AUS Tertiary Update
In our lead story this
week…..
University union urges support for four weeks'
holiday
The AUS has urged all members of the Government
to support the call for increased annual holidays for all
workers. AUS President, Dr Grant Duncan, said today that the
Association believed it timely that Progressive Coalition
MP, Matt Robson's, private member's Bill which seeks to
increase the minimum annual holiday entitlement from three
weeks to four is to be considered by Parliament.
"While
many university employees presently have four weeks annual
leave, there are still some university and many private
sector employees who only have the current statutory minimum
of three weeks", said Dr Duncan. "At a time when workloads
and productivity are increasing, three weeks is no longer a
sufficient holiday entitlement. An average academic staff
member now works 53 hours per week, a level which is not
sustainable without additional leave."
Dr Duncan said
the Association was concerned by statements attributed to
the Associate Minister of Education, Steve Maharey, prior to
the general election, that Labour did not want to see
holidays increased. In calling on Labour and United Future
MPs to support Matt Robson's bill, Dr Duncan said that
employers had shown they could not be relied upon to
increase leave entitlements, and it was up to Government to
provide that leadership.
Also in Tertiary Update this
week
1. 3.5% Salary offer at Waikato
2. Fogelberg
attacks fee setting legislation
3. Academics call on SIS
to open archives
4. AUS calls for stop to attacks on
Asian immigrants
5. Wellington College of Education ASTE
members suspended
6. Questions in the House on tertiary
education
7. Foreign students set to increase
8. U. of
California Will Ask Some Students to Verify Information on
Their Applications
3.5% Salary offer at Waikato
Protest
action proposed for Waikato University has been held off
while staff consider fresh offers to settle the academic and
general staff collective employment agreement negotiations.
Following a further two days negotiation at Waikato this
week, the salary offer for both groups of staff has been
increased to 3.5%, complimented by a restructuring of salary
scales. While AUS negotiators are recommending that the
offers, which will be put to ratification within a
fortnight, are accepted, concern has been expressed that the
increased salary offer will come at the expense of cuts to
operating budgets.
A 3.5% salary offer made to staff at
Victoria University will be put to a ratification ballot
early next week.
Fogelberg attacks fee setting
legislation
Otago vice chancellor, Dr Graeme Fogelberg,
launched a stinging attack on the Tertiary Education Reform
Bill at that University’s Council meeting earlier this week.
Dr Fogelberg described Government plans to set tuition fee
maximums for tertiary institutions as “the worst kind of
interfering by Government in university affairs” and said
the legislation, which would allow the Government to set
maximum fee levels for academic courses, was the “worst
piece of legislation” that he had seen in New Zealand.
Continuing his attack, Dr Fogelberg compared the
Government’s proposal to the Muldoon era and said it was
price fixing of the “worst kind”.
Academics call on SIS to
open archives
Some of the country’s top academics are
calling for the Government to open up the archives on the
SIS.
Senior political science staff from the country’s
top tertiary institutions have signed an open letter to
Prime Minister Helen Clark calling for New Zealand to follow
the norm of its allies and open up security service archives
older than 30 years 'in the interest of a more democratic
and open society’.
AUS calls for stop to attacks on Asian
immigrants
AUS President, Grant Duncan, said that he
deplores the continuing attacks made by Winston Peters on
our Asian community. "Many valuable members of our
universities, and of New Zealand society as a whole, are
recent immigrants”, he said. "Xenophobic attitudes are
completely contrary to the inclusive and multicultural
values of a modern education system. NZ First's policies
will now be coloured by their leader's attacks and one,
therefore, has to question the credibility of any statements
that NZ First make on tertiary education”.
Wellington
College of Education ASTE members suspended
Wellington
College of Education ASTE members have been suspended
because they have been taking low level industrial action
including withholding grades, and not attending college
meetings for moderation and planning for 2003. This follows
unsuccessful negotiations to renew the collective agreement
at the college. Crunch issues for the union for settlement
include workload and salary, with the employer refusing to
move from its 2.5% offer. ASTE members are seeking 3.25%.
Messages of support for ASTE members can be emailed to:
Richard.Manning@wce.ac.nz
Questions in the House on
Tertiary Education
A number of questions about tertiary
education were asked in Parliament this week including one
on measures taken by the Government to ensure tertiary
education remains affordable to students. Associate
Minister of Education, Steve Maharey, explained the fees
freeze initiatives over the last three years including the
increases in EFTs funding that accompanied these deals.
National spokesperson Simon Power asked how the Minister
could honestly believe that the Government's efforts to make
tertiary education more affordable have worked, when under
its stewardship, overall levels of student debt have risen
from $2.9 billion to $4.7 billion, and 33,000 more students
took out loans last year than they did in 1999. The Minister
responded saying that that for the first time this year
student debt levelled off, because of the policies of the
Government.
World Watch
Foreign students set to
multiply
A prediction that Australia's international
student market could be worth more than $10 billion a year
by 2010, and $38 billion by 2025, has been made by promoter
IDP Education Australia. That compares with an estimated
education export income of $4.15 billion for the 2001-02
financial year. Queensland Education Minister Anna Bligh
recently left for a 10-day visit with chancellors and
vice-chancellors, saying China was the sixth biggest source
of full-fee-paying students in Queensland, with a 25 per
cent annual growth. South Australian Premier Mike Rann, told
an education industry dinner in Shanghai that enticing more
Chinese to study at South Australian universities was
crucial. He said the number of students coming from China
had trebled during the past two years.
U. of California
Will Ask Some Students to Verify Information on Their
Applications
To discourage applicants from embellishing
their admissions applications, the University of California
system will begin spot-checking the veracity of students'
statements about their personal achievements and
experiences. The university will ask an unspecified number
of applicants to provide evidence to support the claims in
their admissions essays and lists of activities. The
university's "systemwide verification process" is believed
to be the first such program in the nation.
A faculty
report was issued by a committee that has studied the
overhaul of the admissions process. The new policy, which
took effect for students applying for this fall's freshman
class at the system's six most competitive campuses,
broadens the criteria for evaluating students: While 50 to
75 percent of applicants had been admitted solely on 10
academic criteria, like grades and standardized test scores,
the university now takes into account factors such as
special talents and overcoming adversity for all applicants.
Although the faculty group concluded that the new
policy, known as "comprehensive review," had maintained the
academic quality of admitted students, the report noted that
questions about the reliability of information on which
admissions decisions are based "have intensified because of
the perception that greater weight ... is being placed on
information contained in the personal statement and list of
supplemental honours and activities that students provide."
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AUS Tertiary Update is compiled
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 enquires to Marty
Braithwaite, AUS Communications Officer, email:
marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz