AUS Tertiary Update
PBRF decision awaited
A
decision is still awaited from the High Court in Auckland
following an application by the University of Auckland and
Victoria University of Wellington to stop the release of the
Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) report on the
Performance-Based Research Fund (PBRF). The Court last week
reserved its decision on the substantive hearing of the case
after earlier granting an interim injunction when the
Universities challenged the inclusion in the report of
comparisons between the New Zealand universities in the PBRF
exercise and British universities in the Research Assessment
Exercise (RAE).
Meanwhile, the University of Auckland has
expressed its disappointment at reported comments from the
Minister of Finance, Michael Cullen, critical of the legal
action taken by the universities and their reluctance to be
compared with their British counterparts. University of
Auckland Vice-Chancellor Dr John Hood rebutted Dr Cullen’s
comments, saying that the University does not fear being
judged internationally against British universities or any
others. “We only ask that the comparison be on a fair and
valid basis,” he said.
Dr Hood said that the Minister
appeared to have missed the point that the legal action was
driven by a desire to protect export education, something he
described as a “major bulwark” of the New Zealand
economy
“The sole purpose of our action is to prevent an
invalid comparison being released that would do irreparable
harm to New Zealand’s image as an education destination for
growing numbers of international students,” said Dr Hood.
“New Zealand educational institutions are already suffering
from the effects of the recent failure of English language
schools here. The Government needs to appreciate the threat
to the reputation of the entire sector if the TEC is allowed
to release a poor piece of work comparing New Zealand and
British universities. That will only serve to damage New
Zealand’s image even further.”
“We took legal action only
as a last resort to protect the ability of the New Zealand
tertiary sector to recruit and retain staff internationally,
the credibility of New Zealand graduates’ qualifications on
the world stage, and our ability to recruit students
internationally,” said Dr Hood.
The High Court was
expected to release its decision earlier this week, but has
not done so yet.
Also in Tertiary Update this week . .
.
1. University staff to vote on industrial
action
2. International graduate numbers
increase
3. Waikato denies merger claim
4. Otago
Polytechnic backs living allowance
5. Enrolment figures
up at Waikato
6. Industrial action suspended in
UK
7. Israeli academics urged to oppose Government’s
Palestine policies
University staff to vote on industrial
action
University staff members began voting yesterday on
a proposal for industrial action after mediation failed to
break an impasse in national collective agreement
negotiations. Staff will vote, at seven universities over
the next week, on a recommendation from union negotiators to
take up to five days strike action over a five week period
starting from 28 April.
The strike ballot is proceeding
after university employers failed to make sufficient
progress in mediation to allow for an interim settlement to
be reached. The unions are claiming for new national
collective employment agreements for academic and general
staff and salary increases of up to 10% per year for the
next three years. The universities have made pay offers
between 2% and 2.8% to renew enterprise (site) employment
agreements. All have rejected national agreements.
During
mediation, the unions proposed considering a 3.5% salary
increase with a further 1 percent to be added from 1
September to break the impasse and allow the unions and
employers to jointly lobby Government on funding issues. In
response Waikato, Auckland and Canterbury Universities have
advised that their current offers of a 2.2% salary increase
stands, while Lincoln and Massey have modified their
positions slightly. The other universities have not
responded.
Association of University Staff (AUS) General
Secretary Helen Kelly said that it was imperative that
university employers demonstrated they had a genuine resolve
to remedy salary problems within the sector. “To date, that
has not been the case,” she said. “They are continuing to
act competitively and current salary offers are worse than
last year.”
The ballot result will be known on 8
April.
In other industrial news, staff at six
polytechnics are due to receive back-paid pay increases
after signing a new multi-employer collective employment
agreement in that sector. Union members at Unitec, Waikato
Institute of Technology, Whitireia Community Polytechnic,
the Western Institute of Technology, the Bay of Plenty
Polytechnic and Northland Polytechnic will receive pay rises
of between 2.5 and 3 percent.
International graduate
numbers increase
The New Zealand university system is now
producing more than 2300 international graduates a year,
according to the latest report on university graduate
destinations. University Graduate Destinations 2003,
published by the NZ Vice-Chancellors’ Committee (NZVCC),
looks at where the 27,088 eligible graduates from New
Zealand’s eight universities in 2002 ended up six months
after graduation.
Of the 2310 international graduates
reported, 22.1% listed China as their country of origin, up
from 3.6% in 2000 when the previous survey was undertaken.
By contrast Malaysia, the previous dominant country of
origin, has fallen from 36.2% in 2000 to 10.6% in 2002.
International graduates are defined in the report as those
requiring a permit to undertake study in New Zealand.
Of
the domestic graduate population 64.4% (24,778) identified
themselves as European/Pakeha, 17.0% as Asian (Chinese,
Other Asian), 5.8% as NZ Maori, 2.4% as Pacific peoples and
2.3% as Indian.
Female graduates outnumbered males in
both groupings. Of the New Zealand graduates, 57.6% were
female while the proportion for international graduates was
55.8%.
In total 9285 graduates responded to a survey on
which the report is based. Of these respondents, 8854 were
New Zealand graduates, with 64.6% reporting they were in
full-time employment six months after graduation. The
proportion undertaking further full-time study was 21.9%.
Of the graduates from the New Zealand university system
in 2002, 14.2% were aged 40 or older, down by one percent on
the equivalent proportion for 2000 graduates. The majority
of 2002 graduates (54.7%) were aged between 18 and 24, with
a further 15.3% aged between 25 and 29.
The most popular
area of study for university graduates in 2002 was
commerce/business (26.9%), followed by social and
behavioural sciences (26.8%), health (10.6%) and humanities
(9.5%).
Waikato denies merger claim
Waikato University
Vice-Chancellor Professor Bryan Gould has said a recent
report in the Waikato Times, that the University is
discussing a merger with Te Wananga o Aotearoa, is seriously
misleading. In a statement to staff, Professor Gould said
there had been discussions last year after the Wananga
approached the University but these had not progressed and
no further merger talks were planned.
“We have no
intention of entering merger discussions (with the
Wananga),” Professor Gould told AUS. “No such talks have
taken place and I see no prospect of them doing
so.”
Professor Gould said he did not believe the Waikato
could maintain its university status if such a merger went
ahead, but said he would be glad to have closer and more
collaborative relations with the Wananga. It is reported
that informal discussions on that basis are continuing
between the two Councils.
Last year the University failed
to secure a merger with the Auckland University of
Technology (AUT) which would have seen the University become
one of the biggest and most influential tertiary
institutions in New Zealand.
Otago Polytechnic backs
living allowance
The Otago Polytechnic Council has
endorsed a national petition by the New Zealand University
Students’ Association (NZUSA) calling for a universal
student allowance. “Otago Polytechnic Council’s unanimous
support of a living allowance for all students shows great
understanding of the severe issues facing many students”
said Otago Polytechnic Students’ Association (OPSA)
President, Rachel Dibble.
“With Council and community
support there is a clear message to the Government that
student debt is unacceptable.” The petition is part of a
national campaign to gain a living allowance set at the
level of the unemployment benefit for all students.
Currently less than a third of full-time students are
eligible for the student allowance. “Others are forced to
borrow simply to eat and pay rent,” said Ms Dibble. “With
student debt rapidly approaching $7b this may be the
Government’s last chance to make a positive change and
rectify ten years of generational theft,” said Ms
Dibble.
Enrolment figures up at Waikato
Final enrolment
figures at Waikato University show an increase of 133
students over the same time last year according to Dr Wendy
Craig, Director of Student and Academic Services. Figures
just released show that at 22 March, new domestic students
had increased by 6% (143 students) compared with the end of
March 2003. The number of students coming directly from
school has increased by 21%. Total international students
are 7% (169 students) higher than last year, with growth
concentrated in degree-level enrolments.
Marketing
Director Stephen Knightly says the University has had
success with particular targeted groups this year. “The
University did not do mass market TV advertising or large
billboards, instead we focussed on key groups such as school
leavers,” he said. The number of A and B Bursary students
enrolling at Waikato has increased by 17%, to 474
students.
Worldwatch
Industrial action suspended in
UK
Delegates at the Association of University Teachers
(AUT) conference in the United Kingdom have voted to suspend
industrial action and ballot members on a new pay offer from
university employers. If accepted, it would see salary
increases of between 8.7% and 24.7% over two years for
academic and academic-related staff.
The renewed offer
comes after the rejection of an earlier attempt by
university employers to restructure national pay scales
which, if accepted, would have led to a loss in career
earnings of up to £2,000 per year for some
staff.
According to AUT General Secretary Sally Hunt, the
new offer will produce significant additional pay increases,
targeted initially at those at the lower end of the salary
scales, and will protect the link between academic and
academic-related staff. It would also ensure
academic-related staff have the same pay protections as
academic staff.
The new offer will be voted on over the
next four weeks.
Israeli academics urged to oppose
Government’s Palestine policies
Israel’s academic leaders
have been asked to take a public stand against their
Government’s violation of academic freedom at Palestine
universities in the occupied territories in an on-line
letter conceived by Lawrence Davidson, a professor of
history at West Chester University of Pennsylvania.
Professor Davidson and several other American and British
academics have led a campaign to boycott Israeli
universities in protest at Israeli’s military action plans
against the Palestinians.
According to the letter, “the
Israeli Government has set up a system of roadblocks and
checkpoints that make it difficult or impossible for
Palestinian teachers and students to reach their
universities, colleges and schools. It’s a policy of
harassment, arrests, random shootings and assaults,” the
letter continues.
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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