AUS Tertiary Update
Allegations continue over
computer courses
The Christchurch Polytechnic (CPIT) has
received more than $15 million of public money for running
computer courses that simply require it to hand out CD-Roms
to members of the public, according to The Christchurch
Press. It has been revealed that CPIT enrolled 18,493 people
in four Cool IT courses, for which it then received $795 in
funding per course for each student.
It has been reported
that the Cool IT students, who were recruited at random in
Christchurch shopping malls, libraries, and schools, were
not required to attend classes or complete course work. They
did not have any contact with teachers. According to The
Press, the students simply had to sign up and accept the
CD-Roms which contained the four courses.
The CPIT also
paid schools and libraries $20 for every person they
enrolled and spent $80,000 on book vouchers as rewards for
people who signed up.
Associate Minister of Education
(Tertiary) Steve Maharey said that while $15 million was a
sizeable amount of money, the CPIT had done nothing outside
the rules. He told Parliament yesterday that the Tertiary
Education Commission (TEC) had advised him that CPIT’s
community education courses, which include the Cool IT
programmes, met funding requirements. He said any question
of whether the particular programmes are a good use of
public funding will be assessed this year through the TEC’s
profile negotiations with individual institutions.
A
spokesperson for Mr Maharey said that while the rules for
the community funding programme had not changed since the
previous National Government, the problems with funding had
become evident last year. He said that community education
funding had now been capped and details would be provided in
next week’s Budget.
The Cool IT programme is a joint
venture between CPIT and Christchurch company Brylton
Software. Tertiary Update reported last week that former
Christchurch Mayor and current CPIT Development Manager
Vicki Buck is a director of Brylton.
Also in Tertiary
Update this week . . . .
1. Staff call for greater
involvement in VC appointment process
2. Angry reaction
to budget blow-out
3. No poaching says Maharey, but . .
.
4. Collective agreements settled
5. Announcement
soon on South African MBA programmes
6. Petition opposes
PeopleSoft installation
Staff call for greater involvement
in VC appointment process
University staff have called
for increased involvement in the appointment processes for
new vice-chancellors after the Association of University
Staff (AUS) was excluded from any participation in the
selection of a new vice-chancellor for the University of
Auckland.
It is understood that interviews for the
vice-chancellorship have been completed and an offer of
appointment made to one of the applicants.
AUS National
President Dr Bill Rosenberg said that university councils
are empowered by statute to seek advice from relevant
parties, and may invite appropriate people to be involved in
either an examination of the applications or in the
council’s deliberations for such an appointment.
The AUS
Auckland Branch President, Associate Professor Peter Wills,
said the University of Auckland Council had only allowed the
involvement of a small group of staff after its initial
appointment process failed to find any suitable candidate
for the position. It then restricted staff participation to
those on the University Council and a few others who have
only now been identified after the event. “The secrecy
surrounding this appointment process is unacceptable,” he
said. “It is extremely disappointing that, despite numerous
attempts to raise the issue with the Chancellor, the AUS has
been prevented from briefing candidates on staff concerns at
a time when a delicate industrial situation exists and
Auckland staff have not yet ratified a collective employment
agreement with the administration after backing away from a
national strike.”
“It is both logical and reasonable to
widely consult and involve staff in such an appointment,
given that the vice-chancellor is to be the University’s
senior academic leader and senior manager,” said Associate
Professor Wills. He said a vice-chancellor requires the
confidence and support of all staff, and it had been the
usual practice in New Zealand universities to involve staff
and AUS widely in the process.
The appointment process at
the University of Auckland can be contrasted with that at
Oxford University in England, where Dr John Hood is soon to
take up the Vice-Chancellorship. His appointment there was
subject to ratification by the staff.
Dr Rosenberg and
Associate Professor Wills called on the Chancellor and
University Council to consult with staff and the AUS to
establish a policy on future appointment processes for new
vice-chancellors.
Angry reaction to budget
blow-out
Students and the AUS have reacted angrily to
reports that the cost of the University of Otago’s new
Registry entrance has blown-out to $4.7 million, more than
double the original estimate of $2.2 million. The new
estimates were released by the University to the Otago
University Students’ Association (OUSA) following an
Official Information Act request.
OUSA President Andrew
Cushen is reported on the Otago Daily Times (ODT) saying
that it was mind-boggling that the University is prepared to
waste nearly $5 million on the project when, by their own
admission, the University library and other facilities
desperately needed more funding. “This is a disgusting waste
of money,” he said. “Putting grand entranceways and useless
bridges ahead of teaching resources is stupid when the
quality of education is increasingly being
compromised.”
Acting AUS Branch President Dr Shef Rogers
said this week that it was a worrying waste of University
money at a time when the university and unions were still
unable to settle on a salary rise for staff. “Union members
will be angry that, at a time when they are being forced to
contemplate taking (industrial) action in support of their
salary claims, large sums of money are being squandered on
unnecessary glamour projects, such as the St. David Street
redevelopment,” he said.
The first stage of the new
entrance has cost $1.3 million, more than double the
original estimate of $611,000. The later stages, yet to get
underway, have risen similarly with a new avenue expected to
have almost trebled in cost from $600,000 to $1.5
million.
Dr Rogers said that more than $4 million
recently awarded to the University in the Performance-Based
Research Fund was achieved through the hard work of staff.
“That money, and other money coming into the University,
should be directed towards improved salaries and working
conditions for staff, and improved services for students,
not over-priced entranceways,” he said.
The ODT reports
that neither the University’s Vice-Chancellor Dr Graeme
Fogelberg nor Property Director Barry MacKay could be
reached for comment.
No poaching says Maharey, but . .
.
Associate Education Minister (Tertiary) Steve Maharey
says there is no proof that Australian universities are
poaching top high-school students after reports that some of
New Zealand’s best students are being lured with lucrative
Australian scholarships.
The Australian recruitment
strategy is alleged to include the Australian universities
making direct approaches to top Year 13 students from
Auckland Grammar and private schools including Kings College
and Christ’s College, running recruitment seminars, and
offering scholarship worth up to $40,000 each.
While Mr
Maharey said that only two students had been approached,
others are warning that such competition is inevitable.
New Zealand Vice-Chancellors’ Committee Chairman,
Professor Stuart McCutcheon, said that there is a clear risk
to New Zealand’s economic well-being if Australia takes “our
best and brightest” students. He said that Australian
universities enjoy at least a third more per-capita
resourcing than their New Zealand counterparts, and the gap
is increasing. It meant the Australians could afford to
offer such scholarship schemes as well as being able to
provide the quality of education that better resourcing
brings.
Collective agreements settled
University of
Canterbury academic staff voted narrowly yesterday, by 91
votes to 90, to accept a new collective employment agreement
which will increase salaries by 3.5% from 1 May. General and
trades staff and cleaners have also voted to accept the new
offer. The settlement comes after an earlier decision to
defer national bargaining in the university sector and
conclude local enterprise agreements at individual
universities while discussions are held on a number of broad
funding and salary issues in the sector.
AUS General
Secretary Helen Kelly said today that the narrow margin in
the academic staff vote at Canterbury reflected a strong
desire and commitment by university staff to resolve
long-standing salary discrepancies. She said that the union
remains firmly committed to having these issues addressed at
a national level.
Waikato University staff have accepted
a salary offer of 3%, 2% of which will be backdated to 1
October 2003, and Victoria academic staff have accepted 4%
from 1 May. Lincoln staff have accepted an increase of 3%,
back dated to 1 March.
General staff at Victoria have
voted not to put a salary offer of 2.2% to ratification, and
propose to take strike action in protest. Those at Otago
have elected not to consider salary offers of 2.5% for
general staff and 3.5% for academic staff on the basis of
the level and differential nature of the offers.
Negotiations at Otago will get underway this week.
Voting
at Auckland and Massey will not finish until Friday and will
be reported next week.
Worldwatch
Announcement soon on
South African MBA programmes
The South African Council on
Higher Education is due to complete a review this month in
response to an apparent proliferation of Masters in Business
Administration programmes in the Republic. The review
included private and public institutions, some of which are
from franchised providers.
Around thirty-eight programmes
have been assessed against set of thirteen criteria and a
process of self-evaluation, and have tested the ability of
each institution to sustain quality of teaching, learning,
and research.
In accordance with current Quality
Assurance mechanisms, it is expected that institutions will
be given full or conditional accreditation, or may have
their accreditation withdrawn from next month.
It is
expected that another report, later in the year, will
provide benchmarking criteria for “good practice” measured
against international standards, and highlight areas which
are considered to need improvement.
Petition opposes
PeopleSoft installation
Staff at California Polytechnic
State University (Cal Poly) at San Luis have signed a
petition protesting a plan by campus administrators to seek
a $15-million loan to install PeopleSoft software.
At
issue is a recent decision to press ahead with using the
software, which manages student records, even as other
cash-strapped campuses at California State are delaying the
upgrade.
The petition asks the institution to
“immediately halt the plans for implementation of the
student-administration module of PeopleSoft until the
State's budget situation improves,” and until campus
information-technology officials have conducted “a thorough
and transparent cost analysis of other alternatives in the
upgrading of our current software.”
The petition also
asks that the decision to take out a multimillion-dollar
loan for the project be reconsidered.
“We believe it is
unjustified to spend millions of dollars to implement an
expensive software package at a time when we are facing the
worst budget crisis in the history of our University,” the
petition reads.
PeopleSoft’s Chief Technology Officer is
a member of the “President's cabinet” at Cal Poly, a group
of forty-nine business executives that helps shape campus
goals.
PeopleSoft is used in some New Zealand
universities.
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
distributed freely to members of the union and others. Back
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http://www.aus.ac.nz. Direct enquires to Marty Braithwaite,
AUS Communications Officer, email:
marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz