AUS Tertiary Update
National bargaining, tripartism back on agenda
Union
members in New Zealand universities will begin to gear up
for this year’s salary round with a series of meetings
starting next week to look at bargaining and on-going
tripartite meetings with the Government and
vice-chancellors. Ballots will be conducted later this month
to determine whether to initiate bargaining for national
multi-employer collective agreements for academic and
general staff.
Association of University Staff General
Secretary, Helen Kelly, said that the AUS Annual Conference
and Council were recommending that union members again vote
in support of national bargaining, with the current
site-based agreements in the seven universities due to
expire on 31 May. “Although union members have previously
voted on this issue, the technical provisions of the
Employment Relations Act require that a ballot be held again
this year,” she said. “If the recommendation for
national bargaining is endorsed, bargaining will be
initiated in early April and bargaining is expected to begin
by May.”
Ms Kelly said that last year’s salary
increases of between 4 and 7.5 percent throughout the sector
were made possible by a contribution of $26 million from the
Government directly attributable to the Tripartite Forum
resulting from the national bargaining framework. “The
tripartite process has allowed the unions to work
constructively with the Government and vice-chancellors to
address workplace issues within the universities, including
funding and salaries, and last year’s results show that it
was positive for university staff,” she said.
“Continuing participation will allow us to build on last
year’s good results and, while funding and salaries will
remain a priority, tripartism may allow other issues to be
addressed. These could include workforce development,
including building skills and career opportunities,
governance and ensuring that universities are working in the
national interest.”
Ms Kelly said that the tripartite
process is the most significant engagement that staff and
unions have had in the direction of the New Zealand
university sector and that it is important to keep the
momentum going.
The first meeting of the Tripartite
Forum will be held on 15 March
Also in Tertiary Update
this week
1. Decision expected on UCOL diploma
course
2. More than 300 Saudi students to come to New
Zealand
3. Glass walls may not increase transparency,
National warns
4. Students’ transition between school
and tertiary education
5. Fear and loathing in North
Dunedin
6. US student-grant increase, but at a
price
7. University to ban gay marriages on
campus
8. Crisis threatens Mathematics as RMIT sheds
staff
9. Tesco shoppers bag a bargain with OU
Decision
expected on UCOL diploma course
An announcement on the
future of the first-year intake for the local
polytechnic’s Diploma in Glass Design and Production
course is expected to be made today by the Wanganui Mayor,
Michael Laws. Whanganui UCOL has come under sustained
criticism following its surprise announcement cancelling the
first-year intake for the three-year Diploma course only
days before classes were due to start. UCOL says student
enrolment numbers are in single figures for 2007, making the
course unsustainable, and that decisions were also based on
enrolment trends and financial and academic viability.
It
is understood that Mr Laws and the Wanganui District
Council’s Cultural and Community Manager, Sally Patrick,
have now met with senior UCOL officials and that an
agreement in principle has been reached which may save the
course. Mr Laws said that the agreement was yet to be
signed off and put to district councillors and UCOL's glass
department staff and students before being made public.
“All I ask is hold on one more day and let’s see what
Santa brought, as I say to my children on Christmas Eve,”
he said.
Earlier, the polytechnic had come under
sustained criticism for cancelling the intake in what was
described as an iconic course. Maori Party Co-Leader,
Tariana Turia, said that it is New Zealand’s only tertiary
programme majoring in hot and warm glass, and has attracted
students from all around the country and overseas. “The
technologies and techniques of glass-making taught on this
course are a vital foundation for our glass art community
throughout the country,” she said. “The consequences of
the decision to cancel the course will have a major impact
on art galleries, on the local economy, on the tourism
industry and it will also limit our ability to contribute to
the international glass scene. The late cancellation has, it
appears, been made without any consultation with the
interested parties.
Form the Wanganui Chronicle
More
than 300 Saudi students to come to New Zealand
Last
week’s announcement that more than 300 Saudi Arabian
students would study in New Zealand under an expanded Saudi
Government scholarship programme has received a welcome
response from the tertiary-education sector.
The
Minister for Tertiary Education, Dr Michael Cullen, said
that universities are expecting applications from at least
350 students at both undergraduate and postgraduate level
for the 2007 academic year. “The expansion of Saudi
Arabia’s King Abdullah scholarships programme not only
boosts export education earnings, it also strengthens
cooperation and understanding between New Zealand and the
countries of the Gulf region,” he said. “The
scholarships could be worth more than ten million dollars a
year to the New Zealand economy, based on estimated
foreign-exchange earnings for an international university
student of around $40,000 a year.”
The New Zealand
Vice-Chancellors’ Committee said that the influx of Saudi
students would enrich New Zealand universities, with
Committee Chair, Professor Roy Sharp, saying the initiative
is further recognition of the quality of New Zealand
university education. “As the [recent] OECD report states,
international education not only benefits the economy and
society but also the universities themselves through new
academic perspectives, cultural contexts and an enriched
learning environment,” he said.
Similarly, Education
New Zealand says that the country’s success in securing
the scholarships speaks volumes for the quality of our
education offering and the way in which universities and
stakeholders have been able to work together to attract
students. ”New Zealand’s universities have put aside
traditional competitive rivalries and cooperated to rise to
the challenge presented by the Saudi opportunity,” said
Robert Stevens, Chief Executive of Education New Zealand.
“[We] strongly support this approach, and have worked hard
with the universities in this and other markets to ensure
that New Zealand is to the forefront when educational
opportunities arise.”
Glass walls may not increase
transparency, National warns
A pledge by the new
Secretary for Education, Karen Sewell, to make her Ministry
more “open and transparent” will require more than an
office makeover, according to National Party Education
spokeswoman, Katherine Rich.
In this week’s issue of
the Education Gazette, Ms Sewell says she is determined to
break down barriers to the public accessing Ministry
information. Ms Sewell told the Gazette she wanted an office
refit, knocking out a wall and putting in glass so she can
see her reception area, adding to her new vision of
transparency. “I want the Ministry of Education to be more
open and transparent. We have to be accessible and
responsive. We have some wonderful information here and we
need to make it more available. I don’t want us to feel
isolated. I don't want people to think that secret stuff
goes on here, because it doesn’t,” she said.
While
welcoming Ms Sewell’s approach, Katherine Rich has warned
that attempts to allow the public to access information will
most likely be stymied by Education Minister Steve Maharey.
“Ms Sewell is on a collision course with the Minister who
regularly declines Official Information Act requests and
generally hides information,” said Ms Rich. “I wish Ms
Sewell good luck in her fresh approach but would warn her to
think carefully before installing glass walls as a symbolic
gesture of transparency and save her actions for something
that will actually improve learning.”
Students’
transition between school and tertiary education
School
leavers with little or no formal attainment are those most
likely to enrol in tertiary education, according to a recent
report looking at trends in students’ transition between
school and tertiary education. The report, Students’
transitions between school and tertiary education, reveals
that, in 2000, the group least likely to go on directly to
tertiary education after leaving school comprised students
with little or no formal attainment. By 2004, however, the
trend had reversed with 80 percent of this group likely to
go to tertiary education.
The report says it is likely
that the introduction of the Youth Training programme, which
gives young people with no qualifications the opportunity to
study in tertiary institutions for no cost, has contributed
to this change in trend.
Most of the demographic
differences in rates of transition between school and
tertiary education are a result of differences in the
attainment with which students leave school. Maori and
Pasifika students have similar transition rates to all
students, though male students remain less likely to attend
tertiary education after leaving school.
Those students
who attain at University Entrance level or above at school
are reported to be the most homogenous in their transition
to tertiary behaviour. Most choose study at degree level,
with a small group choosing certificates. Students who leave
school with University Entrance and study at certificate
level are more likely to be Maori, Pasifika or from low
decile schools.
Students’ transitions between school
and tertiary education can be found
at:
http://educationcounts.edcentre.govt.nz/themes/schooling/student-transition.html
Fear
and loathing in North Dunedin
The quality of the student
experience was expected to have been richly enhanced
yesterday with the forays of four University of Otago Campus
Watch teams into the depths of North Dunedin. The initiative
is one of several recommendations to come out of a
University working party established to address student
behaviour in the city.
Twenty-one people have been
employed to make up the Campus Watch teams; their role is
essentially to act as “walking information booths” on a
range of issues, many associated with the transition from
colleges of residence to flatting. Apparently, these might
include education around how to extend cooking portfolios
from baked beans on toast and running a good party that is
within the law and acceptable to the neighbours.
University Student Services Director David Richardson
says the teams are there to maintain and improve the quality
of the student experience in the wider campus environment
and to assist residents and businesses of North Dunedin with
any concerns they may have. “Each team … will be on duty
well into the night during semester time, and wear
distinctive clothes so they are readily identified,” he
said.
“We know there is a small percentage of students
whose idea of fun has a negative impact on their fellow
students and nearby residents,” said Mr Richardson. “The
presence of the Campus Watch team members should go some way
towards deterring inconsiderate behaviour and encouraging
people to look after themselves and each other more
responsibly. These people are, after all, the future of this
country.”
Mr Richardson said that the mix of alcohol
and youth doesn’t always lead to good judgments, and that
Campus Watch would be endeavouring to help students early
on, so they don't put themselves in positions stemming from
“high spirits gone wrong” which could prevent them from
entering their chosen career.
Worldwatch
US
student-grant increase, but at a price
This week’s
announcement of the 2008 United States Education Department
budget has confirmed speculation that spending for student,
or Pell, grants would be increased, but at the cost of
cutting lender subsidies and eliminating the Supplemental
Educational Opportunity Grant programme which augments Pell
Grants for low-income students.
