AUS Tertiary Update
Funding review the medicine for ailing salaries
The
announcement that funding arrangements for Medicine and
Dentistry degree programmes will be reviewed has been
welcomed by the Association of University Staff National
President, Professor Nigel Haworth. He said that Medical and
Dental academic staff have for too long subsidised Medical
and Dental teaching at the Universities of Otago and
Auckland through low salaries and poor conditions of
employment, and any move to alleviate this would find strong
support.
The Minister for Tertiary Education, Dr Michael
Cullen, said that the review, to be carried out this year,
will ensure that there is sufficient funding available to
maximise training opportunities in order that the country
continues to produce the highest-quality
graduates.
Professor Haworth said that government funding
rates for Medicine and Dentistry remain less in actual terms
than they were in 1992, and that current funding levels are
now perilously close to compromising the quality of the
programmes. “It is our view that the overall funding
shortfall in Medicine is around $81,699 over the cost of a
degree, or $NZ13,616 per student per annum, and in Dentistry
by $64,920 over the cost of a degree, or $12,584 per student
per annum,” he said. “That funding shortfall had been borne
by students through high fees and by staff through low
salaries.”
Professor Haworth said that a significant
problem is the disparity between salaries paid to Medical
and Dental specialists within the public health system and
those in the universities. “Despite an international
acceptance that salary rates should be comparable, the
current difference in base-salaries is around $20,000 per
year,” he said. “Under current salary structures, that
differential will balloon to $49,000 within eight years
unless action is taken. That is completely untenable.”
Specialists employed in New Zealand’s only Dental School
at the University of Otago are paid around half the amount
received by their colleagues in private
practice.
Professor Haworth said that a major problem
faced by the universities is their ability to recruit or to
retain specialist staff in an increasing number of clinical
specialties.
The review will be carried out by officials
from the Tertiary Education Commission and Ministry of
Education who are expected to report back to the Minister
later this year to ensure any changes can be in place for
the next academic year.
Also in Tertiary Update this
week
1. Bargaining ballot closes tomorrow
2. Further
legal challenges at Auckland over fixed-term
employment
3. Unitec faces industrial
action
4. Tertiary innovation and e-learning get $15m
boost
5. NZQA announces consultation on foundation
learning
6. UK universities face strike action
7. No
summer for Harvard President
8. South African strike
lifted
9. US withholds visa from Bolivian scholar
Bargaining ballot closes tomorrow
A ballot to
determine whether AUS members in New Zealand’s seven
traditional universities will initiate bargaining for
national multi-employer collective employment agreements
again in 2006 will close at lunchtime tomorrow. Similar
ballots being conducted by the other unions involved in
national bargaining are expected to be completed early next
week. The current enterprise-based collective agreements for
academic and general staff are due to expire on 30
April.
AUS General Secretary, Helen Kelly, said that
representatives from AUS and the New Zealand
Vice-Chancellors’ Committee met with the Minister for
Tertiary Education and officials from the Ministry of
Education and Tertiary Education Commission last week. “The
meeting with Dr Cullen was a constructive one during which
we presented new information on university funding and
salaries, based on an independent report commissioned by the
vice-chancellors and ourselves to inform discussion in the
Universities Tripartite Forum,” she said. “We expect to be
able to release the report next week.”
Further legal
challenges at Auckland over fixed-term
employment
Management and union representatives will meet
in mediation next Monday following the filing of further
legal proceedings against the University of Auckland over
the use of fixed-term employment agreements. In the latest
case, the lecturer concerned had been employed for ten years
on successive fixed-term agreements, but was told that her
employment would end because the position she held was being
made permanent. She applied for her own position,
unsuccessfully, and was subsequently dismissed with one
month’s notice.
Association of University Staff Branch
Organiser, John Leckie, says that the case is depressingly
familiar, with the University of Auckland management having
attempted over recent year to replace a number of
long-serving fixed-term staff with new ones.
A further
case, involving a lecturer employed for seven years on
consecutive fixed-term agreements, is being filed in the
Employment Relations Authority, and is expected to be
referred for urgent mediation. In a manner consistent with
most of the recent cases at Auckland, the lecturer was told
his position was to be made permanent and that he could
apply. His application was, however, unsuccessful.
Fresh
legal proceedings have also been issued on behalf of six
long-term fixed-term staff dumped from their positions at
the Elam School of Fine Arts late last year. They were
invited to apply for “new” positions but, again, all were
unsuccessful. A further five similar cases from Elam have
been successfully settled at mediation.
