AUS Tertiary Update 25 October 2002
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AUS
Tertiary Update Vol. 5 No. 39 , 25 October
2002
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In
our lead story this week…..
WAIKATO NEGOTIATIONS FALTER –
MASSEY SETTLES
Academic staff at Waikato have rejected a
2.5% salary offer from their employer and a ballot on
industrial action is to be held next Thursday. More than 70%
of staff turned out for this week's ratification meeting
which voted to turn down a package that also included
restructuring of salary scales and modest increases in
annual and paid parental leave. The university management
put the full cost of the package at around 3.5%, but staff
decided it was insufficient to keep pace with other proposed
New Zealand university settlements, let alone compete on
international academic or domestic professional salary
markets. Other issues, including further development on
workload frameworks and restricting the results of
negotiation to union-members only, were rejected by the
employer. Waikato general staff have indicated that they are
also likely to reject their 2.5% offer.
Meanwhile, Massey
staff have accepted a 3.5% salary offer from their employer.
Union members will get the rise from the date of
ratification -– 2 months before the expiry date of the
current collective agreement, raising the net value of the
offer to around 4.1%. At Otago, staff conclude ratification
meetings on the employer’s offer today (Friday) – the salary
offer was increased to 4% after staff undertook industrial
action. Combined unions spokesperson, Dr Shef Rogers, said
it was also likely that if the offer was ratified, a motion
would be put to staff, regarding a union commitment to work
with the university, to put as strong a case as possible to
Government for more funding. “We need to remind Government
the solution is ultimately their problem and to keep the
pressure on Otago management to keep working with us to
focus on Government funding,” said Dr Rogers.
Also in
Tertiary Update this week:
1. CTU wants employer/employee
liaison on health and safety
2. Education Reform Bill -
still waiting
3. Massey Vice-Chancellor named
4.
British MPs attack 'uncoordinated' approach to pay
5.
Monash student charged with murders
6. Australian
research: cuts and casual work affecting quality
CTU WANTS
EMPLOYER/EMPLOYEE LIAISON ON HEALTH AND SAFETY
The
Council of Trade Unions wants employers to involve employees
in health and safety management in the light of new
legislation which for the first time sees occupational
stress identified as a workplace hazard. CTU President,
Ross Wilson said there was strong international evidence
which indicates that employee and union involvement was
crucial to successful injury prevention and health
protection strategies. "It is time we sent a consistent
message, from political, business and union leaders alike,
that the present appalling death toll is not good enough and
that urgent action must be taken by employers and employees
to clean up unsafe workplaces, and that must be backed up by
strong laws," said Mr Wilson.
Research conducted for the
AUS in 1998 revealed that university staff were reporting
higher levels of work-related illness or injury, and
generally exhibiting the symptoms of workplace stress at
higher levels than ever before. "Anecdotal evidence would
suggest that occupational stress has increased significantly
since that time making the new legislation particularly
relevant and important to university staff," said AUS
General Secretary, Helen Kelly.
EDUCATION REFORM BILL –
STILL WAITING
Delays in passing the Education Reform Bill
continue. Aspects of the Bill have been the subject of
discussion and negotiation between Government, opposition
parties and lobby groups - and the New Zealand
Vice-Chancellors' Committee is continuing its efforts to
have an additional clause included. The clause would ensure
that if the implementation of the fees maxima policy proves
unreasonable, universities would have recourse to judicial
review. Following the release of a number of supplementary
order papers proposing several changes to the legislation
[see Tertiary Update last week] and the interruption of its
committee stage, the Bill is not expected back in the House
until later in November. This means that the Tertiary
Education Commission will continue in its transition form
until January next year.
MASSEY VICE-CHANCELLOR
NAMED
Professor Judith Kinnear has been appointed as
Massey University's new Vice-Chancellor – the first woman in
New Zealand to hold that position. She is currently a deputy
vice-chancellor and professor of biological sciences at the
University of Sydney. Professor Kinnear was one of four
people shortlisted for the position and Massey Chancellor,
Morva Crozon, said she had won the job because of her great
strengths in research, publication, teaching and management.
Professor Kinnear told local media that student loans and
how they affect students will be a top priority for her and
that, “I fundamentally see myself as an academic, because
universities are not businesses. They need to be managed,
but their core business is one of teaching, research and
community service”. Massey Students' Association President,
Huia Welton, welcomed the appointment but was critical of
the secrecy surrounding the appointment process. AUS
National President, Dr Grant Duncan, in a recent media
release directed at future selection processes for
Vice-Chancellor positions, noted that secrecy was
inappropriate in a university context.
WORLD
WATCH
BRITISH MPS ATTACK 'UNCOORDINATED' APPROACH TO PAY
Senior MPs in Britain have criticised government
departments for not co-operating in the setting of
scientists' pay rates. The Office of Science and Technology
has boosted the pay for post-doctoral researchers by £4000,
but the MPs complained that this did not appear to have been
taken into account by the Department for Education and
Skills in funding pay further up the academic scale. They
also said the hike for the young researchers could have a
knock-on effect on lecturers' salaries, with the researchers
having to take a pay cut if they took up a junior lecturer
position.
MONASH STUDENT CHARGED WITH MURDERS
A
36-year-old Monash University student, Xiang Huan Yun has
been charged with the murder of two students and the
attempted murder of five others following a shooting
incident at the university earlier this week. Security was
tight for his appearance before magistrates and was remanded
in custody until February 2003. Xiang was not required to
enter a plea, and did not apply for bail. The two students
killed in the shooting were both honours students in the
department of econometrics and business statistics. In
response to concerns regarding student safety, the Monash
Vice-Chancellor, Peter Darvall, has stated that, “All I can
say is our university is as safe as any other part of the
community”. Surveys of overseas students have shown that
Australian’s safe environment is one of the big influences
on their decisions to study there.
AUSTRALIAN RESEARCH:
CUTS AND CASUAL WORK AFFECTING QUALITY
A research project
examining changes in academic work in Australia has found
that half the country's academics believe the academic
standards of graduates has declined and almost as many
report a decline in the quality of incoming students. Around
40% agree that grades have been inflated but only 25% think
this is a change for the worse and most believe that
plagiarism has increased. The research was done for the
Department of Education, Science and Training but it has
never released the final report. The figures came to light
when one of the research team, Don Anderson, summarised the
findings in a submission to the Australian Government's
higher education review. Since cuts to operating grants in
1996, Australian universities have argued that the quality
of education is at risk and Mr Anderson's submission
identifies this as the key problem. He called for a national
agency to be set up to measure and monitor standards across
the sector. His submission also highlights the effect a
growing proportion of casual staff is having on
universities. A majority of respondents thought
casualisation of university teaching was having an adverse
effect on quality and academic standards, with some saying
the training and supervision of casuals was adding to their
work. On the other hand, casuals were likely to be paid
poorly, made to feel on the outer, not provided with much
guidance or training and neglected by the over-worked
academics for whom they provide relief from the burden of
teaching.
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AUS
Tertiary Update is produced weekly 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, Policy Analyst:
margaret.ledgerton@aus.ac.nz