AUS Tertiary Update Vol.3 No.29
COMPETITION'S OUT,
HAVEN'T THEY HEARD?
Competition among tertiary
institutions still rages despite the fact that the sector is
aware the change of government means the emphasis is now on
collaboration and co-operation. Massey University is
continuing with plans to expand its nursing programme in
Palmerston North in direct competition with UCOL (the very
body seeking a ‘gung-ho’ marketing and sales person --
Tertiary Update Vol.3 No.27, 31.8.00), and the Press has
reported on the amount of money going in to advertising. At
the risk of sounding like a faulty CD, Tertiary Update calls
yet again on the Associate Minister of Education to stand up
and remind tertiary institutions that co-operation is now
the watchword, and that they should cease this unproductive
competitive behaviour.
Also in Tertiary Update this
week:
1. Hot competition for students
2. Government
policy reversal
3. Retirement age situation
clarified
4. Wairarapa polytechnic decision soon
HOT
COMPETITION FOR STUDENTS
AC Neilson figures on
advertising to July this year show some institutions have
increased their advertising spending by more than 20% as
they compete for students. The figures show the University
of Otago spent as much in the first six months of this year
as it did on advertising in the whole of 1999. Included in
the figure is about $203,000 spent on television
advertising. Another institution that chose to advertise on
the box was the Christchurch Polytechnic Institute of
Technology. It spent about $208,000 on TV spots in six
months to July, and overall spent $440,000 on advertising.
That compares with advertising spending for 1999 of
$359,000. Smallest spender over the six-month period was
Victoria. It spent $84,000.
Aotearoa Tertiary Students’
Association president, David Penney sees marketing
expenditure increasing still further in response to the
government's deal to hold student fees next year, at a time
when student numbers are leveling off.
GOVERNMENT POLICY
REVERSAL
Last year, immediately following the election,
the Associate Minister of Tertiary Education told Education
Review that equal funding for private providers would be a
one-year phenomenon. We took this to mean that the
arrangement whereby students in the private sector were
funded at the same rate as those in the public sector would
be reversed in this year’s Budget. Were we naïve? It seems
so! This funding arrangement now looks rather more
permanent. This week, the Hon Steve Maharey advised the
conference of the NZ Association of Private Education
Providers:
"Upon taking office, this Government
proceeded with moves to equate PTE funding rates with those
in the public sector. This has resulted in an estimated 323%
increase in funding for EFTS-funded private training
establishments in 2000." He went on to say …"There will be
no change to the EFTS system for private providers in
2001."
The Minister said the reason for the reversal was
the role that the PTEs could play in the Government’s
‘Closing the Gaps’ policy. The trouble is, the money comes
out of the existing budget for tertiary education, meaning
less for the public institutions. The question arises, if
the PTE funding had not been increased, would Massey and
Victoria Universities now be faced with major restructuring,
and the loss of scores, if not hundreds of
jobs?
RETIREMENT AGE SITUATION CLARIFIED
AUS Executive
Director, Rob Crozier is hailing the Chief Justice, Dame
Sian Elias' declamatory judgement on retirement age as a
victory for commonsense. The case -- between Otago
University and its principal campus unions, the AUS and the
PSA -- hinged on the implications of the Human Rights Act
for staff employed before 1 April 1992 whose employment
contract continued to contain a retirement age provision.
Mr. Crozier says: “The judge has declared that section
149(2) of the Human Rights Act 1991 does not permit
variation or confirmation of a retirement age specified in
an employment contract unless the employment contract was in
force on 1 April 1992 and remains in force." He says,
however, that it is possible that a small number of
employees not covered by the unions’ collective employment
contract could still face compulsory retirement.
WAIRARAPA POLYTECHNIC DECISION SOON
Steve Maharey has
told the Wairarapa community that the government will
announce a decision on the future of the Wairarapa Community
Polytechnic inside the month. The financially-troubled
polytechnic wants to join up with the UCOL in Palmerston
North, and public consultation has now ended. The Associate
Minister of Education told a packed meeting of Polytechnic
staff, students, and council members that he wanted to be
sure the merger was acceptable to the local community, and
promised an early decision.
WORLD WATCH
TORIES
ENDOWMENT SCHEME
Britain's Conservative Party has
proposed universities be paid by endowments. In a policy
document, the party suggests the scheme would end "financial
and regulatory constraints that prevent universities
offering the courses and hiring the staff they need to excel
in the top league of world academic institutions." Briefing
reporters, the Conservative Party leader, William Hague,
said that, if elected, a Conservative government would hand
the universities a capital sum of up to $4bn, which would
provide income in years to come. The money could be raised
from the sale of radio frequencies or by selling off
government assets, Mr. Hague said. He hinted that only top
institutions would receive the endowments, implying that
others would continue to rely on government budgets.
ACADEMIC FREEDOM ISSUE IN HONG KONG
Two top officials
of the University of Hong Kong have resigned over
allegations that they pressured a prominent academic
pollster to stop conducting sensitive public-opinion
surveys. The surveys were showing falling support for the
territory's chief executive, who is appointed by officials
in Beijing. Cheng Yiu-chung, the vice chancellor, and Wong
Siu-lun, the pro-vice chancellor, stepped down just before
the university's council was scheduled to consider a 74-page
report by a three-member independent panel. The report
backed up charges by Robert Chung, director of the
university's Public Opinion Program, that the pro-vice
chancellor had passed along a message to him from the vice
chancellor, telling him to stop the offending surveys or
face a loss of university funds. The two officials have
denied the charges.
AND IN FIJI
Academic staff at
the University of the South Pacific, among them a former
leading professor, have appealed to the university
authorities to safeguard academic freedom. The appeal,
reported in the USP newspaper, Wansolwara, follows the
circulation of a memo to staff and students which was widely
interpreted as a "gag" on public comment during the
political crisis that accompanied this year's coup in Fiji.
Staff and students were also concerned at the closure, for a
month, of the Pacific Journalism Online Training website.
The site had carried up-to-date coverage of the armed
take-over of Parliament.
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AUS
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