Mr Leckie said
that the University of Auckland was a persistent offender in
its use of fixed-term agreements. “The law related to the
use of these agreements is perfectly clear and places clear
limits around their use, including that they can only be
used for genuine reasons based on reasonable grounds,” he
said. “University management has consistently used
fixed-term agreements in a manner we consider breaches the
law but, in a number of situations where their use has been
challenged, have attempted to negotiate confidential
settlements to resolve the problem. It suggests to us that
they are prepared to take a calculated risk that, by
negotiating settlements, they will avoid wider attention
being drawn to the practice.”
Unitec faces industrial
action
Allied (administrative and support) staff at the
Auckland institute of technology Unitec are picketing the
institution today and tomorrow following the breakdown of
collective agreement negotiations. Their union, TIASA, says
a vote for industrial action was overwhelmingly carried
after members rejected a 2.5 percent pay offer from Unitec
in response to the union’s claim for a 4.5 percent
increase.
TIASA Employment Relations Advisor, Shirley
Walthew, said this week that staff were outraged at what
they considered to be an unreasonable and insulting offer,
particularly given the support shown to Unitec by staff
during its recent fifteen-month period of financial
difficulty. “They accepted a low wage increase in last
year’s collective agreement negotiations, and have endured
extensive reviews that have resulted in redundancies,
increased workloads and additional pressures and stress,”
she said. “Our members expected some acknowledgement and
recognition of their endeavours, and not the dismissive
approach shown by Unitec.”
Ms Walthew said that staff are
determined not to accept less than their counterparts
elsewhere in the sector, particularly those in the Auckland
region. “It is not lost on us that Unitec has spent
considerable time and effort in recent years trying to
achieve university status,” she said. “If it wants be
considered a university it needs to follow the recent
examples of AUT and the University of Auckland, both of
which agreed to salary increases of 4.5 percent last
year.”
Meanwhile, industrial action proposed at
Wellington Polytechnic WelTec has been lifted following
further negotiations between TIASA and WelTec management. It
is understood that an offer to increase salaries by 3.1
percent and a further 3.15 percent over a two-year period
will be put to ratification.
Tertiary innovation and
e-learning get $15m boost
Another $15 million will be
spent in the next financial year on twenty-one projects
which will improve e-learning and foster innovative ideas in
the tertiary sector, according to the Minister for Tertiary
Education, Dr Michael Cullen.
The twenty-one projects to
be funded in the 2006/07 financial year were proposed by a
wide range of education providers from around the country.
They include the Tairawhiti Polytechnic in Gisborne, which
is being funded to improve the ability of teachers across
other education institutions to easily develop interactive
e-learning content. The University of Auckland is being
supported to develop a curriculum to encourage secondary
school students to consider careers in the vital area of
biological sciences. Other projects include support for
Maori e-learning initiatives and measures to enhance
e-learning in rural communities.
The latest funding is
on top of the $47 million already allocated to 54 Innovation
and Development Fund (IDF) and e-learning Collaborative
Development Fund (eCDF) projects over the past three
years.
“All of the projects are exciting, cutting-edge
initiatives which will have a significant, positive impact
on the delivery of tertiary education,” said Dr Cullen.
“Initiatives such as these are exactly what the two funds
were set up to encourage. Innovation is the key to creating
the high-performing tertiary-education sector New Zealand
needs to help transform our economy.”
A full list of
successful applicants can be found at:
www.tec.govt.nz/funding/strategic/idf/successful_applicants
NZQA
announces consultation on foundation learning
The New
Zealand Qualifications Authority announced this week that it
is consulting with tertiary education organisations about
proposed new quality-assurance requirements for adult
literacy, numeracy and language, described together as
“foundation learning”.
The proposed requirements are part
of a series of improvements being developed for foundation
learning linked to the Government’s 2001 Adult Literacy
Strategy, 2003 Adult ESOL Strategy and Learning for Living
projects.
NZQA Acting Chief Executive Karen Sewell said
that foundation learning matters because it gives many New
Zealanders the means to restart their education. “To ensure
that foundation learning is being provided to a high
standard, we need a clear and shared understanding of what
good delivery means in this specialist field,” she
said.
