AUS Tertiary Update
Student fee protest shuts
council meeting
Victoria University students protesting
about tuition fee increases forced the cancellation of the
university council meeting yesterday in what has been
described as “just the beginning” of a national campaign
against fee increases by the New Zealand University
Students’ Association (NZUSA).
The university council
meeting was cancelled after chanting students packed out the
public gallery and drowned out council members. Afterwards a
group of students staged a sit-in at the university’s
reception area. Victoria student president, Catherine
Belfield-Haines said students were protesting about a
proposed 3% increase in tuition fees for 2004 and said they
would “continue to protest until the university agrees not
to put fees up.”
NZUSA Co-President, Fleur Fitzsimons
said the Victoria protest had given “university bosses the
chance to rethink their greedy fee grab.”
Victoria
University vice-chancellor, Professor Stuart McCutcheon,
said he recommended a 3% fee rise as a reasonable compromise
between the students’ wish for a fee freeze and the need to
improve facilities, give staff salary increases and expand
the university to meet growing student numbers. He said the
council meeting would be rescheduled.
University of Otago
students have warned that they too will take action if their
university council tries to raise fees next year. Otago
student president, Nick Lanham said a possible “5% increase
in fees was 5% too much” and called on the council to set
fees at less than 2003 levels.
Meanwhile, the University
of Auckland has put fees up by an average of 4.1% for
domestic students and by 5% for international students for
2004. Auckland Vice-Chancellor, Dr John Hood said fees would
go up because the university could not risk damaging the
quality of the education it offers to students. “Rather than
see standards eroding, the university is determined to
improve the quality and international standing of its
education and research,” he said. “Current government policy
does not fully address the realities of higher education
cost structures.”
Also in Tertiary Update this
week
1. Government agrees to protocol with
PTEs
2. Gender pay gap evident in
universities
3. Otago Polytechnic recovery plan biased
against staff
4. Massey set to centralise aviation
courses
5. Top-ups non-negotiable
6. U.S. Awards
Academic Grants for Bioterrorism Preparedness
Government
agrees to protocol with PTEs
The government is to sign a
protocol with the New Zealand Association of Private
Education Providers (NZAPEP) acknowledging its role as the
leading private tertiary training sector representative
organisation and signaling the intent of the parties to work
cooperatively together.
Speaking at the Association’s
conference in Wellington yesterday, Associate Minister of
Education (tertiary), Steve Maharey said that the private
tertiary education sector had an assured place in the new
tertiary education system complementing New Zealand’s 35
public tertiary institutions. “Establishing effective
partnerships between tertiary education organizations,
industry, the community, the Tertiary Education Commission
and the government is crucial to bringing about the kind of
change the post school education system is being called on
the achieve,” he said.
Gender pay gap evident in
universities
The Minister of Labour, Hon Margaret Wilson,
has told university women that there is evidence the gender
pay gap exists as much in universities as other sectors of
the workforce.
Opening the Association of University
Staff (AUS) Biennial Women’s Conference, Ms Wilson said that
while academic staff at universities and other tertiary
institutions have high levels of education and experience,
there was evidence that the gender gap is greater for well
paid women than for low income earners. With respect to
general (non-academic) staff in universities, Ms Wilson
cited the University of Auckland EEO report which found that
while women were well represented numerically in the
workforce, they were not well represented in senior
positions.
The conference was told that the government’s
taskforce on pay and employment equity is examining the
social, employment, economic, and other factors contributing
to pay and employment inequity and to advise government on a
5 year plan to address those inequities. Research shows that
women’s hourly earnings lag 15.7% behind men overall, but
21% behind for high earners.
Margaret Wilson, a former
AUS member, said more direct support for pay equity would
also come out of the review of the Employment Relations Act.
She said updating the existing equal pay legislation would
make it more accessible and user-friendly and reinforce the
fundamental right to equal pay for men and women doing the
same job.
More than 60 women from New Zealand
universities attended the conference which examined the
theme of achieving pay equity for university women. Included
among the speakers was Carolyn Allport, National President
of the Australian National Tertiary Education Union, who
described the approaches being taken in Australia to achieve
pay equity for university women.
Otago Polytechnic
recovery plan biased against staff
The Association of
Staff in Tertiary Education (ASTE) has claimed that a
recovery plan to turn around a projected $2.28 million loss
at Otago Polytechnic is biased against staff and based on
inaccurate information. The polytechnic’s business recovery
plan, released for consultation in August, proposes to turn
its projected operational deficit into a targeted surplus of
$2.51 million by the end of 2005, but at the expense of as
many as 60 jobs.
