AUS Tertiary Update
No need for staff cuts at Massey
The Massey
Branch of the Association of University Staff (AUS) has
rejected suggestions that staffing levels or future staff
salary increases need to be affected by last Friday’s
decision of the University Council to hold tuition fees at
2004 levels for next year. It has been reported that staff
pay rises and overall staffing levels may be at risk
following the decision which saw Massey’s Council members
vote, by seven votes to six, to reject the fees increase
recommended by University management.
“There is simply no
need to reduce staffing levels,” said AUS Massey Branch
President, Harvey Jones. “The University’s budget scenarios
showed that the only difference between zero and a 5 percent
fee increase is the impact on the University’s projected
surplus for 2005.”
“Across all of the scenarios presented
to the Council, the impact on staff salaries was the same.
Even with a 7% fee increase, the University would not have
spent a dollar more on staff,” said Mr Jones. “The
suggestion that staff numbers will need to be cut is just
scare-mongering. Massey is still forecasting a surplus of
$6.6 million dollars next year, which is on the back of
$45.9 million dollars worth of accumulated surpluses over
the past three years. There is no case for cuts.”
Meanwhile, students are delighted with the decision to
maintain fees at current levels. “It is a big win for
students and shows that the University Council shares the
concerns of students about the impact of the massive student
loan debt on our economy and society,” said Adam Maynard,
President of the Massey University Students’ Association.
“We are pleased that the Council has seen sense and agreed
not to increase student fees. Government now needs to stop
all fee increases and start reducing student fees and
student reliance on the student loan scheme.”
Council
member and Alumni representative, Dr Liz Gordon, said that
Massey had been in the best financial position of all of the
universities for some years. “There are some risks on the
horizon in terms of a potential large fall in foreign
student numbers, but the majority of Councillors felt
strongly that the risk should not be borne solely by
students through fee increases,” she said. “We wanted to
signal to young people that Massey is a University that
cares about students and wants to keep debt levels as low as
possible.”
Dr Gordon also said that a “no fee increase”
solution could not be sustained unless the Government
increased funding to universities.
Also in Tertiary Update
this week
1. Feathers fly in community education funding
spat
2. University counters gender-bias claim
3. Hood
takes reins at Oxford
4. Waikato’s “Rhodes
Scholarships”
5. ALP targets higher
education
6. Casual workers prop up UK
universities
Feathers fly in community education funding
spat
Feathers continue to fly in a war of words between
the National Party spokesperson on Education, Bill English,
and the Associate Minister of Education (Tertiary), Steve
Maharey, this time with Mr Maharey telling Parliament he can
never trust anything said by Bill English. Yesterday, Mr
Maharey called on Mr English to apologise for allegations he
made that Aoraki Polytechnic had misused community education
funding by enrolling people who had attended a lunch at the
Polytechnic at which entrepreneur Mike Tamaki was the guest
speaker.
Earlier, in what he described as the “latest
funding scam”, Mr English said he had been advised that
people attending the lunch could stay and hear Mr Tamaki
speak if they filled in a form enrolling them in a “course”
at the Polytechnic. “This form made their attendance at the
lunch an official community education enrolment,” said Mr
English. If true, it would mean that the Polytechnic was
obtaining public finding for those attending the lunch.
It turns out, however, that while the lunch was held at
the Polytechnic, it was organised by the Aoraki Development
Trust (ADT) as one of a number of similar events being held
around the country. ADT says there was no charge to the
public for the lunch, attendees were not required to fill in
any enrolment forms and there was no community education
funding.
In a terse exchange in Parliament, Mr Maharey
said that he would no longer act on any further funding
allegations made by Bill English without independent
verification because of Mr English’s “appalling track
record”, which includes inaccurate claims about Hauraki
Plains College, SiteSafe and a number of courses at the
Aoraki Polytechnic.
“When there are real problems we fix
them, but Mr English should stop making these scurrilous
allegations without bothering to check the facts,” said Mr
Maharey. “Once again, Bill English’s claims have turned out
to be inaccurate. It is now clear that he absolutely cannot
be relied upon.”
Aoraki Polytechnic’s Chief Executive,
Wendy Smith, is understood to have demanded a retraction
from Mr English, while ADT’s General Manager, Murray
Cleverly, questioned Mr English’s credibility. “He’s
definitely going to have mud on his face after this one,” he
said.
University counters gender-bias claim
The
University of Canterbury has moved to ensure its promotion
processes at least look to be above-board following its
refusal, last week, to enter mediation over a complaint
about gender bias in its appointment and promotions
processes.
The University is calling for nominations for
“gender observers” which it says will be appointed to each
of its colleges’ academic staffing committees, as well as
the central Academic Promotions Committee (APC), for this
year’s promotions round. The gender observers will be
elected by members of the female academic staff, with the
observer for the APC to be at the academic rank of associate
professor or professor.
The observers, who will not have
speaking or voting rights, are confined to commenting on
process. They will neither be permitted to comment on
particular cases, nor to advocate for individual
applications during committee meetings.
