AUS Tertiary Update
Auckland University case continues under urgency
The
Employment Court is today continuing to hear the case being
brought by the Association of University Staff (AUS) against
Stuart McCutcheon, the Vice-Chancellor of the University of
Auckland, over his continuing refusal to engage in
negotiations for new national collective employment
agreements for university staff.
The Court had initially
decided to hear evidence on Tuesday and Wednesday this week,
and then legal submissions in the first week of May. After
the hearing commenced, however, the Court decided to give it
greater urgency and is now hearing the remainder of the case
today. It expects to be able to deliver a judgement within a
fortnight. On this basis, the University and the AUS have
agreed that no strike action, lock outs or suspensions will
occur until the Court has given its decisions. Accordingly,
the strike action planned by unions at the University for
today has been cancelled.
Meanwhile, in an unusual
move, the Minister of Education, Trevor Mallard, has written
to the AUS and the New Zealand Vice-Chancellors’ Committee
setting out the Government’s position in relation to wage
settlements arising out of the current university collective
employment agreement negotiations. He has advised that there
is no appropriation or contingency set aside in this year’s
national Budget to meet any costs arising from the current
wage negotiations. While he confirms that there will be a
tertiary education allocation in the Budget, it will not
contain any specific provisions for costs arising out of
wage settlements, and he states that any settlements must be
funded in the normal manner by universities.
AUS General
Secretary Helen Kelly said that the timing of Trevor
Mallard’s letter, on the eve of the court hearing, was
particularly inappropriate. She said the letter was referred
to a number of times in Court as part of the
Vice-Chancellor’s justification for the position he has
taken over the bargaining. “The Minister’s letter has been
interpreted by the Vice-Chancellor as an endorsement of his
approach to bargaining,” she said. “The Minister must have
known this would be the case, and it is a direct intrusion
into the proceedings.”
Ms Kelly said, however, that the
positive message that could be taken from the letter is that
funding and salaries are sufficiently important to the
Government for Trevor Mallard to seek permission from
Finance Minister Michael Cullen to write. Secondly, it
confirms that there will be more money for the sector in the
Budget.
Negotiations for the new national collective
employment agreements are scheduled to begin on 5 May, with
five further days scheduled during the month.
The full
text of Trevor Mallard’s letter can be found at:
http://www.aus.ac.nz/national_bargaining/2005/Auckland/MallardLetter.pdf
Also
in Tertiary Update this week
1. Auckland University
ordered to reinstate sacked lecturer
2. Panel chairs
appointed for PBRF
3. Consultation begins on Unitec’s
university application
4. Otago roll grows
5. VUT
staff to strike
6. Anti-vivisectionists win right to
challenge Cambridge
7. Bought essays fail to hit the
mark
Auckland University ordered to reinstate sacked
lecturer
The University of Auckland has been ordered to
reinstate a permanent lecturer it sacked after refusing to
confirm his appointment at the end of an initial period of
employment. The Employment Relations Authority has also
ordered the University to pay the senior lecturer $10,000
compensation and reimburse all salary lost from his
dismissal in November until his reinstatement takes
effect.
Employment Authority Member James Wilson has also
recommended that the University, in consultation with the
Association of University Staff, review its continuation
policy to ensure it meets minimum standards of natural
justice and is available to and understood by staff, and to
ensure that those charged with administering the policy are
provided with guidance and support regarding their
responsibilities.
The Employment Authority ruled that the
lecturer, who had been engaged on an “on-going”, “tenurable
appointment”, subject to the completion of an initial
four-year term, had been unjustifiably dismissed after being
told by University management he had not met the standards
required of a senior lecturer at the University of Auckland.
AUS General Secretary Helen Kelly said AUS had told the
University that its continuation policy, and the process it
was using to dismiss him, were unfair and did not meet the
basic standards of natural justice. “Instead of listening
and changing tack, the University continued to use the
policy and, in doing so, caused the AUS member great
distress,” Ms Kelly said. “Because of an unfair policy he
was powerless to defend himself.”
Helen Kelly said
the University’s disregard for staff and its legal
obligations was not the behaviour expected from a large and
well-resourced public-sector institution with a statutory
obligation to be a good employer.”
The AUS will now work
with the University to review its appointment and
continuation processes.
Panel chairs appointed for
PBRF
Twelve leading academics have been appointed by the
Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) to chair the Peer Review
Panels as part of the next Performance-Based Research Fund
process. They will oversee next year’s quality evaluation,
which will provide the grading assessments that will help
set PBRF funding, intended to reward and encourage research
in tertiary education organisations. The panel chairs will
join the three moderators who were appointed last
month.
TEC Deputy Chair Kaye Turner said that the
moderators and panel chairs were among New Zealand’s
pre-eminent academics. “Their commitment to these roles
shows a high level of support for the TEC’s PBRF process,”
she said. “We have a solid base of experience represented on
the panels. All of the moderators and ten of the panel
chairs were involved in the first PBRF round.”
The panel
chairs will now work with the TEC to select peer review
panel members, and will contribute to the design of the
guidelines and procedures for the 2006 quality evaluation
process.
