AUS Tertiary Update
University refuses mediation on discrimination
claim
The University of Canterbury has refused mediation
after the Human Rights Commission agreed to investigate a
complaint by a senior lecturer, Sue Newberry, of gender bias
in the University’s appointment and promotion processes. Dr
Newberry says she laid the complaint with the Commission
after experiencing difficulties when attempting to remedy a
long-standing problem over her academic placement. She had
been advised by senior management to undergo the internal
investigation process, but felt bullied and subject to
intimidation when trying to address the issue with them.
The Commission asked the University to formally respond
to the allegation, and although it has responded to the
complaint, it has declined mediation. This means the matter
will have to be heard formally in the Human Rights Review
Tribunal if it is to be progressed.
Canterbury’s
Vice-Chancellor, Professor Roy Sharp, told the Commission
that the issues raised by Dr Newberry had been fully
canvassed, and he is of the view that the University’s
promotion process is fair and equitable. The University did
not consider that she had been subject to discrimination by
reason of age or gender. Professor Sharp said that Dr
Newberry’s skills and contribution to the University had
been fairly recognised, and that she had been given a fair
hearing.
Dr Newberry said she was “amazed” at the process
which led to her complaint to the Commission, and regarded
the conclusion of the University’s initial investigation as
unfair, selective and misleading. She says this was then
compounded by a staff appointment in her area that
reinforced her concerns over the University’s conclusion.
“The rejection of mediation is consistent with the
University’s attitude towards the internal investigation,”
she said. “Based on the information I provided to the Human
Rights Commission, it sought to mediate on two grounds.
Those were discrimination, under section 21 of the Human
Rights Act, and ‘offering less favourable terms of
employment’, under section 22. Nothing has changed, and I
will continue with my complaint.”
Dr Newberry will now
refer the complaint to the Director of Human Rights
Proceedings who will decide whether the Commission will take
the case to the Tribunal.
Also in Tertiary Update this
week
1. $21.5 million Business Links Fund for
polytechnics
2. Increase funding, keep fees low, says
AUS
3. Scholarships stepped-up
4. New leaders for
NZUSA
5. A correction
6. Injunction stops LMU
strike
7. University bosses plan RAE revolt
$21.5
million Business Links Fund for polytechnics
The
Government has released details of a new four-year, $21.5
million fund intended to enable institutes of technology and
polytechnics (ITPs) to develop industry plans setting out
how they intend to meet the needs of business and industry.
The fund, established in this year’s Budget, is the
trade-off to polytechnics for the money they will lose
through the implementation of performance-based research
funding.
Announcing details at the Institutes of
Technology and Polytechnics of New Zealand’s “Research That
Works” conference this week, the Associate Minister of
Education (Tertiary), Steve Maharey, encouraged institutions
to think carefully about how they can build on their links
with business and professional stakeholders over the next
four years. “All tertiary education organisations, but
particularly ITPs, have to become more focused towards the
needs of their communities and local economies,” said Mr
Maharey. “If they are aligned to the economic direction of
their communities they will be able to contribute more
strongly to regional development.”
Funding for each ITP
will be based on the content of an engagement plan, with
each institution able to apply for between $100,000 and
$300,000 per academic year. “Next year, $5 million of
funding will be available, so the average grant will be
about $250,000,” said Mr Maharey. “I’m expecting some
high-quality plans to be put forward.”
In order to access
money from the fund, ITPs will have to submit an initial
proposal in the form of an engagement plan, which will then
be considered by an expert panel appointed by the Tertiary
Education Commission (TEC). It will assess the quality of
the business-engagement plan and, if it is approved, carry
out annual evaluations in subsequent years. The TEC is
expected to approve the first business-engagement plans
early next year.
Mr Maharey said the funding would
increase to $6 million in 2007 and then $7 million in
2007.
It is understood that ITPs that access this funding
will not be eligible to be assessed for performance-based
research funding.
Increase funding, keep fees low, says
AUS
The Government should increase overall funding to
universities in order to ensure that student tuition fees
are kept to a minimum according to Dr Bill Rosenberg,
National President of the Association of University Staff
(AUS).
Dr Rosenberg was responding to a statement by the
Associate Minister of Education (Tertiary), Steve Maharey,
in which he urged the governing councils of universities to
think carefully about how much they need to increase student
tuition fees so they are kept as low as possible for next
year.
Government funding of universities per student has
declined by 21 percent in real (inflation-adjusted) terms
over the decade to 2002, and New Zealand’s public investment
in tertiary education is now lower as a proportion of GDP
than the average for other OECD countries. It is
significantly lower than in Australia and the United
States.
“It is clear is that Government needs to boost
funding rather than leave tertiary institutions having to
consider further increases in student tuition fees,” said Dr
Rosenberg. “Fees must be kept as low as possible, but in
order for that to happen funding needs to be seriously
addressed. The Government can well afford this with its
mountainous budget surplus, and the spending would fit in
well with its economic and social strategies.”
“It is a
cheek for the Minister on one hand to continue to underfund
the universities, but on the other to tell them they should
not increase tuition fees,” said Dr Rosenberg. “The increase
in public funding for universities for next year has been
set at less than the level of inflation. Clearly that will
be insufficient to meet increased costs faced in the sector,
including salary claims for parity with comparable staff
elsewhere, which all acknowledge is necessary.”
