AUS Tertiary Update Vol 4 No 40
In our lead story this
week…..
INDUSTRIAL ACTION KICKS IN
Staff at Otago and
Massey Universities have this week voted to escalate
industrial action over their pay claims. The Association of
University Staff Otago branch president, Dr Shef Rogers,
says more than 300 academic and general staff have rejected
the collective contract pay offer at three meetings. The
offer was a 2% lump sum payment before Christmas and a 2%
salary increase from February. Academic staff have already
begun delaying the internal processing of many results, and
staff unions say a work-to-rule will come into force from 20
November. OUSA President, Ayesha Verrall, has written to
AUS and PSA members expressing support for the
claim.
Meanwhile, staff on Massey's Hokowhitu and Turitea
campuses have voted overwhelmingly to begin "open-ended and
escalating action", joining their colleagues at Albany
campus, who voted for action last Friday. The Combined Union
Team spokesperson, Jan McPherson, says the meeting, after a
lot of discussion, had decided to withhold student grades to
get their message across to the university management. She
says staff appreciated the support of the president of the
Massey Students Association, Huia Welton, who attended the
stopwork. "Huia appreciated, as the majority of our students
do, that the well-being of staff greatly affects the quality
of the education we can provide," Ms McPherson said. Staff
at Auckland and Victoria are also delaying the release of
student results as part of their industrial action.
Canterbury University staff plan to protest at graduation on
12 December.
Another round of stopwork meetings will be
held next month around the country to discuss further action
affecting enrolments and next year's graduations.
Also in
Tertiary Update this week:
1. Widespread consultation
promised on report
2. New Victoria Chancellor
elected
3. Test case for equal pay
4. US academics
protest at 'gagging'
5. Canada relaxes academic
employment rules
6. China woos private investors for
higher education
WIDESPREAD CONSULTATION PROMISED ON
REPORT
The government is promising it will consult
widely before it comes to any decisions on a new funding
system for tertiary education in this country. A series of
consultation meetings is being held around the country to
get feedback on the fourth and final report of the Tertiary
Education Advisory Commission (TEAC), “Shaping the Funding
Framework” and submissions are also being sought. Announcing
the timetable, the minister in charge of the sector, Steve
Maharey said the government would be "carefully listening to
feedback". Public submissions on the report close on 31
January 2002, and consultation meetings are being held as
follows: AUCKLAND – today, 15 November, 1pm, Hotel Grand
Chancellor, Auckland Airport; HAMILTON – 16 November, 9am,
Glenview International Hotel; CHRISTCHURCH, 20 November,
1pm, The Arts Centre; DUNEDIN – 21 November, 9am, The
Dunedin Centre; PALMERSTON NORTH, 27 November, 1pm, The
Coachman Hotel; WELLINGTON – 28 November, 9am, The Old Town
Hall. The full report and the government's initial response
can be found at:
www.executive.govt.nz/minister/Maharey
In an editorial,
the "Manawatu Standard" has criticised the latest TEAC
report, saying it could "damage, perhaps mortally, the
dearly-held tradition of open entry to higher education".
The paper says that while there are people at university who
shouldn't be there, rationing should not "artificially
stymie people on the grounds that …..20 years earlier they
had bombed out of school." Any changes, it says, should be
thoroughly debated.
NEW VICTORIA CHANCELLOR ELECTED
A
former Victoria University staff member, Rosemary Barrington
has been elected as Victoria University's new chancellor.
She will take over the position at the beginning of next
year from Russell Marshall, who becomes New Zealand's high
commissioner to London.
WORLD WATCH
TEST CASE FOR
AUSTRALIAN EQUAL PAY
Librarians in Australia are to test
the recently introduced principal of gender pay equity with
an average pay claim of 14% to bring them in to line with
male-dominated professions. The claim to the Industrial
Relations Commission is being taken by the Public Service
Association on behalf of librarians, library technicians and
archivists and argues that they are undervalued because they
are mostly female. Australian has long had laws requiring
men and women to be paid the same for doing the same job,
but last year the Commission introduced the principle of pay
equity between female and male-dominated professions. If the
librarians' case is successful, child-care workers,
hairdressers, nurses and other traditionally female
industries could bring their own cases.
US ACADEMICS
PROTEST AT 'GAGGING'
Hundreds of academics in the United
States are reported to have signed a statement pushing for
the right to question the wisdom of the US bombing campaign
against Afghanistan in response to the September 11
terrorist attacks. Britain's "Guardian" newspaper says the
action follows growing concerns that government and
university officials are disciplining lecturers who question
the bombing campaign. The paper says the campaigners plan
to publish their statement in the "New York Times". The
statement is also said to be circulating among academics in
Britain. According to the 'Guardian' report, City University
in New York, the Universities of Texas in Austin, MIT, the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and the
University of Massachusetts at Amherst are among those that
have tried to silence academics for speaking out.
CANADA
RELAXES ACADEMIC EMPLOYMENT RULES
The Canadian government
has relaxed rules relating to the hiring of non-Canadians
for academic positions. Colleges will be allowed to recruit
professors from the US and other countries without first
trying to find qualified Canadians for the job. As a result,
job ads can be placed simultaneously in Canada and other
countries. However, the government says Canadians and
Canadian residents must still be given 'priority' in job
placement and tertiary institutions will have to make annual
reports on the numbers of Canadian and foreign academics
hired. The Association of Universities and Colleges of
Canada had lobbied for a relaxation of policy, saying the
old policy put Canadian institutions at a disadvantage in
the global marketplace at time when Canada is in urgent need
of more academic staff.
CHINA WOOS PRIVATE INVESTORS FOR
HIGHER EDUCATION
The Chinese government is launching a
major investment programme for its higher education sector.
The influential "People's Daily" newspaper says the
government is encouraging further co-operation between
foreign universities and Chinese institutions to increase
the number of joint degree courses available in China. The
newspaper says the government is also planning to raise more
money for the sector over the next five years through
government bond issues and loans from international
financial organisations.
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AUS
Tertiary Update is produced weekly on Thursdays and
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