AUS Tertiary Update
Union members to vote on national bargaining
Union
members in New Zealand’s seven traditional universities will
begin voting next week to determine whether the unions will
again initiate bargaining for national multi-employer
collective employment agreements in 2006. The current
enterprise-based collective agreements for academic and
general staff are due to expire on 30 April.
Association
of University Staff General Secretary, Helen Kelly, said
that the AUS Council and Industrial Committee strongly
recommended that union members vote in favour of the
national bargaining proposal in order to build on the
progress made over the past few years to resolve salary and
funding problems within the university sector. “Last year’s
collective-agreement negotiations resulted in the
establishment of the Universities Tripartite Forum,
providing the Government, vice-chancellors and university
unions with the means to make progress on these issues,” she
said. “It was also agreed between the unions and
vice-chancellors that ensuring competitive and fair salaries
would be given a high priority in the Universities
Tripartite Forum’s work plan, and that the parties would use
their best endeavours to develop and implement sustainable
solutions to the issue of providing competitive and fair
salaries for all university staff.”
Ms Kelly said that it
was clear that a national approach had increased the
collective strength of staff, as it had done for teachers,
nurses and doctors, and gave the unions a better basis to
bargain effectively for better salaries and conditions of
employment. It had also allowed the Government to become
involved and work with the parties to find national
solutions to the issues facing the sector.
“New Zealand
competes on an international labour market for university
staff, and it is our view that the national bargaining
process has the potential not only to set national terms and
conditions of employment, but also to assist with workforce
planning, reduce competition and increase cooperation within
the country’s universities and help differentiate
universities from the rest of the tertiary education sector.
As such, national collective agreements are in the interests
of a high-quality university system for this country,” Ms
Kelly said.
The national bargaining ballot closes in late
February, with bargaining expected to commence by early
April.
Also in Tertiary Update this week
1. New funding
system to be revealed soon
2. Legal challenge to
dismissal of fixed-term lecturer
3. Increase in
proportion of female graduates
4. NZUSA set to expand
membership
5. Hood may face no-confidence vote
6. US
scholars speak out on NYU graduate students’
rights
7. Student editor suspended after printing cartoon
8. Budget cuts proposed for US higher education
New
funding system to be revealed soon
The Minister for
Tertiary Education told an audience at the Auckland
University of Technology (AUT) yesterday that a new funding
system for the sector is expected to be announced towards
the end of March. Speaking at the opening the new AUT
Akoranga Campus Library, Dr Cullen said that his officials
are currently working on identifying more effective funding
options as part of a move away from a model that rewards
enrolment numbers to one which encourages high-quality
course design and teaching. “Our ambition is to see a
tertiary system that values quality and relevance and
provides students with a clear set of educational choices,”
he said.
Dr Cullen said that any new funding system must
support academic staff who are zealous about their teaching
and research. “We need to find ways to foster improvements
in the quality of teaching and ensure that learning
programmes have better learner outcomes,” he said. “That of
course requires a nuanced appreciation of what outcomes
learners are seeking.”
In what may be a strong indication
that course completions will be one of the measures being
considered, Dr Cullen said that there needed to be a
minimisation of the number of students who enrol in study
programmes but get lost in the system through a lack of
forward planning or an inflexible bureaucratic process which
does not allow them to tailor their study to their needs and
where they live.
“Invariably the outcomes students are
seeking go beyond the specific skills for a particular
vocation; they are seeking the ability to understand and
master new technologies, to negotiate the challenges of a
global labour market, and to contribute to a New Zealand
society and economy that grows more diverse by the day,” Dr
Cullen said. “We are on our way to creating a tertiary
sector which provides consistently high-quality education
that meets international benchmarks and fulfills the
expectations of students and employers.”
Legal challenge
to dismissal of fixed-term lecturer
Legal proceedings
challenging the dismissal of an assistant lecturer at Massey
University were filed in the Employment Relations Authority
this week by AUS.
