AUS Tertiary Update Vol.3 No.8
NO CERTAINTY YET ON
FUNDING
We will have to wait until after the Budget in
June to find out the
Government's intentions regarding
the former Government's decisions to
institute the
Universal Tertiary Tuition Allowance and to severely
curtail
postgraduate tuition funding.
In response to
our request last week, the Hon. Steve Maharey has given
AUS
an assurance that a clearly differentiated sector,
and the funding
principles that underpin this, will form
part of the Tertiary Advisory
Commission's programme. AUS
sees the realignment of funding as being a
priority for
TEAC when it is finally established.
Also in Tertiary
Update this week:
1. TEAC Chair Welcomed
2. Polytech
Alliance Will Lower Fees and Staff Costs
3. Crossbearer
and Whitefoot Strike Again
4. Otago Proposal
Disenfranchises Academics from Voting on
Council
Representation
TEAC CHAIR WELCOMED
The
appointment of Dr Norman Kingsbury as chair of the Tertiary
Education
Advisory Committee has been welcomed by the
Association of University Staff
(AUS).
AUS President
Neville Blampied said Dr Kingsbury has a great wealth
of
knowledge and experience which will provide a very
sound foundation to TEAC.
"Dr Kingsbury has an intimate
knowledge of how universities, other
tertiary
institutions and the Ministry work, and he is
universally respected within
the sector," he said.
JOB
LOSSES LIKELY FROM POLYTECH ALLIANCE
The Association of
Staff in Tertiary Education (ASTE) were not
impressed
that Otago Polytechnic staff found out about a
new polytech alliance and
potential job losses from the
Otago Daily Times.
The Tertiary Accord of New Zealand
announced this week, involves Otago
Polytechnic,
Auckland's MIT, Palmerston North's Universal College
of
Learning (the former Manawatu Polytechnic) and
Christchurch Polytechnic.
ASTE president Jill Ovens told
the Otago Daily Times the union was concerned
that there
might be intellectual property issues at stake in
the
announcement that a key focus would be on the joint
development and delivery
of programmes.
Otago
Polytechnic CEO, Wanda Korndorffer, said student fees were
to be
limited and staffing costs were predicted to fall
as a result of the
alliance.
CROSSBEARER AND WHITEFOOT
STRIKE AGAIN
Putting the AUS views before the public is
assisted from time to time by a
morphic organisation,
whose latest manifestation was as the Association
for
United Science.
The chief spokespersons for this
Association - Neville Whitefoot and Rob
Crossbearer -
leapt to the defence of universities when it was suggested
by
Dr Andrew West (see Tertiary Update Vol. 3 No.7) that
only by merging
universities could New Zealand develop at
least one world-class institution.
In a press release
embargoed until 1 April 2000, Crossbearer and
Whitefoot
supported rumours that a merger of Crown
Research Institutes into a new
Department of Science and
Innovation - DSI - was the only way to achieve a
critical
mass expertise within NZ's research and development
sector.
Organisations ringing the AUS for further
information were gently advised to
check the date of the
release!
OTAGO PROPOSAL DISENFRANCHISES ACADEMICS FROM
VOTING ON COUNCIL
REPRESENTATION
Academic staff at
Otago are bristling at the Vice-Chancellor's proposals
for
the Senate that would see a downgrading of their
voting rights on the
University Council
representation.
Currently three of the Council's members
are elected by academic staff. The
proposal involves the
non-elected Senate having the capacity to 'elect' two
of
its members to be two of the three academic staff members of
Council.
This would mean that academic staff could only
directly elect one of the
three academic members of
Council instead of three.
"If the Vice-Chancellor wants
overlap between the membership of Senate and
Council,
there are other ways to achieve it short of drastically
curtailing
the democratic rights of academics to
participate in the governance of their
institution," said
AUS Otago branch president, Michael Robertson.
He
suggested that co-option was available to achieve
overlap.
WORLD WATCH
· UK TREASURY APPOINTS NZ
ECONOMIST
Current Director of Macroeconomic Forecasting
and Policy in the New Zealand
Treasury, Roger Procter,
has been appointed as Chief Economist in the
Public
Services Directorate (PSD), one of the most senior
and influential posts in
the UK Treasury.
His is the
second appointment from outside the Civil Service to the
Board of
PSD in the last two months.
· UNION TO CHART
CHANGING SECTOR
Changes in work patterns, funding, the
user-pays trend and quality in
universities will be
revealed in a national audit to be carried out
by
Australia's National Tertiary Education Union.
The
report resulting from the audit, which will identify crisis
points and
problem areas in universities, will be
released next year in time to link
with the federal
election cycle.
NTEU president Carolyn Allport said the
audit would focus on material that
was not currently
collected. The union wanted to use the data not just
to
raise public consciousness but to reflect the need for
broader
accountability.
The NTEU project comes amid
concern about the lack of an independent
government
advisory structure, particularly with a deregulation agenda
in
the offing. A progress report is expected by
September.
NO EDUCATION VOUCHERS IN FLORIDA
In a
tremendous victory for families and children, a Florida
Circuit Court
found last month that the Florida State
constitution means what it says --
that children are
guaranteed the right to free, public education. As
Judge
Ralph L. Smith Jr. stated, "Tax dollars may not be
used to send the children
of this state to a private
school."
This ruling puts a stake in the heart of the
voucher movement, sending a
strong signal across the
States that vouchers are no substitute for a
quality
public
education.
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AUS
Tertiary Update is produced weekly on Fridays and
distributed freely to
members of the union and others.
Back issues are archived on the AUS
website:
executive director. Email:
rob.crozier@aus.ac.nz.