AUS Tertiary Update
Hood appointed to head
Oxford University
Current University of Auckland
Vice-Chancellor, Dr John Hood, has been appointed as the
next Vice-Chancellor of England’s Oxford University. He is
the first person in the 900 year history of the University
to have been selected from outside the institution and will
take up his appointment on 1 October 2004. The initial
period of appointment is five years with the possibility of
renewal for a further two years.
Dr Hood will remain in
his current position until “close to that time”, and in the
interim the University’s Council will undergo a process to
appoint a successor.
Dr Hood’s appointment was approved
by the University of Oxford Congregation, a committee of
around 3,000 academic, senior research, library, and
administrative staff which has the final say on all
legislative decisions at the University.
Also in Tertiary
Update this week:
1. Fee and course costs maxima – the
debate continues
2. Course support for aviation
students
3. Otago student numbers to be
restricted?
4. Teaching awards on Monday
5. AUS leader
on pay equity taskforce
6. AUS Council supports Iraq
children
7. Australian government misrepresents funding
gain
Fee and course costs maxima – the debate
continues
The government has received a steady stream of
submissions following the announcement of proposed fee and
course-cost maxima in the May Budget. Indicative schedules
of the maximum fees that can be charged from 2004 until 2006
have prompted fifty five submissions from all areas of the
sector. They will be analysed and considered as part of the
process of finalising the fees and course-cost maxima, due
to be completed by the end of July.
Associate Education
Minister, Steve Maharey, said that the Tertiary Education
Reform Act which Parliament passed in December 2002 required
the indicative fee and courses-cost maxima to be gazetted so
that comment from interested parties could be received prior
to them being finalised.
“The government has a statutory
period, through to July 22, to consider the submissions on
the proposed schedule. I will finalise the fee and
course-costs maxima after that,” Mr Maharey
said.
Education Review reports that the New Zealand Vice
Chancellor’s Committee (NZVCC) is saying that university
leaders are concerned that increases to the fee maxima
beyond 2004 will be restricted to the level of inflation.
NZVCC has questioned whether the Consumer Price Index (CPI)
is the right measure for controlling the level of increase,
saying that some course costs could easily rise at a greater
rate that the CPI. It has also asked government whether it
would allow increases which are higher than the level of
inflation in order to improve the quality of tertiary
education.
NZVCC Director Lindsay Tairoa drew specific
attention to the pay aspirations of staff and questioned
whether they would be happy with pay rises limited to the
rate of inflation.
AUS National President, Dr Bill
Rosenberg, reinforced this view, saying that staff would
need to gain salary increases at rates considerably higher
than the rate of inflation over the next few years to regain
ground lost over the last decade.
The New Zealand
University Students’ Association (NZUSA) has argued that the
fee maxima will result in considerably higher fees for
students. NZUSA Co-President, Roz Connelly, said she was not
optimistic that government would listen sufficiently to
student concerns and predicted that it would now be
politically difficult for it to go back on the proposal. She
said there was no justification for the introduction of new
maxima bands for commerce and law as they were no more
expensive to teach than other humanities subjects.
Course
support for aviation students
Tertiary Education
Commission (TEC) officials met with sector representatives
involved with aviation training in Wellington last week for
consultation around the government’s decision to provide
funding for a limited number of aviation students with their
in-flight training costs. The government proposes to spend
$0.477 million in 2003/4 and $0.957 in each of the two
subsequent years to support this initiative.
Aviation
training programmes have experienced significant growth in
the last decade, increasing from around 200 EFTS in the
early 1990’s to 850 last year. As reported in Tertiary
Update last week, aviation course costs are high and there
is already concern that some programmes may be at risk with
the implementation of fee maxima.
The TEC is preparing a
paper for the Associate Minister of Education, Steve
Maharey, looking at the broader issues of aviation training.
It will include details on current provision and costs,
industry needs, graduate employment, capacity, and the
impact of such factors as SARS and terrorism on the growth
of aviation.
Otago student numbers to be
restricted?
The Otago branch of the AUS has given
qualified support to suggestions by the Vice-Chancellor Dr.
Graeme Fogelberg that Otago University needs to consider
restricting student numbers, but it warns that this must not
be at the expense of poor students. The University’s roll
has grown by more than 1,000 equivalent full-time students
this year, to 15,787, leading to Dr Fogelberg’s statement
that numbers may need to be restricted to ease pressures on
the university’s infrastructure and to ensure academic
excellence. The Otago Daily Times reports the
Vice-Chancellor saying that if Otago is to stand equal to
the best in the world, the University needs to “set certain
standards of academic excellence”.
AUS Branch President,
Mark Peters, said that the rapidly increasing role had
created heavier workloads and put greater pressure on
student resources. He said any system of restricting student
growth needs to be fair and equitable, but equally could not
disadvantage students on academic grounds either.
Teaching
awards on Monday
This year’s annual tertiary teaching
awards will be presented at an awards dinner hosted by the
Prime Minister, Helen Clark, at Parliament on Monday night.
The awards aim to recognise and encourage excellence in
tertiary teaching and provide an opportunity for teachers to
further their careers and share good practice with others.
The purpose of the awards is to recognise and encourage
excellence in tertiary teaching, encourage and promote good
practice, and enhance career development for teachers by
valuing and rewarding excellent teaching practice.
Awards for excellence are considered in three
categories. There are up to 9 awards of $20,000 each and a
supreme award, the Prime Minister’s Award, of $30,000. The
selection process is undertaken by a Tertiary Teaching
Awards Committee and is supported by the New Zealand
Qualifications Authority.
AUS leader on pay equity
taskforce
AUS General Secretary, Helen Kelly, has been
elected as the education sector representative for the New
Zealand Council of Trade Unions to the Government’s Pay
Equity Taskforce. The Taskforce will advise the government
on how the factors that contribute to the gender pay gap
apply in particular parts of the public service and public
health and education sectors, and on a five year plan of
action to address pay and employment equity. The Taskforce
is required to report to a Ministerial Reference Group by 1
December 2003.
Ms Kelly has also been appointed to the
NZCTU Appointments Committee whose job it is to oversee
appointments to tertiary institution councils.
AUS
Council supports Iraq children
AUS has supported a
request from Education International, the international
education union federation to which AUS is affiliated, to
contribute to an appeal for children in Iraq. $500 has been
authorised for donation by the AUS Council and another $500
by two branches.
Care is being taken to ensure the money
will be used in a legitimate way and will be channelled
through reliable independent agencies to ensure the money
goes directly to intended recipients.
Australian
Government misrepresents funding gain
The National
Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) has accused the Australian
Government of substantially misrepresenting the funding gain
to universities from its higher education reform package
announced recently in the Australian Budget. It says that
only $753 of the $1.46 billion announced in the Budget is
genuinely new money.
NTEU President, Dr Carolyn Allport,
says changes to the system of funding student places will
see Canberra “claw back” $584 million, much of which will be
returned to universities s conditional funding. She said the
government had also failed to acknowledge that it will save
$128 million on payments for over-enrolments which are being
phased out by 2005.
Dr Allport said that the Federal
Government is proposing to allow universities to increase
the Higher Education Contribution Scheme (HECS), student
fees, up by
30%
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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