The Massey AUS Branch Organiser,
Lawrence O’Halloran, says that legal intervention was sought
because mediation between the parties had failed to resolve
the problem. He said that the University first employed the
assistant lecturer on a three-year, fixed-term agreement,
but then continued to employ him after its expiry. The staff
member subsequently received a fresh offer of fixed-term
employment for a further year, retrospective to the expiry
of the previous agreement. Not surprisingly, the staff
member declined to accept the new offer because, by
continuing his employment beyond the expiry of the initial
fixed term of employment, he believed his employment was
ongoing. He also believed that the University did not have a
genuine reason, based on reasonable grounds as required by
the law, for using a fixed term agreement for his position
on the basis that the work he was employed to perform was
on-going and, therefore, permanent.
What occurred next,
however, was that, ten days before the end of what would
have been the second fixed-term of employment, the staff
member was sent a “reminder” from one of the University’s
Human Resources advisors that his employment was due to end.
He was told to return his keys, parking card and staff
identification, and his employment terminated.
Mr
O’Halloran said that the University was not entitled to rely
on the expiry of a purported fixed-term agreement to dismiss
the staff member but, if it had a justifiable reason, such
as redundancy, to end the employment, it was obliged to
consult the union and endeavour to reach agreement on
alternative options or pay redundancy compensation. He said
the University had also failed to comply with an important
requirement of the Employment Relations Act by failing to
advise the staff member, before accepting his initial term
of employment, of the reasons that his employment would be
brought to an end at the expiry of his fixed-term
engagement.
Meanwhile, an application, filed in the
Employment Relations Authority in November, to prevent the
dismissal of a lecturer employed on five successive
fixed-term agreements at the University of Otago has been
settled.
Increase in proportion of female
graduates
During the last ten years there has been a
gradual increase in the proportion of female university
graduates, with, of course, a corresponding decrease in the
proportion of male graduates, according to NZUniGradStats, a
new publication from the New Zealand Vice-Chancellors’
Committee (NZVCC). During that time, the university-graduate
population increased by 45.2 percent, from 21,389 in 1995 to
31,048 in 2004. Of domestic graduates in 2004, 58.9 percent
were female, while 56 percent of international graduates
were female.
The publication, based on the results of
the NZVCC annual survey of graduates from New Zealand’s
eight universities, looks at the 31,048 students who became
eligible to graduate with a degree, postgraduate
qualification or diploma in 2004, and the 10,441 graduates
who responded to the survey.
Reflecting the increasing
reliance of universities on international students, the
report shows that the proportion of international graduates
grew by 464 percent, from 1015 in 1995 to 5728 in 2004. Most
of that growth occurred between 2002 and 2004, reflecting
the rapid increase in student numbers from China.
During
the last nine years of data collection, the proportion of
European/Pakeha graduates has declined, with a corresponding
increase in the proportion of Asian graduates. The
proportions of New Zealand Maori and Pacific Peoples’
graduates has remained relatively constant.
Not
surprisingly, the University of Auckland produced the
highest number of graduates (7,955) in 2004, well ahead of
the second-placed Massey University with 5691. Victoria
University had the highest percentage of students graduating
with more than one qualification, at 8.7 percent, followed
by the University of Otago with 8.1 percent.
The full
report can be found
at:
http://www.nzvcc.ac.nz/files/advocacy/publications/NZUniGradStats%202005.pdf
NZUSA
set to expand membership
The University Students’
Association is to expand its membership to include
polytechnic students’ associations following the collapse of
their national body, ATSA, in 2005, according to a report in
Education Review. At its recent national conference, NZUSA
decided to review its structure so it could deal with issues
specific to polytechnics.
NZUSA Co-President, Joey
Randall, is as reported saying that members were very clear
that all students should have national representation, with
fellow Co-President, Conor Roberts, adding that the
Association had increased its mandate to represent students
throughout New Zealand. “Most issues facing students were
common across the two types of institution”, he
said.
NZUSA had begun discussions with polytechnic
students’ associations interested in joining NZUSA and was
looking at strategic planning and structural reviews, such
as setting up parallel internal mechanisms. A postal
ballot, to be held in mid-March, will decide on a name
change to reflect the proposed wider membership.
Education Review reports that, as well as continuing to
push for increased access to the student allowance, NZUSA
would respond to developments in the sector such as changes
to funding structures.
Worldwatch
Hood may face
no-confidence vote
Senior figures within Britain’s Oxford
University are considering a vote of no confidence in its
Vice-Chancellor, reflecting continuing opposition to his
management style, according to the Times Higher.
