AUS Tertiary Update
Universities hit by continuing protest
action
Universities continue to be hit by industrial
unrest following a day-long strike by staff last Wednesday
in protest at the refusal of vice-chancellors at six of the
country’s universities to agree to national collective
employment agreements and make acceptable salary offers. The
exception is at the University of Otago where action was
lifted after its Vice-Chancellor, Professor David Skegg,
offered a 5 percent salary increase and agreed to further
discussion on multi-employer bargaining.
Rolling
stoppages at the University of Canterbury culminated
yesterday with union members in academic regalia marching on
its Council meeting. The Council unanimously supported a
resolution to participate actively in the Tripartite Forum
set up by the Government to bring a high-level resolution to
university salary problems. Lincoln University has seen
lightning strikes stop a number of lectures, as well as
rallies and other disruption to normal duties. A picket,
coinciding with a two-hour strike by library staff, was held
yesterday at Victoria University during an address to
students by National Education spokesperson, Bill English.
That action complements an earlier ban on teaching 200 level
courses and other disruptive actions. One-hour stoppages are
planned for Massey Albany tomorrow and Tuesday next week,
while other Massey staff have been taking action short of
striking. Lightning strikes are planned at Waikato
University following the successful picketing of lecture
theatres this week. On Monday, a lightning strike at the
University of Auckland was accompanied by a picket of that
University’s Senate. Since then, specific buildings have
been targeted for rolling stoppages and a lunchtime rally
has been held.
More lightning strikes and rolling
stoppages will be held over the next few days, with a
further full-day strike planned for Thursday 4 August.
Further action will be determined if the dispute is not
resolved by then.
Association of University Staff General
Secretary Helen Kelly said that the industrial action had
been well supported, with union members determined that the
dispute would have a positive outcome for staff. “We have a
number of meetings planned with vice-chancellors to try and
reach a national settlement in order that we can concentrate
on the more strategic work of identifying and resolving
salary problems facing the sector through the Universities
Tripartite Forum,” she said.
A full update on the
industrial action and bargaining can be found on the AUS
website: www.aus.ac.nz
Also in Tertiary Update this
week
1. Labour to axe interest on student
loans
2. National policy trumped by Labour
3. CPIT
staff strike
4. Top teachers recognised
5. PBRF
panelists named
6. RAE shifts focus from prestige
journals
7. Brunel sacks staff in RAE maneuvering, LMU
dispute over
8. Police fire shots in UPNG
dispute
Labour to axe interest on student loans
Within
a day of its announcement of the date for this year’s
General Election, Labour moved to establish student debt as
a key election issue with the release of its student-support
policy. In a media conference at Victoria University on
Tuesday, the Prime Minister, Helen Clark, announced that,
from 1 April next year, Labour would abolish all interest
charges on student loans for those who reside in New
Zealand. Graduates who go overseas for fulltime study will
not be charged interest as long as they are studying.
The
new policy means that a graduate with a debt of $30,000 who
earns $45,000 per year, and factoring in a 3 percent
increase in salary per year, would save $20,000 and pay back
the loan in nine years. That is, five years less than the
time taken currently to pay back a loan of the same
size.
At the same time, Labour says there will be an
amnesty period in 2006 where those who return from overseas
or enter into a repayment arrangement will not be charged
the penalty interest for any overdue payments.
Helen
Clark says the total cost of the policy is expected to be
around $100 million in its first year, rising to around $300
million per annum.
Labour says it will also maintain a
simplified, capped student fee structure to provide
certainty on fee levels for students throughout the duration
of their studies; conduct a specific review of the funding
arrangements for medical and dental students; progressively
increase parental income thresholds so that at least half of
all fulltime students will receive a student allowance;
continue to increase parental income thresholds each year by
the rate of inflation; increase the personal abatement rate
for student allowances each year by the rate of inflation;
and increase the number of bonded scholarships to assist
students with the cost of fees.
Helen Clark said that the
policy contained a real incentive for young graduates to
remain in New Zealand, and would encourage those who head
overseas for work and travel to return home more
quickly.
While students and staff groups across the
sector have widely supported the announcement, the curious
exception was the New Zealand Vice-Chancellors’ Committee,
whose Chair, Stuart McCutcheon, slated the policy on
national radio as blatant electioneering.
