AUS Tertiary Update Vol.4 No.2
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AUS
Tertiary Update Vol. 4 No. 2, 15 February
2001
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In
our lead story this week…..
The government has made it
clear it won't intervene in the row between Massey
University and UCOL over their nursing courses. UCOL has
complained that Massey's new bachelor of nursing degree at
its Palmerston North campus is in direct competition with
its flagship nursing programme begun 20 years ago. The
Associate Education Minister Steve Maharey has written to
the institutions telling them the government has done as
much as it can to help settle the dispute and urging the two
sides to talk things over. "This is a local problem, which
should have a local solution," he writes.
Meanwhile, the
second report of the Tertiary Education Advisory Commission,
“Shaping the System”, will be released in Wellington on
Wednesday 7 March at a meeting in the National Library
Auditorium at 10:00 a.m. The report sets out TEAC’s view on
how the tertiary education system should be shaped and the
tools and mechanisms needed to make it happen. "Tertiary
Update" suggests the competitive spirit in Palmerston North
will provide the first real test for TEAC.
Also in
Tertiary Update this week:
1. Re-scheduling of TEAC
reports
2. Knowledge Society conference
3. Arguing for
a wisdom economy
4. Show us your debt
5. Graduates not
leaving in droves
6. Loans as bait for UK teachers
7.
Questions about U21
8. Students occupy the
Bodleian.
RE-SCHEDULING OF TEAC REPORTS
TEAC has
announced it will now produce only two further reports this
year after delays to its "Shaping the System" publication.
As we noted last week ("Tertiary Update" Vol. 4 No. 1) TEAC
was due to produce a further three reports this year, but
that schedule is no longer possible. Now TEAC will produce
a report on the form and content of a tertiary education
strategy for July, and will follow it up with one on
implementing the strategy, including funding issues, in
September.
KNOWLEDGE SOCIETY CONFERENCE
The
Government and the University of Auckland are organising a
national conference to draw up a blueprint for New Zealand
to become a knowledge economy of the 21st century. "Catching
the Knowledge Wave" will take place in early August. It
will be co-chaired by the Prime Minister, Helen Clark and
the Vice-Chancellor of Auckland University, John Hood.
Topics on the agenda include economic impacts, policy,
governance, social and cultural issues, and environmental
sustainability. Attendance will be by invitation only, and
participants will include the heads of major companies,
senior government officials and politicians, representatives
from the research and higher education sectors, as well as
major media and community organisations. Young people will
also be invited to participate. CTU and tertiary education
union representatives are to be invited to join the Advisory
Committee. Prime Minister Helen Clark is to make a formal
announcement about the conference at an Auckland University
alumni dinner tomorrow night.
ARGUING FOR A WISDOM
ECONOMY
The co-leader of the Green party, Rod Donald,
says despite its talk of building a knowledge economy, the
government has yet to make a significant contribution to
improving the tertiary education sector. In a speech to the
House on Tuesday, he argued that a knowledge economy is more
than information technology, science and business. "It is,"
he said, "about building the knowledge and wisdom base of
New Zealanders on how to live in our natural environment…how
to build and care for communities, how to build a
sustainable economy, how to live with others without
conflict and how to actively participate in decision-making
processes... " Mr Donald said financial problems in the
tertiary sector had created an environment of uncertainty
and low morale that did not produce quality education. He
called for reinvestment in higher education and for the
government to implement Green Party policy of debt
write-offs for all students who choose to remain in New
Zealand and incentives for those overseas to return by
matching debt repayments dollar for dollar.
SHOW US
YOUR DEBT
Students say the news that the British
government will restrict access to working-holiday visas for
New Zealand students with significant loan debt is taking
away a right that previous generations of young New
Zealanders took for granted -- the right to live and work
overseas. The co-president of NZUSA, Sam Huggard says the
move puts students "between a rock and a hard place". "If
they can't find a job in New Zealand, or have children,
their loan will be with them for life. Yet if they head
overseas looking for work to alleviate their debt, they are
being told to go home," he says. Mr Huggard says that a
scheme set up to provide financial help for students to help
them complete their study is fast turning into a restrictive
trap that is "preventing graduates from leading normal
lives".
GRADUATES NOT LEAVING IN DROVES
A recent
survey of graduate employment suggests no dramatic increase
in the number of recent university graduates going overseas.
The "University Graduate Destinations 2000" report,
published by the Vice-Chancellors Committee, shows an
increase of 6.1% in the number of graduates reporting
"overseas" as their destination compared with the last
survey -- and points out that this is at a time when
graduate numbers have slightly increased as well.
WORLD WATCH
LOANS AS BAIT FOR UK TEACHERS
The
British government is proposing that undergraduates could
have their student loans paid off by the government if they
opt for a teaching career in subjects where there are staff
shortages. These include maths, science, technology,
languages and English. The move is among a number of
financial incentives that will be offered to students from
next year as part of the government's new five-year plan to
drive up secondary education standards. The plan has been
welcomed by the National Association of Head Teachers, which
wants to see the scheme offered to all newly-qualified
teachers. The teachers' union NASUWT says it "throws into
chaos" the whole principle of student loans. "Students will
be up in arms in protest if they are not one of the favoured
group to have their fees waived," said its leader, Nigel de
Gruchy.
QUESTIONS ABOUT U21
Proposals by Universitas
21 to establish its on-line university through a joint
venture with Thomson Learning Ltd have drawn strong
criticism from affected staff and students. Universitas 21
groups universities in Australia, New Zealand, North
American and Britain and is currently negotiating a deal
with Thomson Learning. Staff unions for U21 member
universities, including AUS, have sent a letter calling on
the consortium to negotiate with staff on academic and
employment issues before any agreement is finalised. The
letter says staff are concerned that little information had
been made available about the proposed university.
"Questions about governance structures, intellectual
freedom, quality assurance, intellectual property and
financial arrangements must be addressed, so that staff,
students and the community which provides funding to these
institutions can have confidence in the venture," the letter
says. A network of student representatives also wants
assurances from Universitas 21 that "its original mission of
international academic exchange remains at the heart of its
strategic directions"
STUDENTS OCCUPY THE BODLEIAN
Students last week staged a two-day occupation of the
University of Oxford's historic Bodleian Library in protest
at the university's imposition of academic penalties against
students who had refused to pay for tuition. The students
ended their protest after university authorities threatened
them with arrest.
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