AUS Tertiary Update
Restructuring plan unveiled
at Canterbury
34 staff positions will be disestablished
and 46 new ones created as part of the University of
Canterbury’s plan to restructure its 36 academic departments
into four new colleges. The new colleges of Arts, Business
and Economics, Engineering, and Science are expected to be
in place for the beginning of 2004. The School of Law will
remain outside of the new college structure.
The plan,
which was released to staff on Tuesday, outlines new
academic processes and reporting lines, reviews university
committees, updates business processes, and sets out
procedures for affected staff.
In a statement released by
deputy vice-chancellor, Professor Bob Kirk, and
restructuring project leader, Dr John Vargo, they said the
reasons for the changes were to provide a strong leadership
structure to take the university into the future, and to
enable resources and efforts to be put into the core
business of research and teaching. “We also have to move
decision-making closer to where decisions will actually be
implemented and to establish a new management structure
where all staff have clear responsibilities and
accountabilities”. Advertising for new pro vice-chancellors
and managers to lead the new colleges will begin
soon.
Those staff whose positions are being
disestablished have been given formal notice of redundancy,
but some may be appointed to newly created positions in a
selection process which is to start this week. It is
expected to be completed by late November.
AUS Canterbury
Branch President, Jane Guise, said that while the number of
staff positions being disestablished was fewer than
originally expected, there were still a number of issues to
be dealt with. “In addition to the 34 positions
disestablished, a further 15 staff are in a selection pool
for 8 available positions, which gives the potential for a
total of 41 redundancies,” she said. “Some others have been
told that while they have retained their jobs, their
positions are being downgraded”.
Jane Guise said many
staff were disappointed that the vice-chancellor was out of
the country, leaving the deputy vice-chancellor to make the
announcement to staff. “It was interpreted by some to be a
lack of recognition or appreciation of the contribution made
by those staff to the university”.
Also in Tertiary
Update this week
1. Freeloading part of ERA
review
2. Wananga or university?
3. Waikato VC to step
down
4. Amalgamation approved by university and college
5. Keep panels but scrap grading
system
6. International action spreads
Freeloading part
of ERA review
Labour Minister Margaret Wilson has told
delegates to the biennial conference of the New Zealand
Council of Trade Unions (NZCTU) that proposals to deal with
“freeloading” would be introduced as part of the review of
the Employment Relations Act. Speaking at the conference in
Wellington this week, Margaret Wilson said the government
would seek to ensure there was no automatic passing-on of
new terms and conditions of employment, negotiated by unions
in collective bargaining, to non-union members on individual
agreements. She noted the lack of genuine negotiation where
freeloading occurred and said the Act needed to contain much
clearer guidelines about what was acceptable practice.
In
response to a question about bargaining in the tertiary
sector, Margaret Wilson said it was currently too easy for
employers to say no to multi-employer bargaining, or simply
to exhaust the bargaining process. She said that
multi-employer bargaining would be “incentivised”, and good
faith and dispute resolution processes improved.
AUS
National President, Dr Bill Rosenberg, welcomed the comments
saying that the ease with which non- members had picked up
the benefits of union negotiations had long been a cause of
frustration for union members in the university sector.
“Most university employers made it too easy for non-members
to receive the benefits obtained by union members and any
move by government to redress this would be welcome”.
Dr
Rosenberg also said he hoped university employers would take
a lead from the Minister’s comments about multi-employer
bargaining in the current negotiations.
Margaret Wilson
said that the review of the Employment Relations Act would
strengthen arrangements around collective bargaining and
provide greater protections for vulnerable workers.
The
review of the Act will be introduced to Parliament before
Christmas and any amendments are expected to be in force by
the middle of 2004.
Wananga or university?
The New
Zealand Vice-Chancellors’ Committee (NZVCC) has taken issue
with a statement by Progressive MP Matt Robson that Te
Wananga o Aotearoa is the “University of New
Zealand”.
The issue stems from reports that Te Wananga o
Aotearoa is working with the Cuban government to offer a
Cuban-developed distance learning literacy programme in New
Zealand. The development has drawn criticism from ACT MP
Rodney Hide to which Mr Robson responded by defending the
wananga’s choice of programme to combat illiteracy among
Maori. It was in this context that Mr Robson referred to Te
Wananga o Aotearoa as the University of New
Zealand.
“There are five types of tertiary education
institution recognised in the Education Act: universities,
polytechnics, colleges of education, wananga and specialist
colleges. A wananga is just that, not a university,
polytechnic, college of education or specialist college,”
said NZVCC Executive Director Lindsay Taiaroa.
