AUS Tertiary Update Vol. 5 No. 37, 10 October
In our lead story this
week…..
OTAGO ACTION SUSPENDED ON HOPES OF BETTER
OFFER
Academic and General Staff at Otago are to suspend
rolling stoppages and work-to-rule in view of Tuesday's
meeting of the University Council. The meeting – -held
behind closed doors - agreed to try to finalise a three-year
agreement with staff unions to avoid the disruption of
yearly negotiations. Otago Chancellor Eion Edgar also said
that there would have to be cuts in capital spending to
direct money towards staff. Combined unions' spokesperson,
Dr Shef Rogers said the unions would have no objections to
a longer-term settlement, but said the amount of money the
university offered was the real issue. He hoped the Council
and the Vice-Chancellor, Dr Graeme Fogelberg had been able
to agree on a new offer that would see the union and
management negotiators quickly back in discussions. "We
think that both sides understand the issues and recognise
that this dispute needs to move toward settlement," he said.
"We have no desire to harm the university’s reputation or
its functions, and wish to return to meaningful discussions
as soon as possible."
Also in Tertiary Update this
week:
1. Fees-freeze deal accepted
2. AUS call for
open V-C appointments
3. 'The Press' analyses Le Grew
years
4. Call for action on Indonesian detainees
5.
Police tear gas protestors
6. Mixed messages at senate
hearing
FEES-FREEZE DEAL ACCEPTED
Four university
councils -– Massey, Canterbury, Victoria and Otago – have
voted to accept the governments offer of an addition 4.5%
funding in return for holding student fees at present levels
for 2003. The decision has been welcomed by student leaders
who say that, with their vote, the universities are doing
their bit to see that student debt does not "balloon out of
control". But the President of Victoria University of
Wellington Students' Association (VUWSA), Fleur Fitzsimons
said the government should not interpret acceptance as
approval of the level of funding.
The Association of
University Staff (AUS) has also welcomed the news, but warns
that the 4.5% in public funding is inadequate. National
president, Dr Grant Duncan says the extra money barely keeps
up with inflation. "There will be no highly-skilled,
knowledge-based economy for the future, unless this
Government is prepared to tackle the fundamental problem
faced by New Zealand’s university system – which in terms of
real Government funding, experienced, on average, annual
reductions of 2.8% each year during the 1990s," he said. Dr
Duncan says AUS is all for reducing the personal cost of
study at university, but this must not be at the expense of
university staff and the quality of university
education.
AUS CALL FOR OPEN V-C APPOINTMENTS
The
Association of University Staff wants university councils to
allow greater scrutiny of candidates in line for the
position of Vice-Chancellor. AUS says that, in future, the
selection process for the top job should be conducted in an
open manner so that all university staff, students and the
public can have their say. AUS national president, Dr Grant
Duncan says such an approach would be in line with the
unique character of our universities and their idea of "an
open, unconditional and contestable pursuit of knowledge,
based up free collegial investigation, debate and inquiry".
Dr Duncan says any applicant insisting on absolute
confidentiality during the selection process or refusing to
be presented to the university community as a candidate
would in effect be declaring themselves unworthy of the
job.
WORLD WATCH
CALL FOR ACTION ON INDONESIAN
DETAINEES
An Auckland-based organisation, Indonesia Human
Rights Committee (IHRC) is calling on the New Zealand
government to step in and pressure Indonesia to release two
women held by police in Aceh since mid-September (see
"Tertiary Update" Vol. 5 No.36). The women are Australian
journalist and academic, Lesley McCullock and American
nurse, Joy-Lee Sadler. They have been charged with abusing
their visa conditions under Indonesia's immigration law.
Marie Leadbetter of IHRC suggests the women have been
detained because they will publicise Indonesian military
actions in South Aceh, including looting and the blocking of
food and medical supplies by the military.
POLICE TEAR
GAS PROTESTORS
Police in Pakistan used tear gas to break
up demonstrations by students and teachers at Karachi
University. Sixty-five people were arrested. The protest
was against new legislation – the Model University Act.
Those arrested were released about three hours later. Police
accused the demonstrators of "running riots", saying they
had to use force to disperse them, but the protestors said
the protest had been peaceful. Academic staff associations
have announced a complete boycott on teaching throughout
Pakistan for one day this week in protest at the police
violence against the protestors. A student organisation has
also announced a boycott of classes in Karachi and several
other parts of the country in protest at the police handling
of the demonstration.
MIXED MESSAGES AT SENATE
HEARING
A senate hearing in the United States has heard
differing views on the progress of women in the fields of
science, mathematics and engineering 30 years after the
passage of laws to close the gender gap. One witness gave
statistics showing a doubling in the proportion of women
among computer science graduates from 14% when the law was
introduced in 1972 to 27% in 1997. But another witness said
the figures were incomplete and that the number of women
receiving bachelor's degrees in computing and information
sciences had dropped from a high of 37% in 1987 to 28% in
1999-2000. Others said women professors in the field faced
barriers to tenure because of time off to raise families,
and that women had less access to important resources than
men.
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AUS
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