For full
details, including a loan calculator to determine repayment
times, go
to:
http://www.labour.org.nz/news/latest_labour_news/news-050726a/index.html
The
Association of University Staff media release can be viewed
at:
http://www.aus.ac.nz/media_releases/2005/StudentLoans.htm
National
policy trumped by Labour
Labour’s promise to end interest
on student loans effectively trumped National’s tertiary
education policy, which had been released the previous
Sunday afternoon. Under National’s policy, from 1 April next
year, interest payments on student loans would be tax
deductible against income earned in New Zealand, meaning
that a graduate with a loan of $30,000, and earning $45,000
per year, would have their tax liability reduced by up to
$693 per year. The loan principal would be reduced by $7,540
after ten years.
Announcing the policy, National leader
Don Brash said the process would be done automatically by
the Inland Revenue Department, and would require no extra
work of form-filling for borrowers. “The IRD will credit the
tax deduction on interest actually paid to the student loan
account of the borrower,” he said. “It will be automatically
directed to lowering the loan balance, thus accelerating the
repayment of the loan.”
Don Brash also said that reducing
the gap in incomes between New Zealand and Australia will be
a key theme of National’s election campaign.
National has
also said it will abolish community education courses run by
tertiary institutions; boost trade, skills and workplace
training; freeze government spending on students in
sub-degree certificate and diploma courses; introduce
spending controls across all tertiary funding; strengthen
quality control; fund institutions where students are
genuinely engaged and learning; set retention and completion
thresholds for continued funding; ensure students have a
better choice of courses and providers; reduce central
bureaucracy; reform polytechnic councils to ensure better
accountability; work for sustainable training provision in
the regions; support growth in adult education night
courses; and focus on high-value research.
Education
spokesperson Bill English said that National would cut back
the complex Wellington education bureaucracy because it has
“failed spectacularly” to ensure value for taxpayers’
investment in tertiary education. “We will start by cutting
the $10 million more for bureaucrats that Trevor Mallard
announced last week,” he is as reported saying. “He is
pouring good money after bad.”
Further information can be
found at:
http://www.national.org.nz/Article.aspx?ArticleID=4741
The
Association of University Staff media release can be viewed
at:
http://www.aus.ac.nz/media_releases/2005/NatStudents.htm
CPIT
staff strike
Academic union members at Christchurch
Polytechnic Institute of Technology were on strike yesterday
in protest at what they describe as an unfair salary offer
made during collective employment agreement negotiations.
Mike Dawson, a field officer for the Association of Staff in
Tertiary Education (ASTE), said that, despite many months of
talking, the parties had not been able to close the gap
between the needs of academic staff and what is being
offered by the employer. “The employer’s offer, of 2 percent
for 2005, 3 percent for 2006 and a further 1 percent for a
proportion of 2007, was thoroughly rejected by ASTE members
who voted unanimously to take ongoing strike action,” he
said. “With inflation running at 2.8 percent, CPIT’s offer
was nowhere near [union] members’ expectations of what
constitutes a fair pay rise.” Union members are seeking a 6
percent pay rise for 2005.
Mr Dawson said that, while
CPIT had a number of internal and external problems to
contend with, they were not of the staff’s making, and that
staff do not see a raid on their salaries as a solution to
these problems. “All of the polytechnics are subject to the
same funding regime and, yet, with the exception of one
semi-bankrupt institution which offered 2.6 percent, they
have had no hesitation in doing better,” he said. “Strike
action will continue until a more realistic and acceptable
offer is made by CPIT management.”
More than one hundred
staff picketed CPIT after a two-hour stopwork meeting.
Top
teachers recognised
Dr Roger Moltzen, a senior lecturer
at the University of Waikato, was awarded New Zealand’s top
tertiary teaching award at the fourth annual Tertiary
Teaching Excellence Awards at Parliament on Tuesday night.
He received the Prime Minister’s Supreme Award and will
receive $30,000 to further enhance his teaching career and
promote best practice.
Congratulating New Zealand’s top
tertiary teachers, the Minister of Education, Trevor
Mallard, said that the awards celebrate excellence in
tertiary teaching, promote good teaching practice and
enhance career development for teachers. “It is great to be
able to applaud and reward people whose skill, passion and
commitment to teaching contribute to what is best about New
Zealand’s tertiary education system,” he said. “Setting up
the Tertiary Teaching Excellence Awards was one of the first
things this Government did as part of our determination to
reform the tertiary education system.”
“Dr Moltzen was
selected for this prestigious award because of his
exemplarary teaching, ability to deliver excellence over a
wide spectrum and for his impact on teachers and principals
across the education sector, “ Trevor Mallard said. “It is
fantastic that we have teachers at this level of excellence
in our tertiary education system.”