Mr
Maharey has defended the Government’s record on fee
increases and student debt, saying that students are $1200
better off in terms of fees than they would have been under
a National Government. He said that after next year, when
students would face fee increases of no more than 5 percent,
fees would return to being tightly regulated by
government.
Dr Rosenberg said, however, that the Minister
must also intervene to increase funding if he is to ensure
that universities can deliver high-quality education without
increasing tuition fees.
Scholarships stepped-up
Step
Up Scholarships are being extended to enable more university
students from low-income backgrounds to study in a wide
range of fields, according to the Associate Minister of
Education (Tertiary), Steve Maharey. The scholarships for
students entering degree-level courses in human and animal
health are being expanded to include students up to the age
of twenty-four. From 2006, they will also be available to
school-leavers studying science and technology.
Mr
Maharey said that the expansion of the age eligibility would
mean that the number of students in human and animal health
expected to benefit from the scholarships would increase
from 169 this year to 400 in 2005 and more than 600 in 2006.
In 2006 a new category will provide 175 Step Up
Scholarships for science and technology-based qualifications
at degree level. Those scholarships will be available to
students in their final year of school, or within one year
of leaving. Recipients will pay a flat fee of $2,000 a year,
irrespective of the tuition fees for their chosen course,
with the scholarship paying the remainder of the normal
tuition fee.
“Step UP Scholarships are all about ensuring
access for people from low-income backgrounds into strategic
fields of study,” said Mr Maharey. “The scholarships will
help the students to participate in tertiary education and
provide New Zealand with skills critical to the country’s
success.”
New leaders for NZUSA
Camilla Belich and
Andrew Kirton will be the Co-Presidents of the New Zealand
University Students’ Association for 2005, and Karen Price
the Women’s Officer. All were elected at NZUSA’s annual
conference held in Dunedin last weekend.
Andrew Kirton is
currently an NZUSA Co-President and former President of the
Lincoln University Students’ Association, while Camilla
Belich is currently the NZUSA National Women’s Rights
Officer and a law student at Victoria University of
Wellington (VUW). “I am really excited about the potential
to achieve positive change for students both in the lead-up
to and after the general election,” said Ms Belich.
“As
long as university students are forced to borrow to live and
fees are going up, we have plenty of work to do,” said
Andrew Kirton. “Next year we will be campaigning
aggressively for lower fees and a living allowance for all
students.”
New Women’s Officer Karen Price was previously
on the VUW Students’ Association Executive.
Current
Co-President, Fleur Fitzsimons, will step down in December
after two years in the position.
A correction
In our
story last week, headed “Massey to coordinate social
sciences programme”, we reported that Massey University is
to coordinate an $8 million programme to improve the
capacity of social sciences in New Zealand. We reported that
the network of social scientists is made up of senior
researchers from the Auckland, Massey, Canterbury, Victoria
and Lincoln Universities and the Family Centre in Lower
Hutt. We omitted the University of Waikato from that list.
Professor Richard Bedford, Adjunct Professor Judge Michael
Brown, Professors Judy Motion, Neil Ericksen, Ted Zorn and
Jacques Poot are the researchers involved from
Waikato.
Worldwatch
Injunction stops LMU strike
A
High Court injunction has stopped a strike planned by
lecturers at the London Metropolitan University this week.
The Court’s decision was based on a complaint by LMU
management that the lecturers’ union, the National
Association of Teachers in Further and Higher Education
(NATFHE), failed to fulfil a number of technical
requirements in its balloting processes for industrial
action.
The dispute is centred on the threat to sack 387
academic staff if they refused to accept new, inferior
employment agreements following the merger of the University
of North London and London Guildhall University to create
LMU. In April, the University told staff they had until 31
August to accept the new agreements or be dismissed.
The
ensuing dispute led to strike action in June and an academic
boycott since July. This week’s intended strike was planned
to coincide with freshers’ week, when thousands of new
students take induction classes at the University.
NATFHE
officials are reported to be furious at the University’s
injunction application. “The University’s use of
anti-trade-union legislation to prevent our members from
exercising their right to strike is deplorable and will only
increase the determination of staff,” said NATFHE General
Secretary, Paul Mackney. “We shall now consider ways of
escalating the campaign, including continuing and
strengthening the existing academic boycott. We shall
consider re-balloting all of our members and find
appropriate actions in order to bring the dispute to a
successful conclusion.”
University bosses plan RAE revolt
University bosses in the United Kingdom are planning to
challenge the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise (RAE), their
equivalent to the PBRF. According to the Education Guardian,
vice-chancellors believe they were “duped” into agreeing to
the RAE, and the heads of the three main university
groupings are discussing alternatives, with a view to
approaching the Government with proposals.
The Russell
Group of elite research universities, Campaigning for
Mainstream Universities, representing the new universities,
and the 94 Group of small research universities have united
to question the RAE. They said that the sector was jaded
with the RAE. “The RAE plays games and focuses attention on
the exercise in universities as if it’s the only thing that
matters,” said Professor Michael Stirling, the Chairman of
the Russell Group.
A House of Commons Science and
Technology Select Committee report published this week is
critical of the RAE’s impact on research in the UK.
A
spokesperson for the Association of University Teachers said
the union was delighted that others shared its views on the
need to dispose of the RAE.
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
distributed freely to members of the Association of
University Staff and others. Back issues are available on
the AUS website: www.aus.ac.nz . Direct enquires should be
made to Marty Braithwaite, AUS Communications Officer,
email:
marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz