AUS Tertiary Update
Students arrested during fee
hike protest
Twelve students were arrested at Massey
University yesterday during a protest over tuition fee
increases. Those arrested are due to appear in the
Palmerston North District Court on Friday facing trespass
and related charges. Among those arrested were the New
Zealand University Students' Association (NZUSA)
co-president Fleur Fitzsimons and Massey University
Student's Association president Andrea Grant.
The
students were protesting after Massey University Council
voted last week, by eight votes to five, to approve a 3.5
per cent increase for next year's tuition fees. Council
member Liz Gordon said there was no need for Massey to
increase fees as the university is in good financial shape
and the council had been provided with no evidence that the
increase in fees would enhance quality.
Concern has been
expressed at the manner in which yesterday’s arrests were
made. NZUSA co-president Roz Connelly said she understood
there had been very limited negotiation before the arrests,
and AUS Massey Branch President Harvey Jones said he was
concerned at the heavy handed way in which the students were
dealt with. He said he hoped it was not a signal of the way
in which Massey would deal with any future disagreements
with staff or students.
“To my knowledge, the student's
demands were not heard and real negotiation did not occur,”
he said. “Universities are supposed to be places of
collegiality and discussion and, although we don’t condone
militant action and occupation of buildings, I can
understand the reasoning for such action when a major
'stakeholder' is not listened to”.
Acting
Vice-Chancellor, Professor Ken Heskin, said the students had
broken down two doors and that thousands of dollars of
damage had been done to the Registry building.
Victoria
University has also been hit with student protests over the
setting of tuition fees for 2004. After forcing the
cancellation of the September council meeting, students
disrupted a similar meeting last week where fees were due to
be set forcing it to be shifted to a secret location. About
45 students filled the public gallery of the initial meeting
and used whistles, cymbals and trumpets to protest against a
proposed fee rise. Attempts to call that meeting to order
were drowned out and, after a formal warning to be quiet,
public were excluded and the meeting shifted.
A six hour
occupation of the Hunter building followed the meeting but
was short-lived when Victoria vice-chancellor, Professor
Stuart McCutcheon, warned the students they could be banned
from campus for two years if they remained. A public
notice, mourning the death of democracy, was placed in the
Dominion Post on Monday by students claiming their right to
be heard was silenced as a result of the change to the
meeting venue.
Victoria University has increased fees by
3% for 2004.
Also in Tertiary Update this
week
1. Student loan debt predicted to hit $14
billion
2. Negotiations delayed, mediation for university
staff
3. Call for more R&D spending
4. Lincoln
vice-chancellor retires
5. Online student loan service
launched
6. Sydney strike successful, national action
planned
7. SA to Fight Commercialisation of Education
Student loan debt predicted to hit $14 billion
The
latest Student Loan Scheme Annual Report, tabled in
parliament this week, shows that the overall gross student
loan debt is expected to reach $14.4 billion by 2020. While
the figure is down from an estimated $17 billion reported
last year and $20 billion estimated in 2000, AUS National
President Dr Bill Rosenberg says the long-term burden placed
on students and graduates is completely unacceptable.
While the Associate Minister of Education (Tertiary),
Steve Maharey, said the findings in the report are a
“concrete sign of the government’s ongoing moves to make
tertiary education more affordable for students,” Dr
Rosenberg says the Minister had failed to do anything more
than make a marginal reduction in the rate at which student
debt is growing.
Dr Rosenberg called on the Minister to
take a hard look at the overall public investment in
university funding with the purpose of relieving student
debt and to improving conditions for staff.
NZUSA
co-president Fleur Fitzsimons says Mr. Maharey “could not
have chosen a worse time to try and show how good the
student loan scheme is”. She says student debt has doubled
under Labour and will double again. “Maharey has huge
problems on his hands and his system of fee maxima is
clearly not making tertiary education more affordable. While
debt forecasts may have reduced, they still show debt will
hit $14.5 billion by 2020.”
Negotiations delayed,
mediation for university staff
Collective agreement
negotiations between university employers and unions have
been delayed after the parties failed to agree on aspects of
a bargaining protocol intended to govern conduct during
formal negotiations. University employers declined to
commence bargaining without further progress on the protocol
and the matter has been referred to mediation.
The areas
of disagreement include attempts by some employer
representatives to limit the participation of staff
representatives by restricting the numbers of staff to be
released and the number of days they will be released for
negotiations, and by placing limits on which of the unions’
negotiating team members will have access to information
required for bargaining.
AUS advocate Jeff Rowe said that
while a number of issues had been agreed an impasse had been
reached on the remaining issues. He said he was disappointed
at the delay but was confident that outstanding issues would
be dealt with through mediation.
