AUS Tertiary Update Vol.3 No.23, 4 August 2000
MASSEY RESTRUCTURING
IGNORES THE LAW AND ITS OWN POLICIES
Massey University
Council members have been advised by Association of
University Staff (AUS) lawyers that they will breach the
Education Act 1989 and the university’s own internal
statutes if they proceed making decisions about academic
programmes without seeking the advice of the Academic
Committee of the Academic Board.
However, Massey
University Vice-Chancellor, Professor James McWha, has today
said that having consulted the Academic Board, he is not
obliged to take advice from any other quarter.
AUS
Executive Director, Rob Crozier, said Professor McWha’s
statement was consistent with the attitude of a chief
executive running a private education company, but that it
was astonishing that the Vice-Chancellor of a public
university would ignore both legislation and Massey’s own
internal rules.
“As the only Council employee, Professor
McWha is charged with managing the affairs of the university
within the policy framework set by Council,” said Mr
Crozier. “These are set out in 4.2.1 of the Manual of
Operating Procedures and Policies, approved in 1997.”
The
text states:
All new courses and changes to existing
courses must be submitted to the Academic Committee by
Faculty and School Boards. Academic Committee will
recommend/not recommend the proposals to Academic Board for
approval.
All new academic developments, change of
procedures relating to academic matters must have the
support of Academic Committee before going to Academic
Board. [4.2.1.1.1]
“Council members have been asked to
think long and hard about the legal consequences of the
decision that they are being asked to ratify
tomorrow.”
Also in Tertiary Update this week:
1. TEAC
Releases Its Initial Report
2. Massey Staff and Students
March
3. TMU Will Consider Human Capital
4. AUS
Women’s Conference
5. Computer Offer Extended
TEAC
RELEASES ITS INITIAL REPORT
TEAC released its initial
report and work plan for the next 12 months on Thursday 3
August. The report discusses a vision for New Zealand
society and the role of tertiary education within
it.
TEAC Chair, Dr Norman Kingsbury, says that a key
message of the report is that the tertiary education system
needs to develop an evolving and responsive strategic
direction.
“This direction needs to be developed by
those in the tertiary education system, in partnership with
Government and those whose needs the system serves.”
The
report is available from TEAC’s website: www.teac.govt.nz
MASSEY STAFF AND STUDENTS MARCH AGAINST
RESTRUCTURING
Massey staff and students will march to
show their opposition to the controversial ‘repositioning’
at Massey University Council’s meeting today (4
August).
A stop-work is being held this morning to convey
how important it is to abandon this divisive restructuring.
Albany members are also calling a stop-work meeting and will
be linked via teleconference to the Council meeting.
“It
is not too late for the University Council to recover from
the damage that the 'DEpositioning' project has caused. We
urge Council members to consider the legal situation,
abandon the proposals before them, and join with their staff
and students in a genuine 'repositioning' exercise,” said
AUS Branch President, Associate Professor Lewis.
TMU WILL
CONSIDER HUMAN CAPITAL
Associate Minister for Education
(Tertiary), Steve Maharey, said the Tertiary Monitoring Unit
would consider both human capital factors and capacity
maintenance issues in examining solutions to Victoria’s
financial difficulties.
He was responding to concerns
raised by a delegation from Victoria University of
Wellington (see AUS Tertiary Update, Vol.3 No.22) who met
with him and Education Minister Trevor Mallard last week.
The delegation reviewed the ways in which successive
changes to university funding over the past five years had
seriously disadvantaged Victoria University
financially.
Minister Maharey said that the university
should continue in active detailed discussions with the
Tertiary Monitoring Unit (TMU, formerly the Tertiary
Ownership Monitoring Unit).
AUS National President
Neville Blampied expressed concern that TMU would seek only
accounting-type solutions. The Minister said, however, that
TMU had clear instructions to consider the ‘people’ issues.
TMU is briefing the Minister on a regular basis and
‘successful’ packages have been developed on a case-by-case
basis to help other institutions (so far, all Polytechnics)
in financial difficulty.
The AUS recommendation is that
all VUW working parties highlight the human capital,
institutional, and national capacity losses of any proposals
made.
AUS WOMEN’S CONFERENCE
Former AUS member and
current Minister of Labour, Hon Margaret Wilson will open
the AUS Status of Women Committee (SWC) conference on gender
issues in teaching, research and employment policies in New
Zealand universities.
The conference is on Thursday 17
August in Wellington, with limited places available. There
is no registration fee. Enquiries can be made to:
monica.zhou@aus.ac.nz, 04 915 6690.
COMPUTER OFFER
EXTENDED
Due to the later appearance of the AUS July
‘Bulletin’, a computer offer by IHUG has been extended,
although specifications and price may have
changed.
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