AUS Tertiary Update
In our lead story this
week…..
Tertiary Consultative Group meets
AUS policy
analyst, Margaret Ledgerton, joined with a wide range of
tertiary education sector stakeholders last week as part of
a Tertiary Consultative Group (TCG). The TCG will meet once
or twice a year for consultation and discussion on a broad
range of issues arising in the sector. Those present
included Ministers of Education, Ministry of Education, NZQA
and Tertiary Education Commission officials as well as
tertiary employer (both public and private) groups, unions,
students quality assurance bodies and external
stakeholders.
The TCG is intended to bring a broad sense
of cohesion into the tertiary sector. It will liaise with
other sectors, such as the secondary sector, provide input
into the ongoing development of wider tertiary policies, and
monitor and advise on the operation of existing
policies.
While AUS believes that the TCG is a valuable
forum, it should not be a replacement for more on-going
specific sector consultation processes. In particular AUS
strongly advocates the need for a university reference group
within TEC in order to address specific university
issues.
Also in Tertiary Update this week . . . .
1.
Waikatos Manukau moves delayed
2. Victoria mail
service to remain in-house
3. Advertising figures
slammed
4. Medical student numbers to rise
5.
Senior doctors seek national agreement
6. 12.5%
salary offer in Queensland
7. Egyptian scholar
acquitted
Waikatos Manukau moves delayed
Moves to
develop a Waikato University campus at Manukau city may be
delayed as other tertiary providers enter the debate about
who should provide public tertiary education in the area. A
presentation to the Manukau City Council by Waikato
university, due to be held last Friday, was delayed and it
is understood that the City Council will now be briefed on
competing proposals from the Manukau Institute of
Technology, Unitec and the University of Auckland. Advice is
also being sought from the Tertiary Education
Commission.
Manukau City is now New Zealands largest
population base without a university and says that in order
to improve participation rates in tertiary education and
bring research capabilities to local industries it is
prepared to make land available in the area to establish a
university campus.
Despite the delay City Council
manager, Colin Dale, said the Council remains keen to see
the new tertiary institution in the area.
A decision is
not now expected until some time in April.
Victoria
mail service to remain in-house
A panel reviewing mail
services at Victoria University has recommended that the
internal mail delivery service remains in-house with the
staff continuing to be employed by the university. The
recommendation comes following a review in which staff were
asked to comment on options which included contracting-out
the mail delivery. A campaign by the AUS Victoria branch
resulted in 279 staff submissions, every one in favour of
the service remaining in-house.
The review panel has
made several recommendations for expanding and improving the
in-house mail service and a decision on these
recommendations will be made after further consultation with
staff.
That decision comes at a time when it appears
likely that job losses will result from a proposal to
contract-out security services at
Canterbury.
Advertising figures slammed
The New
Zealand University Students Association (NZUSA) has slammed
spending on advertising by public tertiary education
providers with AC Neilson, which it says has risen by nearly
two thirds since 1999.
Public universities, polytechnics
and colleges of education spent nearly $75 million competing
with each other in advertising over the last four years,
said NZUSA Co-President Roz Connelly. This represents a
massive waste in public money and in student fees.
The
increase in spending took place during a period that
government hailed as the end of competition in public
tertiary education.
The amount wasted by public tertiary
institutions rose significantly each year of the Labour
government," said NZUSA Co-President Fleur Fitzsimons.
"Spending on TV, radio, print and cinema advertising went
from just under $13 million in 1999 to over $23 million in
2002.
The AC Nielsen figures are only the tip of the
iceberg, said Fitzsimons. When you add in marketing staff at
institutions, direct mail, and the plethora of promotions
and competitions run by institutions, the marketing bill
will be well in excess of $100 million.
Medical student
numbers to rise
Health Minister Annette King says New
Zealand's medical practitioner workforce will be
significantly boosted following an announcement that the cap
on funded medical students will increase from 285 full-time
students to 325 per year. Ms King said at the Health
Workforce Advisory Committee (HWAC) summit, held in
Wellington this week that Tertiary Education Minister Steve
Maharey had agreed to the increased cap, coming into effect
next year. Ms King said the extra 40 full-time medical
students would be shared equally between Otago and Auckland
Universities.
The HWAC summit, attended by 150 delegates
from across the health sector, is designed to develop a
long-term strategic plan for health workforce development in
New Zealand.
Senior doctors seek national
agreement
Senior doctors have formally initiated national
collective agreement negotiations with district health
boards. The Association of Medical Specialists (ASMS)
expects to finalise its claim at a National Executive
meeting on 10 April and negotiations will commence on 29
April.
ASMS Executive Director, Ian Powell said that
"senior doctors were denied the right to national
negotiations under the former corrosive Employment Contracts
Act. We were forced into local negotiations that, over the
years, led to a fragmentation of employment conditions and
associated anomalies throughout the country despite our best
efforts for national consistency."
"Under the more
flexible Employment Relations Act we have now the
opportunity to address these anomalies and negotiate a
robust national agreement that will go some way to help
address New Zealand's serious recruitment and retention
problems and relieve the increasingly onerous workloads,
work conditions and stress currently facing senior
doctors."
Salaries and conditions of employment for a
number of clinical staff at Otago Universitys Schools of
Medicine are, in part, determined by the ASMS
agreements.
Worldwatch
12.5% salary offer in
Queensland
Griffith University in Queensland has made an
initial salary offer of 12.5% over three years to staff to
kick off the current bargaining round. The offer, which has
been made to both academic and general staff, includes
extending paid parental leave from 12 to 14 weeks and
introducing teaching assistant positions for research
students.
Egyptian scholar acquitted
Egypt's highest
court, the Court of Cassation, has acquitted a prominent
Egyptian-American professor, Saad Eddin Ibrahim, of
"undermining the dignity of the state and tarnishing its
reputation," bringing to an end a three-year legal saga that
many scholars and human-rights leaders say exposed the
fragility of academic freedom in that country.
The
64-year-old Mr. Ibrahim had been a professor of political
sociology at the American University in Cairo for a
quarter-century before his arrest in June 2000. The charges
against him were related to his work at the Ibn Khaldun
Centre for Development Studies, which he founded, an
independent research institute that focused on controversial
political and social issues in an effort to promote human
rights and democracy in Egypt. The centre was shut down by
the Egyptian government following Mr. Ibrahim's arrest.
Mr. Ibrahim, who is a dual Egyptian and American
citizen, was initially convicted in July 2002 and sentenced
to seven years in prison. Mr. Ibrahim's case has drawn
international attention to Egypt's judicial system by the
European Union, the United States, and international
human-rights groups. Amnesty International adopted Mr.
Ibrahim as a "prisoner of conscience."
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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