Mediation will take
place in Christchurch on Monday 13 October with formal
negotiations expected to follow on Tuesday 14
October.
Call for more R&D spending
A recent report
from the Ministry of Research, Science and Technology
(MoRST) shows that private sector spending of $524 million
on Research and Development is less than a third of the
average in the OECD countries. It has prompted a call by the
Royal Society for increased investment in R&D by business.
The OECD averages for R&D activity shows that 69% is
undertaken by business and 17% by higher education, while in
New Zealand 37% is undertaken by business and 31% by higher
education. Two thirds of the total numbers of researchers in
New Zealand are employed in universities.
The report said
that while there had been a steady increase in total overall
R&D spending since 1994, it was still only just over a half
of the levels spent by other OECD countries. New Zealand
spent around $1.416 billion, or about 1.15% of gross
domestic product compared with average OECD spending of
2.25%. Total government spending on research in New Zealand
is 0.54% of GDP, compared with 0.71% in Australia and the
OECD average of 0.67%.
AUS National President, Dr Bill
Rosenberg said the release of the figures was further
evidence that the government needs to increase investment in
R&D if New Zealand is to increase research capacity, but
cautioned against a reliance on private sector funding for
public research.
Lincoln vice-chancellor retires
Lincoln University vice-chancellor Frank Wood has
retired unexpectedly after his health deteriorated rapidly
in recent weeks. He is understood to be in hospital awaiting
surgery. Deputy vice-chancellor Roger Field has been
appointed acting vice-chancellor.
Dr Wood’s retirement
was announced on Monday by Lincoln’s Chancellor, Margaret
Austin. Dr Wood took up the role of vice-chancellor in
March, 1997, and was reappointed for a further five-year
term last year. He is a former chair of the NZ
Qualifications Authority and was made a Companion of the New
Zealand Order of Merit in the New Year’s honours list for
services to tertiary education.
Online student loan
service launched
Associate Education Minister (Tertiary)
Steve Maharey launched an online student loan, allowance and
bursary application system this week. The system will allow
students to complete their loans and allowances applications
in one session.
The website address is
https://sao.studylink.govt.nz
Worldwatch
Sydney strike
successful, national action planned
A 24-hour strike by
general and academic staff at Sydney University on Tuesday
this week was a major success according to the National
Tertiary Education Union (NTEU).
The strike, which
completely closed down the university, was held in response
to Sydney University’s last minute decision to renege on the
signing of a three-year agreement because it did not comply
with the government's recently announced workplace relations
requirements. Staff were due to ratify a new collective
employment agreement which would have given salary increases
of 15% over three years.
“The strike builds momentum for
what will no doubt be a very successful one-day stoppage at
universities across Australia planned for October 16,” said
NTEU General Secretary Grahame McCulloch.
“NTEU members
are opposed to the government’s plan to deny universities
$404 million in funding unless they adopt hardline
industrial requirements, including placing staff on
Australian Workplace Agreements and removing limits on
casual employment”.
“The outcome from Sydney University
serves as a warning to the government of the industrial
turmoil that will follow if it pushes ahead with its
unwarranted interference in the workplace arrangements at
universities,” said Mr. McCulloch.
“The Sydney University
strike also puts university management on notice that they
cannot take the middle ground on this issue. Management can
either give in to the government’s meddling or they can
support staff and their commitment to high quality higher
education”.
Meanwhile, university staff in the United
Kingdom have been warned by their unions to expect
industrial action if pay negotiations with employers do not
make substantial progress.
In a letter to members of the
Association of University Teachers (AUT) General Secretary,
Sally Hunt, and President, Terry McKnight, have said that
the pay offer currently on the table would result in an
effective pay freeze next year. The national executive of
the AUT will meet on 16 October to consider its next
moves.
SA to Fight Commercialisation of Education
South Africa is expected to contest a resolution at the
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organisation (UNESCO) pushing for education to become a
trade service, reinforcing SA's opposition to the
liberalising of its higher education sector in accordance
with the World Trade Organisation's (WTO) general agreement
on trade in services (GATS).
The resolution could pose a
threat to SA's already delicate and complex transformation
process, as the country is preparing to merge its higher
education institutions to address the inequalities in the
system, boost quality and standards and make them more
globally competitive.
Education Minister Kader Asmal
said he believed that treating education as a commodity
under the WTO rules would spell the death of a developing
country's public institutions. He said that trade will
commercialise education, raise costs and lead to a
two-tiered system, one for the rich and one for the poor.
Asmal will push for education to be kept within the
ambit of UNESCO as part of "multilateral co-operation and
public good" not for "selling and trading" as specified
under Gats.
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Tertiary
Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays by the Association of
University Staff
PO Box 11 767 Wellington, New Zealand.
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Direct enquires to Marty
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