AUS Tertiary Update Vol.5 No.31, 29 August 2002
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AUS
Tertiary Update Vol. 5 No. 31, 29 August
2002
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In
our lead story this week…..
INDUSTRIAL ACTION AT
OTAGO
650 members of the combined unions at Otago
University attended a stopwork meeting in Dunedin yesterday.
Meetings of members at the Wellington and Christchurch
Medical Schools will be held today. The Otago meeting
discussed the breakdown in collective employment agreement
negotiations, after the employer refused to move beyond a
1.5% salary increase. Secret ballots were held to confirm
strike action set for Monday 2 September and possible
rolling stoppages to follow, if no significant progress is
made. The results of these will not be known until after the
Medical School meetings but, if other resolutions which were
voted on by show of hands are any indication, they will be
passed overwhelmingly. The above actions are in addition to
the withholding of exam questions which was agreed to by
members at meetings last week. These are to be withheld
until further notice. In a demonstration of solidarity, a
resolution to walk off the job in support of any individual
staff member suspended as a result of industrial action was
passed with no votes against and one abstention. A senior
staff source, quoted in the Otago Daily Times today, said
that the proposed action would: “…shut this place down when
you consider that most of the permanent staff are
involved.”
Also in Tertiary Update this week:
1.
Government confirms tertiary plans in Speech from Throne
2. Keeping fees down: Government extends
deadline
3. Lincoln and Massey 'exploring' alliance
4.
Pentagon backs off controls on basic research
5.
'Teaching Licences' in UK by 2010
6. Reputation at
stake?
7. Controversy sees North Carolina affirm academic
freedom
GOVT CONFIRMS TERTIARY PLANS IN SPEECH FROM
THRONE
There were no surprises this week when the
Government confirmed its direction for tertiary education in
the Speech from the Throne delivered by the
Governor-General, Dame Sylvia Cartwright. In the speech,
which traditionally opens a new session of Parliament, the
Government said the tertiary education system would be
driven by, and rewarded for, a focus on excellence,
relevance and success. It confirmed the four key elements
of the system would be: the "overarching role" of the
Tertiary Education Commission; the use of charters and
profiles for public funding to "steer" the system; the
development of a tertiary education strategy incorporating
the views of "key shareholders"; and, a new funding system
to reward performance and reflect strategic priorities. The
Government also indicated it was committed to removing
barriers to participation in tertiary education - through a
thorough review of student support, including extending
student allowances, developing a system of maximum fees and
introducing scholarship and bonding arrangements in areas
where there were recruitment and retention issues. It said,
however, that New Zealand would continue to need migrants to
fill skill gaps for the foreseeable future.
KEEPING FEES
DOWN: GOVERNMENT EXTENDS DEADLINE
The Government has
extended, to mid-October, the time tertiary education
institutions have to consider its fee stabilisation offer
for 2003. Contentious funding deals between Government and
institutions have frozen students’ tuition fees for the last
two years. Vice-Chancellors, however, have so far not agreed
to accept the latest fee freeze deal – a 4.5% increase in
2003 funding, in return for no fee increases. The New
Zealand Vice-Chancellors’ Committee is currently fighting
proposed legislative changes that would enable the
Government to impose ‘fees maxima’ on institutions to keep
fees down. Andrew Campbell, Co-President of the New Zealand
University Students’ Association, however, is urging
university councils to carefully consider the negative
impact of fee increases, stating that: “The tertiary sector
needs to freeze fees for 2003 and then get on with the
longer-term plan of a new tertiary funding system and
equitable fee maxima and fee reductions.” Association of
University Staff National President, Dr Grant Duncan, states
that, “Universities need better public funding and our
response to the idea of the Minister determining how much
universities can charge students depends on the size of the
Government’s contribution.”
LINCOLN AND MASSEY 'EXPLORING'
ALLIANCE
Massey University has confirmed it has been
holding "exploratory discussions" with Lincoln University
about some sort of partnership. Lincoln Vice-Chancellor,
Professor Frank Wood, said Lincoln needed to be aligned with
a bigger cluster of institutions and was talking with Massey
about how to achieve that without detracting from its links
with Canterbury and other Canterbury-based institutions.
Massey Pro Vice-Chancellor, Professor Robert Anderson,
confirmed he had been working with Dr Wood to seek "a
creative solution to the challenges facing the South Island
institution and the New Zealand land-based economy".
Meanwhile, the Minister in charge of tertiary education,
Steve Maharey – who has signalled that Lincoln needed to
look at its options – said no one was pushing for a merger
as the answer. "What we are saying is this is a small
institution that structurally has problems in that it
teaches relatively expensive courses around science and it
may need to think, because of its size and profile, how it
can run more efficiently."
WORLD WATCH
PENTAGON BACKS
OFF CONTROLS ON BASIC RESEARCH
The US Defence
Department/the Pentagon has backed off proposals that would
have required academic scientists doing basic military
research to get approval before publishing or airing their
work at conferences. The rules are aimed at protecting
sensitive technologies, but a suggestion that they apply
across the board rather than just to classified material had
drawn sharp criticism from researchers. University lobbyists
had feared the original proposals would have prompted many
institutions to stop working with the military.
'TEACHING
LICENCES' IN UK BY 2010
In Britain, the Cooke Committee
review of tertiary teaching standards is recommending that
all new lecturers be expected to have a teaching
qualification by 2010. The measure would require all new
recruits to take teacher-training courses at their employer
institution. The courses would be accredited by the
Institute for Learning and Teaching. Other staff would also
be expected to demonstrate competence in working with
students. Tertiary education union officials have been
calling for union involvement in the review, which is one of
a series of four aimed at enhancing standards in tertiary
education. A spokesperson for the Association of University
Teachers said it was important the debate was opened up to
the public domain "to make sure the terms were not set by
Universities UK, the Standing Conference of Principals, and
the Higher Education Funding Council for England".
REPUTATION AT STAKE?
Australian reports say more and
more 'degree mill' universities are being attracted to
Australia, after moves by the Canadian and US governments to
stop them operating on their territory, with the result that
Australia's reputation as a provider of quality higher
education is at stake. The Australian Higher Education
Supplement says there is an international explosion of
"bogus and unaccredited universities" and Australia and New
Zealand are among the countries being targeted, because
governments are unable or unwilling to combat them. "Phony
or unofficial overseas institutions are trying to sell
degrees into both countries," the paper says, "local
operators are trying to sell degrees internationally and
naïve but legitimate local providers are selling courses
sourced from questionable overseas entities."
CONTROVERSY
SEES NORTH CAROLINA AFFIRM ACADEMIC FREEDOM
In the United
States, a committee of the University of North Carolina
Board of Governors has unanimously affirmed academic freedom
in teaching, learning, research, discussion, and publication
after the full Board failed to pass a similar resolution
earlier this month. The debate over academic freedom was
raised after controversy over the publication of a book
about the Koran by a professor of religion at the campus. An
earlier Board meeting had affirmed a resolution on academic
freedom by 18 to 10, but the measure failed because of a
rule requiring a two-thirds majority for resolutions that
did not originate in a Board committee.
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AUS
Tertiary Update is produced weekly on Thursdays and
distributed freely to members of the union and others. Back
issues are archived on the AUS website:
http://www.aus.ac.nz. Direct enquiries to Margaret
Ledgerton, AUS Policy Analyst, email:
margaret.ledgerton@aus.ac.nz