“Te
Wananga o Aotearoa concentrates its teaching efforts at
lower levels of the National Qualifications Framework
whereas universities teach mainly at degree level,” Mr
Tairoa said.
Cuban Education Ministry officials have been
at the Taumarunui campus of Te Wananga o Aotearoa preparing
for the project which is expected to be running next year.
Cuba has an international reputation for success in
literacy, after improving its adult literacy rate from less
than 50 per cent in the 1950s to 96 per cent today.
Waikato VC to step down
Waikato University has
announced that its vice-chancellor, Professor Bryan Gould,
will step down by the end of 2004 after a decade in the job.
The university council has established a sub-group to start
the process of appointing a replacement.
Professor
Gould’s announcement brings to 5 the number of
vice-chancellorships either vacant or about to become
vacant. Auckland’s Dr John Hood is to take up the position
of vice-chancellor at Oxford University in the UK, AUT’s
John Hinchcliffe is to retire, Lincoln’s Dr Frank Wood has
recently resigned because of ill health and Otago’s Dr
Graeme Fogelberg is stepping aside. It leaves Victoria’s
Professor Stuart McCuthcheon, with 2 years at the helm, as
this country’s most senior vice-chancellor.
Amalgamation
approved by university and college
The respective
councils of The University of Auckland and the Auckland
College of Education have approved a proposal to amalgamate
the two institutions.
The case for the amalgamation will
now be submitted to the Tertiary Education Commission and
the Tertiary Advisory Monitoring Unit for government
approval.
The amalgamation, if approved by government,
would see the creation of a Faculty of Education within the
university, incorporating the university's School of
Education and the Auckland College of Education. The
Faculty would be based at the college's current campus in
Epsom.
Worldwatch
Keep panels but scrap grading
system
UK universities and academics want their work to
continue being judged by expert panels in research
assessment exercises, according to their responses to a
proposed reform of the system, but they say the present
grading scheme should be scrapped.
Officials at the
Higher Education Funding Council for England have been
analysing responses to proposals about the future of the
RAE, the four-yearly assessment on which research funding is
based.
It said there was broad agreement that the core
of future assessments should be judgements of research
quality, not just measurements of citations or grants and
contracts income. Scrapping the expert panels had been an
option considered by the review as a way of reducing the
cost and time involved.
Respondents also wanted
assessments on the basis of the work of a complete
department, unit or group rather than on individuals.
The council found strong support among universities for
the plan to scrap the present 1 – 5 grading system and
replace it with a "score" based on all the work the
department performs.
International action
spreads
Australia: Strikes virtually shut down the entire
public university system in Australia last week as staff
protested against a government proposal to deny universities
$404 million in funding unless they adopt a series of
hard-line industrial reforms
At least 10,000 general and
academic staff, students and members of the public attended
rallies and public meetings that were held in all major
capital cities in a show of strength against government
requirements to break down collective bargaining in
universities and force staff onto individual employment
contracts.
Not affected was the Australian National
University (ANU) where the university struck a deal with the
National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU), in defiance of the
government, which gave a 17.5% pay increase over three
years, recognises the significance of intellectual and
academic freedom, provides 26 weeks paid parental leave and
has a strong recognition of the union in the university's
life, as well as limiting very strictly the use of casual
and fixed-term employment.
United Kingdom: Higher
education unions are preparing for industrial action in the
face of the failure to agree on new salary rates in the UK.
The Association of University Teachers (AUT) voted, at a
special meeting last week, to prepare for industrial action,
while continuing to negotiate with employers, while the
university and college lecturers’ union (NAFTHE) have begun
balloting on whether to remain in the talks, or to move
straight to “serious and sustained” industrial action. The
ballots will run until 3 November.
West Africa: The only
universities in Niger and Mali were shut down indefinitely
last week after students and lecturers went on strike to
demand the payment of government stipends and salaries,
promotions to senior ranks, and improved learning and
working conditions.
In Niger, university lecturers and
researchers stopped teaching because they had not been paid
their salaries for September and at the University of Mali,
more than 300 lecturers stayed home from work, demanding
that the government review their salaries, pay salary
arrears, and evaluate other working conditions. They are
also demanding grants and allowances to enable them to
conduct research, attend international conferences, and
publish their work.
Canada: Professor and librarians at
Carleton University stopped work on Monday after a 94% vote
in favour of strike action over salary levels. Carleton
faculty salaries are the lowest of all the comprehensive
universities in Ontario.
Tertiary Update is compiled
weekly on Thursdays by the Association of University
Staff
PO Box 11 767 Wellington, New Zealand.
Phone
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