Providers and others in the tertiary-education
sector are invited to give feedback and make suggestions to
enhance the proposed quality-assurance requirements. The
deadline for feedback is 7 April 2006 with the Foundation
Learning Quality Assurance Requirements due to be finalised
in late 2006.
Worldwatch
UK universities face strike
action
Universities across the United Kingdom will be
brought to a complete halt on Tuesday 7 March by a day of
strike action, with an assessment boycott beginning the
following day. Lecturers, researchers and academic related
staff will refuse to cover colleagues’ work, mark students’
work or take part in the exam process as part of an ongoing
boycott.
Union members voted overwhelmingly in favour of
industrial action last week and warned today that, unless
the employers make a concerted and swift effort to resolve
their pay dispute, millions of students would be left with
coursework unmarked, lectures and seminars cancelled and
their exam programmes thrown into chaos.
The university
unions, AUT and NATFHE, are angry that the employers have
reneged on public promises to use new government funding,
and the extra billions from top-up fees, to improve pay.
AUT General Secretary, Sally Hunt, said the decision to
take industrial action was not taken lightly, but the
employers had not made a pay offer despite having months to
do so.
NATFHE General Secretary, Paul Mackney, said that
lecturers are now demanding that their salary levels be
restored to those of comparable professionals after years of
comparative decline.
Figures released today by the Trade
Union Centre say that lecturers are underpaid by almost
£10,000 a year, and that their salaries have declined in
real terms by 40 percent over the past twenty years.
No
summer for Harvard President
Controversial Harvard
President, Lawrence Summers, announced his resignation this
week, heading off a vote of no confidence in him proposed by
the University’s Faculty of Arts and Sciences for next
Tuesday. It would have been the second vote of no confidence
against Dr Summers in eleven months.
Last year, Dr
Summers caused outrage after saying at an academic
conference that innate differences, including their
“intrinsic aptitude”, might contribute to the low number of
women in Science and Engineering. He continued to be
embroiled in controversy, including several clashes with
Harvard faculty members leading to the resignations of some
high-profile scholars, most recently that of the Dean of the
Faculty of Arts and Sciences.
In his resignation letter,
Dr Summers said he had reluctantly concluded that the rifts
between himself and segments of the Arts and Sciences
Faculty made it “infeasible” for him to advance the agenda
of renewal he saw as crucial to Harvard’s future. “I
believe, therefore, that it is best for the University to
have new leadership,” he wrote.
Next Tuesday’s vote of no
confidence would have been symbolic because Dr Summers
continued to retain the support of Harvard’s governing
Board. A University spokesperson said, however, that the
decision to step down was made because the situation had
became untenable.
Dr Summers’ resignation will take
effect from 30 June.
South African strike lifted
Staff
at South Africa’s University of KwaZulu-Natal (UKZN) have
ended nine days of strike action pending negotiations with
University management. Agreement on the broad principles for
resolving the dispute is reported to have been reached
between the unions and University Executive.
Staff were
calling for improved working conditions and the sacking of
Vice-Chancellor William Mokgoba over what has been described
as the “messy” merger of the Natal and Durban-Westville
Universities to form the UKZN. In response to a claim for an
8 percent salary increase, staff had been offered 4 percent
conditional on the reduction of sabbatical, leave,
retrenchment and fee-remission conditions.
National
Tertiary Education Staff Union spokesperson, Professor Kesh
Govinder, said the unions are confident that the final
agreement under discussion would alleviate the main concern
of union members, indicating that a salary increase would
not be conditional on concessions on conditions, and that
current staff will be protected against having new condition
of employment imposed on them.
There has been no word on
the call for the sacking of the Vice-Chancellor.
US
withholds visa from Bolivian scholar
A Bolivian scholar
hired by the University of Nebraska at Lincoln has been
unable to take up his post because the United States
Government has withheld his visa, apparently without reason.
The case has again raised concerns at what critics have
described as the arbitrary use of government power to keep
foreign academics out of the US.
Barbara Weinstein,
President-elect of the American Historical Association, said
that the Government’s reason for not issuing the visa seems
related to his ethnicity. “He has certainly never been a
member of any movement that would be of a security concern
to the US Government,” she said.
The latest situation
parallels the recent case of Tariq Ramadan, a prominent
Swiss Muslim scholar who was appointed to a tenured
professorship at the University of Notre Dame in 2004, but
was unable to assume the post after the Federal Government
revoked his visa. Ramadan has since taken up a position at a
British university.
From The Chronicle for 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