Dr John
Hood, a former Vice-Chancellor of the University of Auckland
and the first “outsider” to head the University in its 900
years, has been accused by some academics of trampling on
centuries of tradition in the way he has embarked on change,
including proposed governance reforms.
A senior Oxford
scientist told the Times Higher that, if Dr Hood continues
to be inflexible, he did not see any alternative to a
no-confidence vote. “One scenario would be to collect a
number of signatures to debate the motion that this
Congregation has no faith in the Vice-Chancellor. His
position would then be untenable,” he said.
Peter
Oppenheimer, President of the Oxford Centre for Hebrew and
Jewish Studies, is reported as saying that it was
conceivable that there would be a vote of no confidence.
“You wouldn’t think that one individual could cause so much
divisiveness and such an unpleasant atmosphere in such a
short time. It is very much a personality issue. If there
wasn’t the sense that he is trying to control everything and
trample on Oxford’s traditional way of taking decisions,
what has to be done now would not be done.”
Dr Hood's
proposals for a more corporate style of governance sparked a
bitter dispute last year, but the University insisted that
this had died down.
US scholars speak out on NYU graduate
students’ rights
Leading scholars in the United States
released a statement this week calling on New York
University President, John Sexton to recognise the right of
employees to choose whether and how they wish to be
represented in collective bargaining. The statement,
prepared by the American Association of University
Professors (AAUP), and endorsed by more than a dozen of the
country’s most prominent labour law, labour history and
industrial relations academics, responds to Sexton’s
announcement that the NYU administration will not deal with
the University’s graduate-student employees through a
representative union of their own choosing.
Graduate
Assistants at NYU have been engaged in industrial action
since last year after University management said that it
would not recognise, or work with, the Union representing
staff. Instead it offered new individual contracts and made
a number of threats, including blacklisting, against
teaching assistants who do not accept the new
agreements.
“The principle at stake is fundamental,” said
Roger Bowen, General Secretary of AAUP. “Employers do not
have the right to identify, and thereby to control, who
shall represent a group of employees.”
The teaching
assistants say they will remain on strike until the
University recognises their union, which is an affiliate of
the United Automobile Workers.
Student editor suspended
after printing cartoon
This week’s edition of the
University of Cardiff student newspaper, Gair Rhydd, has
been recalled and its editor suspended after it reprinted
one of the twelve cartoons originally published in a Danish
newspaper, and which have resulted in Muslim protests around
the world.
A student-union spokeswoman said that Tom
Wellingham, the editor of the paper, which won newspaper of
the year at last year’s Guardian Student Media Awards, had
been suspended alongside three other journalists. “The
editorial team enjoys the normal freedoms and independence
associated with the press in the UK, and are expected to
exercise those freedoms with responsibility, due care and
judgment,” she said. “The students’ union very much regrets
any upset caused or disrespect shown by the publication of
the controversial cartoon and has taken immediate action by
promptly withdrawing all copies of this week's edition of
Gair Rhydd at the earliest moment possible.”
The
students’ union has launched an investigation into how the
images came to be published in the paper, which has a
potential readership of more than 21,000 students.
Budget
cuts proposed for US higher education
The United States
budget request for the 2007 fiscal year had little good news
for financially needy students, particularly those who are
not high academic achievers, according to the Chronicle of
Higher Education.
Under the spending plan, the maximum
Pell (student) Grant would remain at $US4,050 for the fifth
year in a row and, for the second consecutive year,
President Bush is calling on Congress to eliminate the
Perkins Loan Program used to provide loans to students from
low and middle-income families.
Mr. Bush’s budget
proposal would also end the Leveraging Educational
Assistance Partnerships programme, which matches each dollar
that states commit to need-based aid. In addition, it would
leave both Federal Work-Study and Supplemental Educational
Opportunity Grants, which augment Pell Grants for needy
students, at their 2006 levels.
Overall, President Bush
has requested $US54.4 billion in appropriations for the
Department of Education in 2007, a decrease of $US3.1
billion, or 5.5 percent, from the current year’s level. The
2007 fiscal year begins on 1 October.
While briefing
education lobbyists on the plan this week, Margaret
Spellings, the Education Secretary, acknowledged that the
budget proposal was austere, but denied that it would harm
low-income students.
“This is a tough budget year,” she
said. “No doubt about
it.”
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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