AUS Tertiary Update Vol 4 No 29
In our lead story this
week…..
ELECTION PROMISE ALMOST KEPT – BUT WHO
PAYS?
Labour’s 1999 election campaign pledge to lower
tertiary tuition fees has been met, in part at least, by two
successive years of fees deals, plus the recently announced
top-up of $34.7m (not due to kick in until 1 July 2002).
Fees haven't exactly gone down, but they have certainly not
increased. However, we would pose the question – at whose
expense? Tertiary Update can come up with only one answer –
staff at our tertiary institutions. They have paid the price
in terms of major redundancies, a pay freeze, worsening
staff to student ratios and a massive increase in workloads.
Might we suggest that if the coalition government had been
serious in keeping its promise, it would have provided
funding increases reflecting the rate of inflation. At the
very least, there should have been increases of 2.3% last
year, and 2.6% this year on the income institutions get from
student fees. Clearly, university staff are considered the
peasant workers of the Knowledge Society.
Also in Tertiary
Update this week:
1. More please, say university
staff!
2. Investing for innovation – Minister
3.
Dental drain as debts loom large
4. Transition TEC at
work
5. Industrial action at polytechs
6. Quality
higher education linked to economic health
7. Court
backs untenured tertiary teacher
MORE PLEASE, SAY
UNIVERSITY STAFF!
The Association of University Staff is
welcoming comments by the Associate Minister of Education,
Steve Maharey that the extra funding recently announced for
the public tertiary education sector was made available as
the result of a funding moratorium on private training
establishments. AUS National President, Neville Blampied
describes it as "a positive step" and says he hopes it
indicates the Government's is making re-building New
Zealand's public tertiary system its first priority. He says
years of funding crises have been destroying the university
system in this country, while private tertiary providers
have seen their funding increase by more than 650% since
1999. And Mr Blampied takes issue with ACT MP Dr Muriel
Newman who suggests the Government's increased investment in
the public tertiary sector goes against OECD trends. "Most
countries we compare ourselves with are investing heavily in
public tertiary education, and in particular university
education," he says.
INVESTING FOR INNOVATION –
MINISTER
The Tertiary Education Minister, Steve Maharey
says there must be investment in a range of areas, including
information technology, research and development,
innovation, skills training, and lifting education levels if
New Zealand is to prosper in a global environment. He
suggested linking tertiary education and research
institutions to the "levers of economic and social
development" to build the nation's innovation
infrastructure. Mr Maharey suggested land-based industries
such as fishing, agriculture and aquaculture were obvious
points of leverage, along with tourism and new industries
such as film.
DENTAL DRAIN AS DEBTS LOOM LARGE
A
survey of dentistry students at Otago University has found
that less than half of the graduates are remaining in the
country, with the rest flocking overseas to earn higher
salaries and pay off debts of between $50,000 and $100,000.
The Dental Council's "Workforce Analysis" report shows only
23 of 54 dentistry students graduating in 1996 were still in
the country last year. According to the figures, retention
rates four years after graduation are at about 43% –
compared with rates in earlier years of 50% to 70%. Student
representatives say they hope new government funding, which
has halved the cost of dentistry tuition, may mean more
students remain in New Zealand after they qualify.
TRANSITION TEC AT WORK
The transitional Tertiary
Education Commission (TEC) began work this week with a
meeting of the Charters and Profiles Working Party. The
working party is chaired by transition TEC Deputy Chair, Kay
Turner. AUS representative on it is Margaret Ledgerton.
CALL FOR HIGHER LITERACY STANDARDS FOR UNIVERSITY
ENTRANCE
Lincoln University is calling for the literacy
standard for university entrance in the proposed National
Certificate of Educational Achievement (NCEA) to be
strengthened. The new qualification will replace the
University Entrance exam in 2004. The NCEA will introduce
new numeracy and literacy requirements to get into
university, but a draft proposal currently circulating among
universities is being criticised as being vague on literacy
requirements because it fails to specify the number of
credits students will require.
INDUSTRIAL ACTION AT
POLYTECHS
Tutors at EIT, NMIT, Tairawhiti and Northland
polytechnics have voted to take industrial action over
negotiations for a multi-employer collective agreement
covering the four sites. ASTE National President, Jill
Ovens says the action is over attacks on conditions as well
as a salary offer that includes a $300 lump sum this year
and 1% next year. The union says the offer is "insulting"
and means tutors' salaries lag behind those of local primary
and secondary teachers.
WORLD WATCH
FUND FAIRLY OR GET
WIDGET FACTORIES
The president of the Australian
Vice-Chancellors' Committee has told business leaders that
universities are not being funded in line with their value
to society. Professor Ian Chubb said any independent
assessment of the university sector would conclude that "the
value of the end product universities provide is
significantly higher than the nation is paying". Thrown into
the deep end by government abandonment, he said Australian
universities had built the export of education into a $3
billion a year industry, risen to new levels of
entrepreneurship, built closer relationships with industry,
and achieved management efficiencies. But he said
universities were not widget factories. "We cannot endlessly
drive down unit costs while improving quality with
management efficiencies and new technology," he said.
QUALITY HIGHER EDUCATION LINKED TO ECONOMIC HEALTH
A
United States report has found that maintaining a quality
tertiary education system is critical to attracting and
retaining high-paying jobs. The report was commissioned by
the National Education Association (NEA) and is based on
interviews with 64 state legislators in all 50 U.S. states.
The report finds that even though legislators understand the
importance of higher education institutions to the economic
viability of their states, colleges and universities are
often among the first budget items to have funding cut when
budgets get tight. "What this report shows is what we've
known in the education community all along – higher
education faculty members make important contributions to
the financial health of their state," said NEA President Bob
Chase. "I urge all of our political leaders to remember how
indispensable our higher education faculty are to reviving
the economy." The report is available at:
http://www.nea.org/he/leg-news/gofrom.pdf
COURT BACKS
UNTENURED TERTIARY TEACHER
Also in the U.S., a federal
appeals court has ruled that a non-tenured member can sue
administrators at Jefferson Community College who refused to
renew his contract after a student complained he had used
offensive words in a classroom discussion. The decision is
seen as protecting the academic-freedom rights of
non-tenured professors. The teacher asked students to
de-construct words such as "girl," "lady," "faggot,"
"nigger," and "bitch" during an interpersonal-communication
course. The session was examining how language is used to
marginalise and oppress minority groups. However, one Black
student complained to her church minister who in turn warned
the college that African-American enrolments would suffer
unless the dispute was resolved to the student's
satisfaction. A month later the college declined to renew
the teacher's contract.
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AUS
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