According to a
staff member spoken to by Tertiary Update, the restriction
on eligibility for observers to the APC raises the
“interesting question” of who can take on the role given the
low number of female associate professors or professors at
Canterbury. “For example, the College of Business and
Economics has no female associate professors and just one
female professor. She is unavailable, meaning it is not even
possible for that College to nominate anyone to the
Committee which makes all of the decisions on applications
for promotion to the rank of associate professor and
professor.”
Commenting on its refusal to enter mediation
over the gender-bias complaint brought by senior lecturer
Sue Newberry, Canterbury’s Vice-Chancellor, Professor Roy
Sharp, said her claims had been considered exhaustively by
the University’s previous Director of Human Resources who
said its promotion and review processes were fair and
equitable. “With further proceedings pending, the University
will be making no further comment on the matter,” he
said.
Hood takes reins at Oxford
Former University of
Auckland head, Dr John Hood, was officially welcomed as
Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University in the United Kingdom
on Tuesday this week. He became the 270th vice-chancellor in
the University’s nine-hundred-year history, and the first
person from outside its academic body to be elected to the
position. Dr Hood, who will lead the University for the next
five years, has pledged to preserve Oxford’s international
reputation, particularly in the students and academics it
recruits, the quality of its research and its collaboration
with other leading international institutions. In a note
echoing his New Zealand refrains, Dr Hood said that funding
constraints would need to be addressed in order for Oxford
to meet its objectives, and that the University could not
simply trade on its long-standing reputation for excellence.
“There is intense global competition for the most talented
scholars. Over time, an international eminent research
university such as Oxford will maintain and enhance its
standing only by being well-resourced, and therefore a
sustainable and credible competitor. Reputations built on
the memorable successes of the past do not in themselves
provide stable foundations for the future.” In order to
truly qualify for the epithet “world-class”, Dr Hood said
that Oxford must continue to excel in a broad range of
fields and judge itself against the highest international
standards.
Dr Hood recognised that Oxford had “achieved
mightily” in recent times, despite the fiscal constraints
under which it had been operating. “In essence, the cost of
providing a world-class university and the revenue available
to fund that are not in harmony,” he said. “Our obligation
as trustees for the next period is to work co-operatively
and assiduously to remedy this position. We must increase
our income while carefully managing the costs. And we must
do this within a well-contested strategic framework that
informs a regularly-updated, long-term financial plan,
thereby allowing accurate operational planning, transparent
budgeting and firm financial control.”
Dr Hood takes over
as Vice-Chancellor from Sir Colin Lucas who was farewelled
at Tuesday’s ceremony.
Waikato’s “Rhodes
Scholarships”
Waikato University is introducing new
scholarships that are intended to become New Zealand’s
equivalent of the prestigious Rhodes Scholarships. The
Parallel Development Programme (PDP) Scholarships will be
available to students who are academic high achievers and
who also excel at either arts or sports. PDP scholars will
receive a package of benefits including a full-fee
scholarship, personal academic support, coaching or training
in their non-academic area of excellence, life skills and
personal development coaching and a personal development
programme.
Announcing the new scholarships at the
University Blues Awards held last Friday night, Waikato’s
Vice-Chancellor, Professor Bryan Gould, said the
scholarships are a great opportunity for young people who
have demonstrated all-round ability. “These scholarships
will support a new generation of leaders by creating
pathways for exceptional New Zealanders.”
Worldwatch
ALP targets higher education
The
Australian Labor Party (ALP) this week pledged to deliver
more than 20,000 additional placements into higher
education, abolish full-fee degrees and reverse planned
student fee increases of up to 25 percent. Dubbed its “Aim
Higher” package, the programme will double the number of new
vocational education and training and TAFE (Australia’s
equivalent to polytechnics) places to 36,000 by 2009, and
commit $A583 million programme to tackle skills
shortages.
The National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU)
says the policy, released just days before the Australian
election, promises substantial benefits for student and
staff as well as universities. “For universities, it is
clear that Labor’s package contains more funding than
provided by the Coalition, including compensating
universities for any loss of revenue from Labor’s decision
to abolish [tuition fee] increases that a majority of
universities have adopted from 2005,” said Carolyn Allport,
NTEU President. “The Union also welcomes the fact that
Labor’s funding and programmes do not appear to be connected
to workplace relations policies that seek to undermine staff
and the reputation of Australian universities.”
Casual
workers prop up UK universities
The Association of
University Teachers (AUT) has launched a campaign to rid
higher education in the United Kingdom of its fixed-term
contract culture of employment after latest figures revealed
that nearly half of all higher education staff work on a
casual or fixed-term basis.
The Unequal Academy, a report
released by the AUT, shows that despite the introduction of
regulations to prevent the abuse of fixed-term employment
contracts, 48 percent of women academics and 38 percent of
male academics are employed on a fixed-term basis. A
staggering 93 percent of university researchers are still
employed on contracts of three years or less, and many other
staff are employed on a part-time or casual basis.
Sally
Hunt, the General Secretary of AUT, said that the continuing
use of fixed-term contracts is a hidden scandal in higher
education. “It is about time universities woke up to their
responsibilities,” she said. The Government changed the law
to stop this abuse two years ago, and universities
themselves signed an agreement to reduce the use of
fixed-term contracts. Two years on, very few have actually
reduced the use of those contracts.”
The AUT’s new
Security Alert campaign aims to eliminate the use of
fixed-term contracts in higher
education.
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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