Under the President’s
budget proposal, the maximum Pell Grant would increase by 14
percent to $US4,600 next year, while the maximum Academic
Competitiveness Grants for talented low-income students
would increase by 50 percent to $1,125 for first-year
students and $1,950 for second-year. These grants are
awarded for what is described as strong or rigorous academic
preparation and achievement.
The Budget will also provide
$US24 million for a new grant programme aimed at increasing
the number of speakers of so-called “critical languages”
and $US25 million for a study of a database that would track
the educational progress of students.
However,
commercial lenders in the Federal Government's
guaranteed-loan programme would have their Federal subsidies
slashed for a third time in a year, this time by $18.8
billion, meaning those costs would be passed to students.
Several other higher-education, or student-loan, assistance
programmes will be cut.
The President of the American
Federation of Teachers, Edward McElroy, said that, each year
since taking office, the President has proposed a budget
that ignores the needs of the vast majority of Americans and
instead lines the pockets of the ultra-rich. “This
year’s budget is no exception,” he said.
From the
Chronicle of Higher Education and AFT
University to ban
gay marriages on campus
Academics and students at
Canterbury Christ Church University in the United Kingdom
say they are shocked and incensed by a proposal to ban
civil-partnership ceremonies on campus. The Vice-Chancellor,
Chair of Governors and Deputy Pro-Chancellor of the
University argue that the Church’s position on
homosexuality makes it wrong to conduct lesbian and gay
“marriages” on the University’s premises.
Academics
and students say a ban would flout the institution’s
equal-opportunities policy and damage its reputation, with
representatives of the staff and student unions calling on
the proponents of the plan to retract it immediately or
resign. The University and College Union (UCU) has
criticised the Vice-Chancellor for the ban, saying the
attitude of the senior officers at Canterbury Christ Church
University is inappropriate in a modern place of learning.
“Discrimination should have no place in a university and
it will be opposed by UCU, in line with the law,” said
Roger Kline, UCU Head of Equality and Employment
Rights.
Canterbury Christ Church is one of eleven
higher-education institutions closely aligned with the
Church of England. The Church has declined to comment on the
proposed ban until the University's governing body has made
its final decision. The office of the Archbishop of
Canterbury also declined to comment.
From the Education
Guardian and UCU
Crisis threatens Mathematics as RMIT
sheds staff
A crisis threatening Mathematics departments
in Australian universities is worsening, with Melbourne’s
RMIT University set to make up to 25 percent of staff in
their Department of Mathematics redundant, according to the
National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU).
The situation
at RMIT comes amid renewed debate about the crisis facing
Mathematics and Science departments in universities, with a
recent report on the future of mathematical sciences in
Australia revealing substantial reductions in teaching and
research staff in the nation’s top universities.
The
report, Mathematics And Statistics: Critical Skills For
Australia’s Future, found that the number of Mathematics
and Statistics students and lecturers at Australian
universities is “critically low”. It also revealed that
not enough trained Mathematics teachers are entering the
high school system.
The report will be considered this
week at a forum organised by the National Committee for the
Mathematical Sciences which will be attended by senior
Government and opposition representatives.
On Monday,
RMIT notified two Mathematics academics of redundancy and
have signalled that up to 25 percent of academic staff could
follow in an attempt to alleviate funding
problems.
Jeanette Pierce, the NTEU Branch President at
RMIT, said that it was absurd that the University, which is
a member of the Australian Technology Network group of
universities, should be cutting back in the area of
Mathematics, which she described as a cornerstone for all
technological studies.
Tesco shoppers bag a bargain with
OU
Shoppers who collect points using loyalty cards with
United Kingdom supermarket chain Tesco can now use them
towards obtaining a university degree. A new partnership
between the Open University and Tesco will sees shoppers
able to pay for all or part of an OU course by exchanging
Tesco Clubcard vouchers. The OU is the first university to
use the loyalty-card scheme as a marketing tool.
OU
Vice-Chancellor Brenda Gourley said that the scheme is an
exciting and innovative partnership that is true to the
University's founding mission: to be open to people, places,
methods and ideas. She added that the partnership allows the
University to extend its reach to new students, who have the
opportunity to gain access to its courses without incurring
any debt. “We aim to make access to the University’s
programmes as flexible as possible,” she said. “This
extends to giving our students a number of options to meet
course fees, and this new deal is now one of those
options.”
For every £10 of vouchers, shoppers will
receive £40 towards the cost of their OU course.
The OU
teaches 35 percent of all part-time undergraduate students
in the United Kingdom each year. At undergraduate level,
there are no qualification requirements to study at the
University, with 33 percent of undergraduates starting to
study with fewer than two A-levels.
From The
Guardian
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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