AUS Tertiary Update
In our lead story this
week…..
AUS conference supports move to national
bargaining
The annual conference of the Association of
University Staff (AUS) has unanimously endorsed a new
national approach to industrial bargaining and
salary-setting for more than 6,000 staff at New Zealand’s
universities.
The conference, held in Wellington this
week, gave the green light for the Association to pursue a
new national bargaining strategy in 2003 centered on
negotiating national collective employment agreements. They
will replace the current enterprise-based agreements
negotiated separately at each university. Two new agreements
are proposed, one for academic staff and another for general
staff.
AUS National President, Dr Grant Duncan, said that
the two national collective agreements for university staff
would bring greater consistency, collaboration and
efficiency to industrial matters within the sector.
“Furthermore, it is perfectly in tune with the changes being
made to the Government’s tertiary funding formula. We trust
that employers will also see the advantages of national
bargaining and will cooperate with the process”, he
said.
Addressing the AUS conference Associate Education
Minister, Steve Maharey, said that the Government was
comfortable with multi-employer bargaining within the
university sector as it is consistent with the collaborative
intent of the tertiary education reforms.
Also in Tertiary
Update this week:
1. Tertiary Reform Bill to be passed
today?
2. PBRF details emerge
3. Students gain roles
on TEC
4. Merger talks shift behind closed doors
5. No
performance pay for UK teaching
6. Web Site Lists
Professors Who 'Indoctrinate' Students
Tertiary Reform
Bill to be passed today?
The Tertiary Education Reform
Bill passed through its second reading in parliament on
Tuesday this week, and is expected to be passed into law
later today. The Bill establishes the Tertiary Education
Commission and introduces new policy instruments that take
effect from 1 January 2003. These include the Tertiary
Education Strategy (TES), the Statement of Tertiary
Education Priorities (STEP), policies for new funding
mechanisms, stronger quality assurance, industry training
review changes, and the export education levy. Some of the
reforms, such as charters and profiles and new funding
mechanisms, will take effect from 1 January 2004.
PBRF
details emerge
Details on tertiary funding changes,
proposed under the Tertiary Reform Bill, have begun to
emerge with the release of the report from the Performance
Based-Research Fund Working Group, set up in June to advise
the Government on how the PBRF will work in practice. The
recommendations in the report, Investing in Excellence, have
been accepted by the Government and will see research in
tertiary education funded from 2004 on the basis of quality
rather than enrolments. Excellence will be measured by peer
review, the number of advanced research degrees completed,
and the amount of external research income earned.
Government has said that over the next 4 years more than
an additional $200 million will be injected into research
funding, including $130.2 million into capital and operating
funding through the seven centres of research excellence,
$56.3 million into the PBRF itself, $25.2 million to support
the development of collaborative research with the private
sector, and continuing (but unspecified) increases to
Vote:Research, Science and Technology (such as the Marsden
Fund and FoRST).
AUS National President, Dr Grant Duncan,
said that while welcoming the new funding New Zealand’s
investment in research is still nowhere near even 1980
levels. “Our investment in research during the 1980s
decreased from 0.8% of GDP to around 0.6% and has not
increased significantly since then. Our level of investment
in research will still fall well short of that of our
nearest neighbour, Australia.”
Students gain roles on
TEC
The Government has announced that a learner (student)
advisory committee will be established to assist the
Tertiary Education Commission, and that a non-voting student
will be appointed to the TEC Board. The announcement was
made on Tuesday during the debate on the second reading of
the Tertiary Reform Bill.
AUS National President, Dr
Grant Duncan, welcomed the appointment of a non-voting
student representative to the Board but said that similar
representation needs to be established for staff. “Staff and
students form the basis of our tertiary education sector. It
is appropriate that both groups are at the table when
decisions about the sector are being made”, said Dr Duncan.
“While Mr. Maharey had initially said that the Tertiary
Education Commission was not to be a representative group,
the appointment of a student representative now signals this
is no longer the case”.
Dr Duncan said that the
Association has been promoting the concept of a university
reference group, but the need for a staff advisory committee
was also vitally important. Fundamental issues such as
workforce planning, funding, terms and conditions of
employment, and overall resources for teaching and research
require specific staff input. He said that the Commission is
a high level policy group with a broad strategic
responsibility, but needs specific staff input to provide
guidance on the operational implications of its decisions.
Today’s announcement paves the way for such a group to be
established.
“The proposed tertiary education reforms
will have a significant effect on staff and the
establishment of a staff advisory committee, and having a
staff position on the Board, would provide a greater basis
of support for the reform programme”, said Dr
Duncan
Merger talks shift behind closed
doors
Discussion over possible mergers between Lincoln
and other universities has shifted behind closed doors
following recent media reports that Lincoln had axed merger
proposals with Canterbury and may be considering a
partnership deal between Science Facultys with
Massey.
The public part of Lincoln University’s Council
meeting on Tuesday lasted only 33 minutes, during which
there was only scant mention of any proposed partnership.
Chancellor Margaret Austin told the meeting that Lincoln is
in command of its own destiny and is “working assiduously”
to ensure that everything is being done to make the
university attractive to students and to research
endeavour.
Discussion about the relationship between
Canterbury and Lincoln was confined to the private section
of Canterbury University’s Council meeting on Wednesday.
After the meeting a statement was released reaffirming the
University’s willingness to discuss collaboration and
possible partnership with Lincoln at any time and expressed
a hope of pursuing a growing relationship. It also stated a
commitment to a regional partnership with Christchurch’s
four publicly funded institutions through the Canterbury
Tertiary Alliance.
Worldwatch
No performance pay for UK
teaching
Following British Government hints that
performance-related pay for academic staff may be
introduced, the Association of University Teachers (AUT) has
secured an agreement that this will not happen. Margaret
Hodge, Minister for Higher Education, told AUT in a recent
meeting that her proposed national student feedback scheme
would not be linked to pay.
Ministers had earlier told
journalists that the new student feedback scheme would
require undergraduates to fill in forms and other detailed
paperwork assessing and grading the standard of their
teachers' work on an annual basis. The AUT had attacked the
plan to link this with pay saying it would be divisive,
unpopular and unworkable. The union has also pointed out
that research consistently shows that performance-related
pay discriminates against female and non-white staff.
AUT
general secretary, Sally Hunt, said: 'Performance-related
pay would be the single most divisive policy this government
could introduce. It would set colleague against colleague
and would benefit those lecturers who happen to be popular
with their students. Popularity and ability are by no means
one and the same thing.
Instead of tinkering at the
edges, what is needed is a substantial pay rise for all
university staff.'
Web Site Lists Professors Who
'Indoctrinate' Students
A new American Web site allows
students to anonymously accuse their professors of political
bias.
The site, NoIndoctrination.org, which was launched
recently, was started by a parent who labelled as
objectionable a writing course taken by her son at the
University of California at San Diego.
The Web site
allows students to name the professor concerned and to rate
the perceived level of bias in a lecture, reading list, and
class discussions as "noticeable," "objectionable," or
"extreme." It also permits students to post accusations
anonymously, a practice defended because it says identifying
students would invite retaliation from professors.
Professors can write rebuttals to students' accusations,
though so far only one has been posted.
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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