Minister’s bizarre Saudi sales pitch
Media release
Tertiary Education Union
20 April
2012
Minister’s bizarre Saudi sales
pitch
The Minister of tertiary education, skills
and employment seems to have lost his marketing mojo, says
TEU national president Dr Sandra Grey. Yesterday Mr Joyce
gave a speech in Saudi Arabia encouraging students to come
and study here at the same time as admitting our
universities face on-going staff
shortages.
“Astonishingly Mr Joyce then said the
solution to this problem was using broadband to beam
overseas lecturers into New Zealand lecture
theatres.”
“He is effectively telling Saudi students to fly 17 hours to New Zealand to sit in a lecture theatre and watch an academic on television - an academic who might well be Saudi.”
“Mr Joyce has a reputation for being the man who sells the government’s vision and agenda to voters. However, in this speech he seems to have lost track of what people want from tertiary education.”
“He
cannot paper over staff shortages and funding cuts with
ultra-fast broadband and remote learning. International and
domestic students pay large amounts of money expecting
face-to-face contact and human interaction with their
lecturers and tutors. If New Zealand wants to remain an
attractive place to study for international, and domestic
students, it needs to invest in training and recruiting new
academics to cover the impending skills shortage,” said Dr
Grey.