AUS Tertiary Update
Vice Chancellors seek action
on fees
The New Zealand Vice Chancellors’ Committee
(NZVCC) has asked Government to convene a working group to
consider “a more appropriate escalator for fee maxima”
following the recent decision to limit increases in student
tuition fees to a maximum of 5% in any year, and within the
confines of the fee maxima framework. The NZVCC has
described the fee maxima policy as being in tatters with the
three-year freeze in tuition fees being turned into a
further squeeze on institutions.
In addition to limiting
tuition fee increases to a maximum of 5%, the Government has
reduced the maximum fees for engineering, agriculture,
architecture, audiology and specialist large animal science,
and has limited the maximum increase in postgraduate tuition
fees to $500 in any one year.
NZVCC Chair, Dr John Hood,
said that the changes had broken previous commitments by the
Government and were not in the best interests of students,
universities and the wider community. Waikato University
Vice-Chancellor, Professor Bryan Gould, said universities
were being encouraged to run like businesses but it was a
highly rigged market when prices were fixed.
Similarly,
University of Otago Vice-Chancellor Dr Graeme Fogelberg said
his institution would pay a heavy price, having kept fees
down, and then being “clobbered” by both the freeze and the
fee maxima policy change.
The NZVCC has also taken issue
with Government’s intention to adjust the fee maxima in
future years using the Consumer Price Index, saying that
over the last five years the CPI has risen by 9.9% while
Statistics New Zealand’s earning and employment survey has
recorded a 19.4% increase in average earnings over that
period.
Associate Minister of Education (Tertiary),
Steve Maharey, has said he will raise this issue of
indexation of tuition subsidies, but not tuition fees, with
the Minister of Finance.
Also in Tertiary Update this week
1. Bargaining teams named
2. Pay equity for
university women
3. Bids open for new tertiary funding
allocations
4. Quality Public Education
Coalition
5. MPs and unions join in top-up fee
fight
6. Saudi to allow foreign private
universities
7. Nepalese students burn exam
papers
Bargaining teams named
The Association of
University Staff (AUS) has announced its negotiating team
following the initiation of national collective agreement
bargaining with the universities. The AUS team will be led
by advocate Jeff Rowe along with Nigel Haworth (Auckland),
David Neilson (Waikato), Robyn May (Victoria), Mike Shurety
(Canterbury), George Hill (Lincoln), Sandy Graham (Otago),
and Adrianne Paranihi (representing the Status of Women
Committee and Te Kahurangi Whaiti). A Massey representative
is expected to be confirmed before negotiations
commence
The University employers will be represented by
Doug Northey (Auckland), Carole Gunn (Waikato), Annemarie de
Castro and Fiona Stenhouse (Massey), Geoff Summers
(Victoria), Bruce Jamieson (Canterbury), Raewyn Gibson and
Kiri McAlister (Lincoln), and Stephen Gray (Otago). It is
not known whether the New Zealand Vice Chancellors’
Committee will play a role in negotiations or who will be
the employers’ advocate.
The Association of Staff in
Tertiary Education (ASTE) will be represented by Cheri
Waititi (Waikato), Harold Shepherd (Massey) and Jenny
Chapman (co-advocate), and the Public Service Association
(PSA) by Pam Jemett (Otago), Thelma Fisher Te-Wake (Waikato)
and Mark Ryan (co-advocate).
It is expected that union
and employer representatives will meet in Wellington on 10
September to agree on a number of bargaining arrangements,
including setting dates for negotiations and establishing
bargaining protocols and good faith agreements.
Pay
equity for university women
Achieving pay equity for
university women will be the theme of the Association of
University Staff Women’s Biennial Conference to be held in
Wellington next Thursday. The conference theme is timely
given the recent establishment of the Government's Pay
Equity Taskforce which is developing a five year action plan
to achieve pay equity in the public sector. That Taskforce
is now undertaking a range of relevant research and
development projects necessary for finalising the
plan.
The conference will be opened by Margaret Wilson,
Minister of Labour, who will discuss the political agenda
for pay equity. Other speakers and workshop presenters
include experts in the field from Australia and New
Zealand.
The conference will deal with pay equity issues
within universities and workshops will look at mechanisms to
achieve pay equity in the sector. Information from the
workshops will inform the Association's strategy on the
issue, to be developed the following day.
For further
information and/or registrations please contact AUS Policy
Analyst, Margaret Ledgerton; margaret.ledgerton@aus.ac.nz or
Liz Poole, Women's Vice-President,
elizabeth.poole@stonebow.otago.ac.nz
Bids open for new
tertiary funding allocations
Tertiary education
organisations have four weeks to bid for $34 million of new
funding for innovation and e-learning projects. Applications
for the new funds close on 26 September with the Tertiary
Education Commission.
The e-Learning Collaborative
Development Fund and the Innovation and Development Fund
make $34 million available for projects that build capacity
within the tertiary education sector. Tertiary Education
Commissioner Shona Butterfield said that E-learning needs to
move from being the domain of innovators alone, to being
embedded in the way an organization works.
For further
information on the e-Learning Collaborative Development and
the Innovation and Development funds, email:
ecdf@tec.govt.nz or idf@tec.govt.nz
Quality Public
Education Coalition
A special general meeting of the
Quality Public Education Coalition (QPEC) will be held on
Saturday 13 September to follow up themes explored at the
recent QPEC conference, “Reclaiming Public Education”. The
meeting will develop a plan of action to put key public
issues at the centre of community and government attention
in the coming years.
The conference will be held at
Education House, 178 Willis Street, Wellington, commencing
at 10.00am.
For further information please contact:
jbminto@xtra.co.nz
Worldwatch
MPs and unions join in
top-up fee fight
The British Association of University
Teachers (AUT) has proposed a motion for next week's Trade
Union Congress annual conference slating the Government's
£3,000-a-year tuition fees plan. Even though the Prime
Minister has said university lecturers stand to gain big
salary rises if the fees are brought in, the teachers came
out against the policy with all guns blazing. Last night,
ministers were privately predicting that the charges would
bite the dust in the first stage of a massive Labour
backlash against Mr Blair's "presidential" leadership style.
Education secretary Charles Clarke has begun a campaign,
however, to persuade Labour MPs to support university top-up
fees by declaring that there was "no alternative" to higher
charges for students. He told the Association of
Commonwealth Universities meeting in Belfast this week that
the days when higher education could be funded entirely from
the public purse were gone. He said plans to allow
universities to charge up to £3,000 a year from 2006 were
"actually rather conservative" by international
standards.
Saudi to allow foreign private
universities
Saudi Arabia's Ministry of Higher Education
has announced plans to allow foreign universities to
establish a presence in the kingdom for the first time.
Khaled al-Angari, Saudi Arabia's minister of higher
education, told a news conference last week that foreign
investment in the private higher-education sector was open
and the opening of foreign universities in Saudi Arabia
would be welcomed.
Saudi Arabia has one of the world's
fastest growing populations and only nine universities for a
country of 23 million people. According to the Ministry of
Higher Education, Saudi colleges and universities have
almost reached their capacity. Saudi universities accepted
178,500 first year students this year.
Nepalese students
burn exam papers
Students in Nepal set fire to test
papers and buildings this week to halt examinations in a
protest against King Gyanendra's dissolution of the
government last
year.
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
distributed freely to members of the union and others. Back
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http://www.aus.ac.nz. Direct enquires to Marty Braithwaite,
AUS Communications Officer, email:
marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz