AUS Tertiary Update
In our lead story this
week…..
National bargaining for
universities
University staff representatives met in
Wellington for two days this week to develop a strategy to
pursue national collective employment agreement bargaining
in the University sector.
AUS General Secretary, Helen
Kelly, told the meeting of more than 50 university staff
that unless the unions can break though the government
funding barrier, they will always be bargaining for short
term outcomes or getting what they can within current levels
of government funding. She said that enterprise bargaining
had not made sufficient inroads into the salary deficiencies
in the sector and that current university salaries would not
sustain an internationally recognized workforce.
Helen
Kelly said that AUS had written to the Associate Minister of
Education (Tertiary), Steve Maharey, seeking a tripartite
approach to the funding and bargaining issues, and are due
to meet with the Minister later in March. She said that Mr.
Maharey is due to announce triennial funding for
universities on May 15, making this a critical time for the
AUS to engage with the universities and government over the
issue.
Meanwhile in what appears to be a very positive
step towards national bargaining in the tertiary sector,
seven polytechnic employers have agreed the meet ASTE, the
main union representing polytech staff, to discuss
multi-employer bargaining.
Also in Tertiary Update this
week . . . . .
1. Otago Polytechnic cutbacks spark
redundancy concerns
2. Waikato poised to set up in
Manukau
3. Credit transfer and recognition
easier
4. Third of Britain’s academics want to
quit
5. Thousands on strike at Yale
Otago Polytechnic
cutbacks spark redundancy concerns
Despite fears of
redundancies, staff and students at the troubled Otago
Polytechnic have pledged support to management as it looks
set to cut as much as $2.7 million from its budget over the
next 21 months. Fewer students than expected have enrolled
at Otago Polytechnic this year, adding to financial
difficulties following the botched campus redevelopment
programme and the resignation of chief executive Dr Wanda
Korndoffer late last year.
Acting chief executive, Dr
Robin Day said that unless action is taken the lower than
expected enrolments are expected to result in a deficit of
between $600,000 and $900,000, potentially compounding an
estimated loss of $280,000 in 2002. The polytechnic council
has asked management to come up with a financial recovery
plan, sparking the concerns about the possibility of
redundancies.
Staff unions, ASTE and TIASA, have
expressed support for the acting chief executive saying that
he seems committed to dealing with the financial problems
and to working openly with the unions. TIASA spokeswoman
Mona Cromb said that union members welcomed the increased
communication with polytech management, saying it was a
marked change from last year when staff and students voted
no confidence in the then chief executive, Dr
Korndoffer.
Waikato poised to set up in Manukau
Waikato
University appears poised to establish a campus in Manukau
City following a request from the Manukau City Council for a
“leading” university campus to be established in the area.
Waikato Vice Chancellor, Professor Bryan Gould, said Waikato
was Manukau’s “preferred provider” and was confident the
development would go ahead. Professor Gould said that they
were currently meeting with the Council and are engaged in
negotiation over facilities for the campus.
Waikato
already has a campus in Tauranga and has been in discussions
about establishing a campus in Taupo. Professor Gould said
that the new developments would not occur at the expense of
Hamilton, and would give the University a “very powerful
triangle in the North Island”.
Credit transfer and
recognition easier
Students changing tertiary courses or
training institutions will find it easier to transfer
credits for courses they have already passed under a new
policy announced last week.
Tertiary Education Minister
Steve Maharey said tertiary providers had agreed to
implement the Supporting Learning Pathways Credit
Recognition and Transfer Policy. "We want to make sure that
students who change the direction of their learning from one
education provider to another or towards a different
qualification, have every opportunity to have their previous
achievements recognised.”
He said that while credit
recognition and credit transfer are not new concepts, they
are increasingly important in a coherent tertiary education
sector. A common set of principles, agreed to by all
providers, will provide consistency and surety for students.
Providers have agreed to have consistent credit recognition
and credit transfer process in place from January 2004.
The policy is supported by the New Zealand Register of
Quality Assured Qualifications, which will be online in July
this year and will enable the public to view and compare all
qualifications that have been quality assured in New
Zealand. It was developed by the New Zealand Qualifications
Authority, working with a group from across the tertiary
sector, including universities, polytechnics, wananga,
student associations, and private training establishments
and will be implemented by the relevant quality assurance
bodies as part of their approval, accreditation and quality
assurance roles.
Worldwatch
One third of Britain’s
academics want to quit
Nearly one in three of Britain's
university academic and teaching staff is seriously
considering quitting the profession, because of a growing
workload and poor pay, according to a new survey out this
week. Nearly half the academics said morale had worsened in
the past two years, while an overwhelming majority
complained that they suffered from work-related stress. The
survey is the first snapshot of the views of academics since
the government published its long-delayed white paper on
higher education in January.
The survey, conducted by
ERS market research for the Association of University
Teachers (AUT), involved 1,817 union members, who were both
academic and academic-related and work at ‘old’ and ‘new’
universities.
Among the key survey findings, 72% are
dissatisfied with their pay, 62% suffer from ‘excessive’
workplace stress, and 81.7% said work impaired their quality
of life. Perhaps not surprisingly, 46% said morale had
worsened over the last two years, while 26.9% said they were
‘fairly seriously’ contemplating leaving higher
education.
Despite Government assurances that breaking
the link between research and teaching would let
universities excel in areas at which they are best, an
overwhelming 85.9% of those surveyed believed the link
between research and teaching should be retained.
The
AUT's general secretary, Sally Hunt, said: "This survey
should start a few alarm bells ringing in government
circles. It clearly shows that university staff are feeling
underpaid, stressed and demotivated. The government wants
the UK's academic and academic-related staff to implement
its reform agenda, and yet most of them feel ignored and
under-valued.
Thousands on strike at Yale
Thousands
of staff went on strike at Yale University last week forcing
the cancellation of many classes and the closure of
services. It was one of the broadest walkouts ever on an
American university campus, and the eighth at Yale since
1968, reinforcing Yale's reputation as having by far the
worst record of labour tension of any university in the
nation.
Four different union locals walked off the job
at the same time - one representing Yale's 2,900 clerical
workers, one representing its 1,200 cleaning, dining hall
and maintenance workers, one representing more than 1,000
graduate teaching and research assistants, and one
representing 150 food workers at Yale-New Haven Hospital.
More than 2,000 strikers, students and New Haven
residents rallied at Woolsey Hall, where they heard the Rev.
Jesse Jackson call on Yale to be more generous.
Professors, students, strikers and administrators gave
various theories to explain Yale's extraordinary string of
strikes, including longstanding distrust between Yale's
administration and the unions, militant labour leadership, a
long line of university administrators who looked down on
the workers and bitter town-gown relations that have taught
workers to resent Yale, the biggest employer in town.
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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