ASTE National President, Lloyd Woods,
says the recovery plan is unacceptable and fails to
acknowledge the poor financial performance of previous
management or that the polytechnic is in better financial
shape than presented in the report.
The previous chief
executive resigned late last year after an Audit New Zealand
investigation into what was described as a “botched”
redevelopment of the campus resulting in a $2.5 million
budget blow-out.
In a submission to the polytechnic
council, ASTE challenges the assumption that the only way
for the polytechnic to recover financially is to axe staff.
It points to a 10.8% growth in equivalent full-time students
which would give additional income of $2.75 million, and
concludes that the key to the future well-being of the
polytechnic is a dedicated staff committed to the provision
of high quality education.
Massey set to centralise
aviation courses
Massey University is considering
centralising its aviation courses after concerns about the
overall performance of the School of Aviation which operates
out of both Palmerston North and Albany-Ardmore. Originally
based in Palmerston North, the School expanded in 1998 with
the purchase of Flightline College, an established flying
school at Ardmore in Auckland. At that time there were 490
students in Palmerston North and around 40 full-time and 800
part-time students at Ardmore. Acting pro vice-chancellor of
Massey’s College of Business, Professor Jack Dowds, said
Albany-Ardmore currently had about 500 students and
Palmerston North only 50.
Professor Dowds said a
consultant’s draft report, aimed at revitalising the school,
had made the recommendation to relocate to Palmerston North,
saying that it would allow the School of Aviation to
interact with the School of Business.
Union members at
Albany-Ardmore have raised concerns with AUS about a number
of details of the consultant’s report and consultation will
be sought with university management prior to any final
decision being made.
Worldwatch
Top-ups
non-negotiable
British academic staff have been warned by
higher education minister Alan Johnson they will sacrifice
the chance of a decent pay rise if they fail to back the
government over top-up fees.
Mr Johnson said the country
faced a stark choice between raising the money necessary for
expansion and pay increases through graduate top-up fees, or
cutting investment in higher education and student places.
He said the government was in no mood for concessions over
its central policy of charging fees of up to £3,000 a year
in 2006. Tax rises were ruled out as an option by Mr Johnson
who said a failure to raise extra cash for higher education
from fees would be negligent in the face of chancellor
Gordon Brown's clear message that public spending could not
be allowed to rise at the rate it has done.
Mr Johnson, a
former union leader, also appealed to higher education staff
to support top-ups. His call came as members of the two
largest lecturing unions, the Association of University
Teachers (AUT) and Natfhe, supported a successful motion
rejecting top-up fees at the recent Trades Union Congress in
Brighton.
More than 130 Labour MPs have signed a motion
opposing top-up fees, and the Conservatives and Liberal
Democrats also oppose the fees.
Mr Johnson also ruled
out a flat-rate fee in place of the variable charging
structure proposed by the government. "The more I understand
the different cost structures among universities, the huge
diversity in courses and the difference in the expected rate
of return, the more I reject the argument for what Nicholas
Barr describes as the 'communism' of the fixed-rate
principle."
U.S. Awards Academic Grants for Bioterrorism
Preparedness
The U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services has awarded grants to 12 universities to support
curricular development in bioterrorism at health-professions
schools. The grants, which are administered by the
department's Health Resources and Services Administration,
total $4,221,541 and are part of $4.4-billion in federal
spending on bioterrorism preparedness in the 2003 fiscal
year.
The department also awarded more than $22-million
in continuing-education grants to a number of hospitals and
medical centres. Among them were several affiliated with
universities, including Columbia University, the Medical
University of South Carolina, Thomas Jefferson University
Hospital, the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences,
the University of California at San Francisco, the
University of Kansas Medical Centre, the University of
Louisville Research Foundation, the University of Medicine
and Dentistry of New Jersey, the University of New Mexico at
Albuquerque, the University of North Dakota, the University
of Tennessee Health Sciences Centre, the University of Texas
Health Sciences Centre at Houston, Virginia Commonwealth
University, and West Virginia University at Morgantown.
The grants will support continuing education in
bioterrorism preparedness for health
professionals
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
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http://www.aus.ac.nz. Direct enquires to Marty Braithwaite,
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