Professor Thomas
Rades, Stephen Pope, Stuart Petrie, Dr Regina Scheyvens, Dr
Colin Quilter and Associate Professor Daniel Brown will all
receive $20,000 for the Sustained Excellence award.
Associate Professor Alexander Davies, Associate
Professor Andrew Charleson and Professor Kereti Rautangata
are all to receive $20,000 for their Excellence in
Innovation award.
PBRF panelists named
The panelists
for the 2006 Performance-Based Research Fund (PBRF) Quality
Evaluation were named this month by the Tertiary Education
Commission. The 172 academics have been organised into
twelve peer-review panels to assess forty-one subjects in
next year’s process. The majority of the panel members are
from the New Zealand research community, and work in
tertiary education institutions, crown research institutes
and the private sector. Forty come from overseas. They will
join the three moderators and twelve peer-review panel
chairs appointed earlier in the year.
Welcoming the
appointments, the Minister of Education, Trevor Mallard,
said that the appointment of so many top people is a great
vote of confidence in the fund. “More than 70 percent of the
appointees took part in the last PBRF round in 2003,” he
said. “The results from the 2006 PBRF Quality Evaluation
will give us the best-ever picture of the research
strengths, and the research areas needing
development.”
By 2007, the PBRF will be the government’s
major method of funding and rewarding research in tertiary
education organisations. PBRF funding is projected to rise
to $230 million in 2009.
The fill list of PBRF panelists
can be found at:
http://www.tec.govt.nz/funding/research/pbrf/panels.htm
Worldwatch
RAE
shifts focus from prestige journals
The Education
Guardian reports that senior academics overseeing the 2008
Research Assessment Exercise in the United Kingdom have
urged universities to abandon their obsession with top
journals, saying they will treat equally all types of
research and journals across all subjects.
Sir John
Berringer, who chairs the panel that will assess biological
sciences, is reported as saying: “The jolt will come for
those [academics] who take the mindless approach – ‘I have
so many publications in journals X and Y, therefore I am
excellent.’ It is terribly important to break the link that
publishing in a journal such as Nature is necessarily a
measure of excellence.”
Similarly, the Director of
Research for the Higher Education Funding Council for
England says that the exercise is about ensuring that
high-quality research is disseminated by “whatever means”.
In some cases that might be a patent application, in others
conference proceedings.
If successful, the move could
signal a major culture-shift in universities where academics
are pressured to publish papers in top-ranking journals to
gain appointment and progression.
Brunel sacks staff in
RAE manoeuvering, LMU dispute over
As the manoeuvering
gets underway for the 2008 RAE exercise in the United
Kingdom, Brunel University management have moved to improve
its research rating by axing staff. While around sixty
teaching-only or “research-inactive” staff have already
negotiated voluntary redundancy packages, a further two were
told last week that they would be made compulsorily
redundant. Included amongst them is the local Association of
University Teachers’ (AUT) Branch President, Alan Harrison,
sparking added fears that he has been selected because of
his trade-union activities.
This action has resulted in
AUT calling for a “greylisting” of the University, meaning
that union members refrain from participating gin any
voluntary links with Brunel, including withholding
collaboration on research projects, journal contributions
and participation in academic conferences. More information
on the Brunel dispute can be found at:
www.aut.org.uk/greylistbrunel
Meanwhile, the bitter
fifteen-month dispute at London Metropolitan University
(LMU) over the attempted imposition of new, inferior
employment agreements for more than four hundred staff
appears to have been resolved. A joint statement from LMU
management and lecturers’ union NATFHE issued yesterday
advised that after two days of negotiation, with the
assistance of an industrial mediator, agreement had been
reached on a revised contract of employment and
interpretation agreement for teaching staff at the
University.
The statement says that the agreed revised
contract will be recommended to the University Board of
Governors and to NATFHE members through a ballot. Both
parties say they hope that agreement will be part of a new
start in relations at the University.
Police fire shots in
UPNG dispute
The University of Papua New Guinea Council
will today consider whether to abandon classes for the
remainder of the term after class boycotts and student
protests over the introduction of a new academic-grading
system turned violent entering their third week.
Student
demonstrators have clashed with police and University
security guards and, on Monday night, police fired warning
shots to disperse the crowd after two buses were burnt and
attempts were made to destroy a campus workshop.
The
Vice-Chancellor, Les Eastcott, has introduced a dusk-to-dawn
curfew in a bid to control the continuing
unrest.
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
distributed freely to members of the Association of
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the AUS website: www.aus.ac.nz . Direct enquires should be
made to Marty Braithwaite, AUS Communications Officer,
email:
marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz