AUS Tertiary Update
Signs of progress avert
first strike day
Planned strike action in universities,
scheduled for next Wednesday, has been called off after
further negotiations between university and union
representatives in Wellington on Tuesday.
AUS General
Secretary Helen Kelly, speaking on behalf of the combined
university unions, said that while she was unable to release
details of the progress, sufficient ground had been made to
avert the first of five days of strike action planned over
the next five weeks to enable the parties to do some further
work.
Ms Kelly said that the employers were now
considering a new proposal to make progress in the dispute,
and they would be responding to the unions by Friday this
week. She said, however, that at this stage the planned
strike action on Thursday 6 May is still set to occur, and
the employers’ response to the new proposals was crucial if
this day was also to be avoided.
Meetings will be held
late next week with union members at the seven universities
involved in the negotiations to consider the employers’
response to the new proposal.
Also in Tertiary Update this
week . . . .
1. Government to pick up tab for PTE
collapses
2. Dates for PBRF results released
3. Otago
EMBA in Auckland scrapped
4. Student prison at
Massey
5. Salaries increase in US
6. Nottingham opens
campus in China
7. Northern Ireland staff oppose top-up
fees
8. UK universities predict rush to beat
fees
Government to pick up tab for PTE collapses
The
Government has announced it will pick up the cost of
reimbursing international students for financial losses
following the collapse in 2003 of two large private training
establishments (PTEs), Carich and Modern Age. It had been
proposed in a Bill currently before Parliament that those
costs would be recovered through an increase in the export
education levy placed on PTEs.
Announcing the change,
Education Minister Trevor Mallard said that the Government
had taken this stance to protect the $2 billion export
education industry, but he warned that the cost of any
future failures would be met by the sector and not by
taxpayers. “We are taking steps to ensure these situations
are covered in the future so our international students are
not disadvantaged if a PTE fails,” he said.
Proposed
changes to the Education (Export Education Levy) Amendment
Bill will enable levy funds to be used to reimburse
international students who face financial losses following
the failure of a PTE.
Earlier, private providers had
fought against the changes saying it was unfair that they
should be penalised for the failure of their competitors,
and had asked for more time to adjust to levy increases to
ensure their viability during a time of market
downturn.
AUS National President Dr Bill Rosenberg said
it was entirely appropriate that PTEs faced a higher levy
than public providers given their performance in the sector.
“The failure rate of PTEs risks damaging the entire sector,
and this is not a cost which should be picked up by the
taxpayer or public institutions,” he said. "We find it
astonishing that the Government can find money to bail out
the reputation of the private sector when the public sector
has well-documented funding problems that desperately need
addressing."
The export education levy currently supports
a range of industry-wide development and risk-management
activities, including professional development, research,
quality assurance and promotional activities.
Dates for
PBRF results released
The Performance-Based Research Fund
report by the Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) was sent
on CD to participating tertiary education organisations
(TEOs) on Tuesday and would have been received on
Wednesday.
The participating TEOs will have received the
password which allows them to access the results on the CD
today.
The material is strictly confidential to the
participating TEOs and embargoed until the public release of
the report, scheduled for Wednesday 28 April.
The
rewritten report contains no reference to an international
comparison of New Zealand universities with British
universities made by the TEC. A consultation process to
obtain feedback about the international comparison is
currently being considered by the TEC.
Otago EMBA in
Auckland scrapped
Otago University’s $43,500 fee
Executive Master of Business Administration June intake has
been cancelled as a result of its 55% fee increase, a lack
of students meeting entry standards and the loss of its
Director.
According to the Otago Daily Times, the course,
reputedly Auckland’s most expensive, suffered from apparent
ill feeling over the Director’s departure. In addition, the
unlikelihood of attracting twenty five suitable students
meant that the course, in spite of the fee increase, was
likely to lose even more than its existing, loss-leader
deficit.
The Otago Daily Times quotes the Otago School of
Business acting Director of Graduate Programmes as saying
that “the school was not prepared to lower entry standards
to maintain the course,” but that its future would be
subject to the results of a marketing exercise intended to
ensure its viability.
Otago University Students’
Association President, Andrew Cushen, indicated that the
Association had accepted the fee rise to avoid
undergraduates subsidising an employer-paid option, but that
the course had been expected to continue in spite of the
increase
Student prison at Massey
Members of the Albany
Students’ Association are today setting up a mock prison at
the Massey Albany campus to illustrate the fact that the
student loan scheme sentences students to a lifetime of debt
by forcing them to borrow to pay for such basics as food and
rent.
“Student debt is imprisoning students and a whole
generation of young people in a lifetime of debt,” said
Association President Nick Mayne. “It is time the Government
released students and their families from the debt burden by
introducing a living allowance for all students so that no
student is forced to borrow to live.”
“Student debt is
not only imprisoning young people, it is having a
devastating impact on the New Zealand economy and the whole
community by putting people off having children and forcing
graduates overseas,” he added.
Worldwatch
Salaries
increase in US
Average salaries of full-time faculty
members in public universities in the US rose by up to 3.3%
in the last year, according to the Annual Report on the
Economic Status of the Profession 2003-2004, released this
week by the American Association of University
Professors.
The data are based on a survey of 1,343
colleges and universities in the US. It shows that the
average base salary for a full professor in a public
university is now $US94,606 with the average overall
remuneration package now worth $US118,047. The average
academic remuneration package in the public universities is
$US95,741, up 3.1% on the 2002-03 year.
Staff in the
public universities are the lowest paid in the sector, with
base salaries around $US5,000 behind the sector average.
Other universities surveyed are either private or
church-related.
Nottingham opens campus in China
The
University of Nottingham has become the first British
university to announce the establishment of a campus on the
Chinese mainland, taking advantage of legislation passed by
the Chinese Government that allows foreign education
enterprises to be set up in that country. The campus will be
set up at Ningbo, an historic city on China’s eastern coast.
The first students will be recruited later this year and, by
the end of the first phase of the development in 2008,
university officials expect to have enrolled about 4,000
students.
Northern Ireland staff oppose top-up
fees
Staff in Northern Ireland universities have
criticised the Department for Employment and Learning over a
recent announcement on a consultation exercise regarding the
introduction of top-up (tuition) fees. The proposals under
consideration would allow institutions such as Queen’s
University Belfast and the University of Ulster to charge
students up to £3,000 per year from 2006-07.
University
staff, who have recently been in dispute with employers
regarding pay and conditions, believe the introduction of
fees is a fundamentally flawed policy and is unfair. Dr
Terry McKnight, Association of University Teachers (AUT)
National President, who is from the University of Ulster,
said that access to university should be based on the
ability to learn, not the ability to pay.
“Higher
education has a special role to play in Northern Ireland, a
society that too often is divided, debt adverse and
economically disadvantaged,” Dr McNight said. “This policy
will certainly discourage the poorest of talented students
from experiencing third level education.”
UK universities
predict rush to beat fees
UK universities are bracing
themselves for the biggest intake ever as students attempt
to get places in universities before top-up fees are
introduced in 2006. They are predicting that, in order to
avoid paying top up fees, thousands of students sitting
A-levels this year will skip a traditional “gap year”
between school and university and enrol in university study.
It is estimated that up to 100,000 students defer entry to
university each year.
A spokesperson for Cambridge
University said that usually about 20% of applicants who get
a place take a gap year, but the university is dealing with
a 10% increase in applications this year. The spokesperson
said that fewer people opt to take a “gap year” it would
result in a significant increase in competition for 2004-05.
Inevitably it would mean that some people won’t get
in.
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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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marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz