AUS Tertiary Update Vol.3 No.40
LIMIT TO LOYALTY OF
MEDICAL SPECIALISTS, SAYS AUS
Parliamentarians have been
warned that the loyalty of medical specialists is being
tested in the face of markedly better offers from overseas.
AUS highlighted the problem during a session in Christchurch
of the Education and Science Select Committee hearing into
student loans, allowances, and tertiary funding. The
associate professor of medicine and clinical pharmacology at
the Christchurch School of Medicine, Evan Begg, cited the
example of the school's cardiology team, which recently
discovered a heart hormone significant in diagnosing and
treating heart failure. Professor Begg said offers had been
made to several members to go to Melbourne. "When people are
being wooed with great conditions and great salaries there's
a limit to people's loyalty to stay." Professor Begg added
that all New Zealand's schools of medicine and dentistry
were finding it difficult to recruit and retain expert staff
because of rising costs, coupled with reduced government
funding. He said the situation was further complicated by
the fact that hospital clinical staff are paid between
$20,000 and $25,000 more than medical and dental academic
staff.
AUS organiser, Marty Braithwaite told the select
committee the Christchurch Medical school was unable to
attract professorial candidates in radiology, anaesthesia,
obstetrics and gynaecology, and orthopaedics. He said New
Zealand needed to make a decision immediately as to whether
it wanted to provide first-world teaching, or sink to
third-world status -- "Because, without exaggeration, that's
where we're heading with the current environment." Staff at
the University of Otago School of Medicine have calculated
that they need an extra $4250 for each equivalent full-time
student to deliver their programme to a high standard.
(see also “World Watch” item below}
Also in Tertiary
Update this week:
1. Focus on tuition fees wrong
2.
Enrolments Soar At Southland Polytech
3. Polytechnic
provision in Hutt Valley will continue, says Minister
4.
AUS Annual Conference
5. An encouragement to teach
6.
Double whammy heading Canada’s way.
FOCUS ON TUITION
FEES WRONG
The Executive Director of the Association of
Polytechnics of New Zealand, Jim Doyle, has told “Education
Review” that the Government’s preoccupation with the level
of tuition fees is not tackling the real problem with the
student loan scheme -- borrowing to meet living costs. Most
of the borrowing goes towards living expenses, and Mr Doyle
points out that while unemployed young people receive money
for living costs --and do not have to repay it -- students
must repay theirs with interest. “Tertiary Update” agrees.
By focusing on tuition costs, the Government is in danger of
crippling the very institutions it expects to drive the
knowledge society.
ENROLMENTS SOAR AT SOUTHLAND POLYTECH
Applications for places at the Southern Institute of
Technology in Invercargill are reportedly up 150% on last
year. The rise in the number of applications is being
attributed to the polytechnic's no-fees-for-students scheme,
although a number of applicants will be disappointed -- the
polytechnic is not offering any more places than in previous
years. The scheme is in effect a scholarship scheme. The
community has come up with the money to cover the students'
fees and living costs -- calculated to be about $11,500 per
student -- in a bid to attract a greater range and calibre
of students to Southland. The chief executive, Penny
Simmonds, says the polytechnic had assumed the scheme would
attract young students, but says a large number of older
students are taking up the offer, and bringing their
families with them.
HUTT VALLEY WILL HAVE POLYTECHNIC
EDUCATION -- MINISTER
The Tertiary Education Minister,
Steve Maharey says the government is committed to providing
tertiary education in the Hutt Valley. The Central
Institute of Technology (CIT), which is in financial
difficulty, has been holding talks with Hutt Valley
Polytechnic (HVP) on possible collaboration. Mr Maharey has
welcomed the talks, and assured students that whatever the
outcome, they can enrol at either institution and be
confident that they will continue to get a quality tertiary
education.
The Association of Staff in Tertiary
Education (ASTE) wants a merger of HVP and CIT, with courses
being offered at both sites. The union has also been
pushing for trades education to be offered in Wellington
city itself now that Wellington Polytechnic is part of
Massey University.
AUS ANNUAL CONFERENCE
The AUS
Annual Conference is being held at the Quality Inn, Willis
St, Wellington on Monday 4 and Tuesday 5 December 2000. All
of the preparatory conference papers have now been posted on
the AUS website: www.aus.ac.nz/conference.htm. During the
conference we plan to add speeches by the Associate Minister
of Education (Tertiary), Steve Maharey; the chair of the
Education and Science Select Committee, Dr Liz Gordon;
National's spokesperson for tertiary education, Maurice
Williamson; and the President of the University of the South
Pacific staff association, Dr Biman Prasad.
WORLD
WATCH
AN ENCOURAGEMENT TO TEACH
With our medical
schools in a parlous state (see earlier story -- Limit to
loyalty of medical specialists….), it's interesting to
consider this news report from the United States. In an
effort to bolster medical education at teaching hospitals,
both Harvard University and the University of California at
San Francisco plan to create multimillion-dollar endowments
for medical doctors who spend time teaching. A report in
The Boston Globe newspaper says the programme will cost each
institution about US$10m. The money is recognition of the
fact that many medical professionals are discouraged from
teaching since they tend to earn more from research grants
or clinical work.
And if "Tertiary Update" might take a
step back in history for a moment: during the 1980s, when
academic salaries came under the jurisdiction of the Higher
Salaries Commission, AUS argued strongly for a premium to be
paid to medical people choosing to undertake university
teaching and research. The result of not taking that advice
is documented in our lead story this week.
DOUBLE WHAMMY
HEADING CANADA’S WAY
While changes in demographics are
boosting student numbers in Canada, they are also seeing the
disappearance of the people needed to teach them. At
present, one-third of faculty staff at Canadian universities
are aged 55 or over, and it's expected that more than 20,000
of the country's 33,000 academic staff will have left by the
end of the decade. That means Canadian universities have
before them the daunting task of finding 30,000 new faculty
staff to cope with growing numbers of students -- and only
10 years to do it in.
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AUS
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