AUS Tertiary Update Vol.3 No.14
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AUS
Tertiary Update Vol. 3 No. 14, 2 June
2000
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UNIVERSITY
STAFF URGE SANCTIONS AGAINST FIJI SITUATION
Association
of University Staff (AUS) members have been asked not to
take up appointments at the University of the South Pacific,
not to attend academic conferences in Fiji, and not to
undertake consultancy work unless it's part of a
humanitarian aid project.
"AUS supports the call for an
immediate release of the hostages, reinstatement of
constitutional democracy and the return of all recognised
human rights and freedom in Fiji," said AUS National
President, Neville Blampied.
Also in Tertiary Update this
week:
1. Reinvestment in Tertiary Education
Signalled
2. 'Labour, Labour, Don't Rob Your Student
Neighbour!'
3. Women Main Award Winners at Victoria
4.
Highest Student Debtor Tops $130,000
5. Government Moves
to Establish Education Council
6. AUS National Office New
Telephone Numbers
7. Values in Education National
Conference
REINVESTMENT IN TERTIARY EDUCATION
SIGNALLED
Associate Minister of Tertiary Education, Steve
Maharey, said yesterday that reinvestment in the tertiary
education sector was an important issue for Government.
He indicated that if students were to continue to
receive a quality education, it would be necessary to ensure
that staff were sufficiently well paid to keep them in New
Zealand.
While AUS is not hopeful that these matters
will be redressed in the Budget on 15 June, we believe that
the Tertiary Education Advisory Commission's work will
provide strong support for the need to revitalise the
university system.
'LABOUR, LABOUR! DON'T ROB YOUR STUDENT
NEIGHBOUR!'
A message of solidarity to Massey staff
facing redundancy finished off a day of protest by Waikato
students in Hamilton this week.
'Massey says cutback- we
say fightback!' was among the slogans shouted on the
'Education Freedom Bus' tour which visited Labour MP Dianne
Yates' office, Labour MP Martin Gallagher's office at the
Ministry of Education and the central WINZ office.
"Dianne Yates and Labour- Don't rob your student
neighbour" was the call from the fifty-strong picket,
protesting that the Labour MPs saying that free education is
unrealistic, benefited themselves from it when they were
young.
WOMEN MAIN AWARD WINNERS AT VICTORIA
Women
students have won the majority of academic awards being
presented at Victoria University's student award ceremonies
on June 7 and 8. Of the 416 awards, 255 - sixty-one percent
- have been won by women.
Victoria University Assistant
Vice-Chancellor (Academic) Roger Robinson linked the women's
success to their rising participation rates in tertiary
education.
The latest (1998) figures for all New Zealand
show 58,889 women at university compared to 49,048 men.
Professor Robinson noted that women were also now a
majority in areas such as law, traditionally a male
preserve, and that many of the best students were mature
women, who now make up greater numbers than
previously.
(See also World Watch below)
HIGHEST
STUDENT DEBTOR TOPS $130,000
Figures just released to
APSU and NZUSA under the Official Information Act show that
the highest student loan account currently held by the IRD
is between $130,000 and $140,000.
The figures also show
that the percentage of students and graduates in higher debt
brackets is increasing.
"The core causes of debt - fees
and the lack of a universal living allowance - must be
addressed in the upcoming Budget," said Sam Huggard,
co-president of the New Zealand University Students'
Association.
Students in Hamilton, Wellington and
Dunedin were protesting this week about these two
issues.
GOVERNMENT MOVES TO ESTABLISH EDUCATION
COUNCIL
A new Education Council to be operating by the
middle of next year was announced by Education Minister
Trevor Mallard this week.
"The Council will be an
expansion of the Teacher Registration Board and will help
the Government in its objectives to lift standards in
education," Trevor Mallard said.
The Council's roles will
include setting standards for registration, looking at
pre-service education and training, ongoing professional
development, and administering the police and character
checks on teachers.
"A professional body for teachers is
long overdue. It has the potential to improve the quality in
our schools and early childhood centres through promoting
best practice and high quality standards in teaching," Mr
Mallard said.
AUS NATIONAL OFFICE - NEW TELEPHONE
NUMBERS
For members and others who need to ring national
office at any time, please note that we now have individual
telephone numbers as set out below:
Monica Zhou 915-6690
Rob Crozier 915-6691
Jeff Rowe 915-6692
Karin
Currie 915-6693
Naomi Miller 915-6694
Margaret
Ledgerton 915-6695
AUS WEBSITE
Our revamped website
has gone live today. Visit us at www.aus.ac.nz
VALUES IN
EDUCATION NATIONAL CONFERENCE
A national conference on
values education has been organised by the Quality Public
Education Coalition (QPEC) to be held in Palmerston North on
21-23 July 2000.
The conference will provide a forum for
constructive debate about values education in its widest
dimensions.
Keynote speakers include Professor Jane
Kelsey, Professor Brian Hill, Arohia Durie, and Emeritus
Professor Ivan Snook, but practically-oriented workshops
will be the focus.
Workshops for the tertiary sector
will be held on managerialism, values in technology
education and teacher education.
Registration material
can be found on www.qpec.org.nz and from Box 1469,
Palmerston North.
WORLD WATCH
* MALES THE 'SECOND
SEX'
Campus Review (May 24-30, 2000) reports that males
are now the 'second sex' on Australian university campuses.
There are now 68,000 more female students than male, and
more female staff than male. Of the 162,000 students who
finished their awards in 1998, 56% were women.
Female
students now dominate 6 of the 10 major fields of study.
*
SEX PAY GAP IN HIGHER EDUCATION GETS WIDER
In an
analysis by the Association of University Teachers (UK),
latest figures show that the university pay gap is wider
than a year ago, with men earning on average 18% more than
women, compared to 17% in 1997-98.
David Triesman,
general secretary of the AUT, said every university should
be shocked into action. In some groups at some institutions
the pay differential is over 25%.
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AUS
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