AUS Tertiary Update Vol 3, No 20
STATISTICS THAT
DAMN
The findings of a report into university funding in
New Zealand since 1980 are no surprise to the Association of
University Staff.
Guy Scott and Helen Scott’s report
shows that over the last two decades funding has declined at
an annual average rate of 2.3% per student, or $3,821 (in
1999 dollars).
AUS President, Neville Blampied, said that
successive New Zealand governments had used an argument
based on the private benefit that students received from
their tertiary education to savagely reduce the amount of
taxpayer subsidy per student.
Report findings showed the
proportion of university operating revenue from the Ministry
of Education fell from 73% in 1991 to 50% in 1998, while the
proportion raised from student fees rose from 14% to 21% and
the proportion raised from other sources rose from 13% to
29%.
The international comparison showed that total
expenditure per EFTS ranged from almost US$20,000 in the US
to just over US$3,000 in Greece. New Zealand recorded
US$8,380, which was US$3,192 below that of Australia.
In
another damning statistic, the student:staff ratio has
increased by 48%, from 12.5 in 1980 to 18.4 in 1998. This
ratio puts it in line with the bottom 4 of Britain’s 96
universities, where the median student:staff ratio is
12.3:1.
Since 1994 the proportion of academic staff in
New Zealand universities has dropped from 45% of all staff,
to 40%.
The report’s conclusions paint a dismal picture
of increased staff workloads, less time available for
research and student interaction, and a reduced ability to
compete internationally.
“The recent budget announcement
of a 2.3% increase for 2001 provided institutions hold their
fee levels constant will do nothing to rescue the system or
reverse the funding cut trends identified by this research,”
said Neville Blampied.
“Treasury is predicting that
inflation will be 2.3% in 2001 and some commercial
commentators are suggesting a rate closer to 3%.”
The
report and its accompanying tables are available on the AUS
website: www.aus.ac.nz
Also in Tertiary Update this
week:
1. Otago First to Freeze Fees
2. Latest on
Massey ‘Repositioning’
OTAGO FIRST TO FREEZE FEES
Otago University’s announcement that it will freeze
student fees at current levels for next year makes it the
first to accept the Government’s offer.
Tertiary
institutions were offered a 2.3 percent increase in funding
in the budget if they would freeze the fees.
Minister of
Tertiary Education, Steve Maharey, said Otago was to be
commended for agreeing to a freeze because the cost of fees
is a barrier to study.
Mr Maharey says the Government
will soon make a formal funding offer to institutions, and
expects to know by September which ones will hold their
fees.
The New Zealand University Students Associations
(NZUSA) also welcomed Otago’s decision, saying the average
annual growth in university fees in the period from 1990 to
1998 was 13.4%.
NZUSA Co President, Sam Huggard said
other universities have a moral obligation to inform
students of their intentions for 2001 fee levels.
“Fees
need to come down, but this is a step in the right
direction.”
LATEST ON MASSEY ‘REPOSITIONING’
The second
draft of ‘repositioning’ proposals for Massey University
released earlier this week provided ‘cold comfort’ to staff
angry about the continuing uncertainty of their
jobs.
Under the new proposals, 307 staff positions would
be affected, compared with 427 under the first proposals,
and the potential number of full time equivalent positions
affected is 86, compared with 116 previously. The new
proposals also anticipate hiring new staff in areas of
growth.
Association of University Staff (AUS) Massey
Branch President, Associate Professor Tony Lewis, expressed
disappointment that the AUS alternatives put to the
Vice-Chancellor last month have been ignored.
“The
reduction in the number of redundancies is a minor
concession and should do nothing to quell the concerns of
the Palmerston North community in particular. The cost of
these redundancies to the community is approximately $4
million in salaries after tax, with annual flow on effects
of $20 million.”
The second draft followed six weeks of
discussions with staff, students and other interested
groups, and after examining more than 330 submissions.
The new proposals are open to further discussion and
submissions and will go before the Academic Board later this
month, to then be considered at the 4 August meeting of the
University Council.
Changes include retaining most
papers in Women's Studies and German, with the possibility
of sharing European Languages delivery with other
universities. No options and majors will be dropped in the
College of Sciences.
AUS representatives met yesterday
with Deputy Prime Minister, Jim Anderton, to brief him on
the likely effects of the forced redundancies to the
region's development.
WORLD WATCH
UNION MAIDS?
Staff
at the University of Hong Kong can obtain a range of
discounted benefits that includes Maid Insurance. The AUS
also notes with astonishment that professorial appointments
at the University are currently being made at a salary
equivalent to $A250,000.
LITTLE PROGRESS IN UK SALARY
CATCH-UP
An initial pay negotiation meeting for the
Lecturers' Common Interest Group (LCIG) saw the Universities
and Colleges Employers Association (UCEA) offer 3% for
post-1992 institutions, the same offer made to the pre-1992
universities.
The claim for post-1992 institutions
included an immediate pay increase to close the 30% gap with
comparable professions, a substantial reduction in the
number of casual staff, improvements to conditions of
employment, particularly parental leave, and discussions on
the reform and updating of the national contract.
The
employers were recommending the removal of three points on
the lecturer's pay scale, making the minimum entry point
start at £17,390. The employers believed this would make
“entrance to academic life more attractive”.
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AUS
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