The new panel chairs are: Professor Bruce
Baguley, Auckland University (biological sciences);
Professor Kerr Inkson, Massey University (business and
economics); Professor Peter Walls, Victoria University
(creative and performing arts); Professor Noelene Alcorn,
Waikato University (education); Professor John Raine, Massey
University (engineering, technology and architecture);
Professor Peter Joyce, Otago University (health); Professor
Raewyn Dalziel, Auckland University (humanities and law); Dr
Ailsa Smith, Lincoln University (Maori knowledge and
development); Professor Vernon Squire, Otago University
(maths and information sciences); Pat Sullivan, Massey
University (medicine and public health); Professor Joe
Tradahl, Victoria University (physical sciences); and
Professor Michael Corballis, Auckland University (social
sciences).
Consultation begins on Unitec’s university
application
Formal public consultation began this week on
whether the establishment of the Auckland tertiary education
provider Unitec as a university would be in the national
interest. The Minister of Education, Trevor Mallard, has
asked the TEC for advice on whether the establishment of
Unitec as a university is in the interests of the tertiary
education system and the nation as a whole.
The TEC has
been asked to carry out the associated consultation process
with the sector and other relevant bodies. In turn, the TEC
has written to tertiary institutions and has placed
advertisements in major newspapers calling for public
submissions.
The TEC will then consider the public
submissions, and undertake an assessment based on the
overall pattern of national and regional provision of
tertiary education as it relates to the needs of learners,
business and communities and the priorities as expressed
through the Government’s Tertiary Education Strategy. Public
submissions close on 20 May.
The TEC assessment is in
addition to, and independent of, an assessment being
undertaken by the New Zealand Qualifications Authority to
determine whether or not Unitec meets the required
characteristics of a university as defined by the Education
Act.
More information about the consultation process and
the TEC assessment criteria can be found on the TEC website:
www.tec.govt.nz
Otago roll grows
University of Otago
enrolments are up by 2.1 percent on the same time last year,
according to the latest figures released this week by the
Acting Vice-Chancellor Professor Gareth Jones.
An
analysis of the enrolments at 31 March shows a 1 percent
increase, or 145 equivalent full-time students (EFTS), in
the number of domestic enrolments, and an 11.9 percent, or
196 EFTS, increase in international student enrolments. The
number of students enrolled in postgraduate studies is up by
13.9 percent.
The analysis showed, however, an expected
drop in the number of first year enrolments, attributed to a
fall in the number of first-year international
students.
Professor Jones said that it was pleasing to
have achieved an overall enrolment growth in 2005, and to
have achieved it at both undergraduate and postgraduate
level, and especially in enrolments for postgraduate
research study. He said that while the 2.2 percent decline
in domestic first-year enrolments was a “little
disappointing”, it seemed to be largely the consequence of a
very strong job market, with the tougher entrance
requirements of NCEA being a secondary factor.
Although
the overall first-year intake is currently down by 3.1
percent, it is still the University’s third highest ever
Professor Jones noted.
Worldwatch
VUT staff to
strike
Staff at Melbourne’s Victoria University of
Technology have passed a vote of no-confidence in their
Vice-Chancellor, Professor Elizabeth Harman, and will strike
for two days on 28 and 29 April. Staff represented by the
National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) have been locked in
protracted industrial negotiations since 2003, a period they
say has been marked by a deteriorating relationship between
staff an management over a range of issues. They include
enterprise bargaining, management moves to dismantle the
Academic Board and job losses arising from a faculty
reorganisation.
NTEU says that since taking over as
Vice-Chancellor in October 2003, Professor Harman’s tenure
has been associated with an unprecedented sense of crisis
and deterioration in the quality of the University’s core
activities of teaching, research and scholarship.
A
planned forty-eight hour strike over Easter was suspended
when Professor Harman agreed to key union items, including a
new three-year collective employment agreement, but NTEU
says she subsequently reneged on the
deal.
Anti-vivisectionists win right to challenge
Cambridge
Anti-vivisection campaigners this week won the
right to challenge the legality of animal experiments at
Britain’s renowned Cambridge University, after evidence
emerged that scientists had ignored safeguards that
protected laboratory monkeys. The High Court ruling came
after an animal rights group managed to infiltrate a
laboratory where experiments were being carried out to help
develop treatments for Parkinson’s and Huntington’s
diseases.
During the investigation, a campaigner working
as a technician discovered monkeys that had the tops of
their heads sawn off to help induce strokes in their brains.
Some of the animals had been left unattended for up to
fifteen hours and were often in poor condition.
A
spokesperson for Cambridge University said that, while they
understood that many people would find the use of animals in
medical research distressing, such research methods must
continue if life-saving advances are to be made in
medicine.
Education Guardian
Bought essays fail to hit
the mark
Students who think they can beat plagiarism
detection software or get top marks by paying an internet
ghost-writing service to produce essays, may need to think
again, according to the Times Higher. An experiment at
Loughborough University, in which students bought essays
from internet services that write one-off pieces of work,
found they were of poor quality, sometimes riddled with
mistakes and unlikely to earn more than a low grade.
In
an experiment, carried out in conjunction with BBC Radio
Four and which will be broadcast in Britain tomorrow night,
students were asked to buy a 1500 word, one-off essay on a
specified topic from the internet. The purchased essays were
then marked and subjected to anti-plagiarism
software.
The best of the essays, delivered by Degree
Essays UK, was marked at 56 to 58 percent, while the worst,
from Essays-R-Us, was marked at 42 percent. It contained
basic errors and suffered from “appalling English”.
Essays-R-Us charged £205, but warned customers that they
accept no responsibility for any inaccuracies that may arise
from time to time.
Researchers also confirmed that the
bought essays were more easily picked up by anti-plagiarism
software.
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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