AUS Tertiary Update Vol 4 No 8
In our lead story this
week…..
EDUCATION AMENDMENT BILL COMES UNDER
ATTACK
The Association of University Staff has urged
Parliament's Education and Science Select Committee to defer
consideration of some sections of the Education Amendment
(No.2) Bill, saying it poses the greatest threat to the
distinctive role of universities since the tertiary
education reforms of 1989-90. Presenting the AUS submissions
to the committee, Executive Director, Rob Crozier called for
parts of the Bill that allow the Minister of Education to
dissolve a University Council and replace it with a
Commissioner to be put aside. “The concept of having one
person running a university with total responsibility for
all academic matters in addition to financial is
mind-boggling," he said. He pointed out that the
recently-completed TEAC report, Shaping the System, is
calling for a substantive review of the Education Act 1989
as it relates to tertiary education. As a result, any
decisions on clauses in the of the present Bill that had the
"potential for political interference in the administration
of universities" should be deferred until that review had
taken place.
Also in Tertiary Update this week:
1.
What the papers say on the Bill
2. Fogelberg warns of
medical staffing crisis at university
3. TEAC report
summary in Maori
4. Polytech payout details
released
5. Canada targets education in GATS
6.
Australian universities check out 'soft marking'
7. US
colleges ban study in UK
WHAT THE PAPERS SAY ON THE
BILL
The "Manawatu Evening Standard", in an editorial on
the Education Amendment Bill, asks "Do our universities
really have something to fear from government moves to
change the law to give the state the power to intervene if
institutions get into financial strife?" It is, the
newspaper suggests, a tricky business balancing the historic
autonomy which universities have traditionally enjoyed with
their accountability as taxpayer-funded bodies. It notes
that the Tertiary Education Minister and one-time Massey
University academic, Steve Maharey has been quick to
reassure the universities they have nothing to fear from his
plans. But, the newspaper concludes – almost unbidden –
images of roads and the good intentions with which they are
paved spring to mind!
In its editorial on the topic, the
"New Zealand Herald" takes issue with the provisions of the
Bill that would allow the Minister to appoint an "observer"
to the University Council if he or she considers "the
operation or long-term viability of the institution is at
risk." With what purpose, wonders the newspaper, given that
there are already four government-appointed members of the
Council? The purpose, the editorial concludes, is as a "spy"
since the observer "may report to the minister on any matter
raised or discussed at any meeting." The observer then
would work for the minister, whereas the minister's
appointees to the council owe prior allegiance to the
university. The "Herald" also takes issue with the
provision allowing the minister to appoint a commissioner to
replace the council, suggesting "an insidious centralisation
of power" that is taking place in public health and
education is now spreading to the tertiary sector. The
editorial's conclusion:"…there is no justification for the
government to interfere. It must be stopped." We couldn't
have put it better.
FOGELBERG WARNS OF MEDICAL STAFFING
CRISIS AT UNIVERSITY
The Vice-Chancellor of Otago
University, Dr Graeme Fogelberg has written to the Minister
of Health, Hon. Annette King, warning that the disparities
between university-level pay and hospital rates have been
causing a recruitment and retention "crisis" at the
university. He told the university's finance and budget
committee he understood "top flight" Auckland hospital
pathologists were paid about $260,000, whereas the combined
payment a university pathologist could expect was about
$100,000 below that. He said this explained why there had
been delays in appointing a replacement pathology professor
at its Christchurch School of Medicine. University salaries
had failed to keep pace with other sectors over the past
five years, and the weak state of the dollar also posed
problems for overseas recruitment. He indicated that
medicine was not the only discipline facing recruitment
problems. Two attempts to fill the post of the Donald Collie
Professor of English had failed. Meanwhile, Dr Fogelberg and
the Chair of the New Zealand Vice-Chancellors' Committee,
Professor James McWha, are seeking a meeting with senior
government ministers to discuss the funding problems, but as
yet no date has been set for the meeting. “Tertiary Update”
is pleased that the Vice-Chancellor has finally recognised
the problem and seems intent on doing something about it.
AUS has been raising this problem for many years and, in the
last 3 years in particular, has identified a potential
crisis in medical teaching and research in our medical
schools.
TEAC REPORT SUMMARY IN MAORI
The
summary of the "Shaping the System" report has now been
issued in the Maori language. It can be viewed at
http://www.teac.govt.nz/documents/system/punaha.pdf
POLYTECH
PAYOUT DETAILS RELEASED
It has been revealed that Aoraki
Polytechnic paid former naturopathy students $515,000 in
settlement of a dispute over the standing of their course.
Thirty-six students took a case against the Polytechnic in
1999 after the New Zealand Qualifications Authority rejected
the course on all but two of the 19 criteria. The students
said they had been led to believe they would receive a
Bachelor of Applied Science in naturopathy at the end of
their three years of study. Details of the previously
secret settlement were made public after an investigation by
the Chief Ombudsman. Incidentally, AUS actively campaigned
at the time against naturopathy being taught as an Applied
Science degree.
WORLD WATCH
CANADA TARGETS EDUCATION IN
GATS TALKS
The Canadian government has given notice that
it will aggressively promote the export of educational
services in the upcoming negotiations under the General
Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS). The Trade Minister,
Pierre Pettigrew said the government would "work hard to
increase export opportunities for Canadian health and
educational services", while at the same time protecting its
domestic public services from access by foreign firms. The
President of the Canadian Association of University Teachers
(CAUT), Tom Booth suggests the government is "naïve" to
think it can win access to foreign education markets while
keeping up barriers to its own education market.
AUSTRALIAN UNIVERSITIES CHECK OUT 'SOFT
MARKING'
Australian universities have begun checks on
'soft marking' after concerns were raised by the Senate
inquiry into public universities which began hearings last
week. New South Wales and Curtin Universities have set up
formal inquiries to see if the fears that inappropriate high
marks are being given, or existing marks are being upgraded
without adequate grounds, have substance. Deakin and
Wollongong have begun informal checks through deans, and
vice-chancellors at Murdoch, Sydney and New England have
called for anyone with information about soft marking to
come forward. To date they have had no response.
US
COLLEGES BAN STUDY IN UK
The outbreak of foot-and-mouth
disease in Europe has upset study-abroad programmes for
students at several American universities. Michigan State
University has cancelled a summer programme in the UK and
Ireland for 30 agriculture students and faculty. It has also
recalled a student who was on an exchange to the Greenmount
College of Agriculture and Horticulture in Northern Ireland
– where the disease was detected among campus animals.
Purdue University has cancelled two of its students' summer
farm stays in Ireland and the University of Wisconsin has
begun to limit foreign visitors to its College of
Agriculture, turning away a group of 50 German farmers.
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AUS
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