AUS Tertiary Update
Tertiary-education sector union talks get under
way
Representatives from among the main unions in the
tertiary-education sector will meet in Wellington next week
to begin discussions on the possible formation of a single
tertiary-education-sector union. The meeting follows the
decision of the Association of University Staff (AUS) Annual
Conference last November to support in principle an
amalgamation with the Association of Staff in Tertiary
Education, the union which represents academic staff in
polytechnics, institutes of technology and wananga.
Officials from the Tertiary Institutions’ Allied Staff
Association, which represents support staff in the
non-university tertiary-education sector will also
participate in the discussions.
AUS National President,
Professor Nigel Haworth, said that the two-day meeting would
concentrate on developing a structure for a proposed new
union, defining areas of coverage and dealing with
representation and how decisions should be made on the
establishment of any new union.
Professor Haworth said
the meeting was the first step in a process towards
amalgamation, but that any decision on whether to proceed
would ultimately be made by union members. “We plan to be
in a position to consult thoroughly with members on a
detailed proposal for the establishment of a new union in
May, following which feedback would be considered and any
changes incorporated,” he said. “From there, we plan to
have a final proposal available and will ballot members on
the issue sometime in August. The AUS Conference would then
adopt the ballot result and, if the proposal for the new
union is supported, transitional arrangements would be made
and the new union formed in June 2008.”
Professor
Haworth said that, with mergers between the colleges of
education and the awarding of university status to AUT, it
had become inevitable that the unions would have to consider
different ways of working together. “Amalgamation gives an
opportunity to increase our industrial and political
strength and to benefit from economies of scale. We must
also be careful to ensure that members support such a move
and that the current strengths of our organisation are
reflected in any new union,” he said.
The AUS will be
represented in the discussions next week by the National
President, four vice-presidents, the General Secretary and
staff.
Also in Tertiary Update this week
1. Pay and
employment equity reviews on horizon
2. Research
capability gets the thumbs-up
3. 3000 Modern Apprentices
complete training
4. Open Polytechnic’s top mark in
audit
5. International student slump confirmed
6. US
falling behind in degree attainment
7. University funding
to rise by 6 percent
8. US university sues
Government
9. Porters immunised against students
Pay
and employment equity reviews on horizon
The New Zealand
Council of Trade Unions (NZCTU) will this evening launch a
new DVD, On the Level, which is described as an informative
way of getting up to speed on pay and employment equity
issues. The launch coincides with International Working
Women’s Day and comes ahead of pay and employment equity
(PaEE) reviews which will get under way in New Zealand
universities this year.
A PaEE tertiary-sector steering
group, comprising the Ministry of Education, the unions,
including AUS, representatives of the New Zealand
Vice-Chancellor’s Committee and the Institutes of
Technology and Polytechnics of New Zealand, will be
established soon to oversee the review process in the
tertiary education sector. It is proposed that reviews will
begin by the second half of this year and will all be
competed by December next year.
AUS General Secretary,
Helen Kelly, said that the reviews would include the
requirement that each university conduct what is essentially
a stocktake of employment practices to identify all areas of
gender inequity and then identify the best way of hoe to
respond to them. The reviews would be conducted through a
bipartite process involving both the employers and unions at
each of the universities.
Ms Kelly said the reviews would
be expected to show areas where gender bias existed, with
each university then required to develop and implement a
response plan. “It could be that the reviews show up areas
where women are employed in the same positions as men, but
are appointed at lower starting-salary rates, that fewer
professional development opportunities exist in
female-dominated occupational classifications or that the
operation of current salary scales are discriminatory,”
she said. “We would expect that these differences would
then be addressed as a part of the Government’s five-year
plan to close the gender-pay gap.
The Minister of Labour,
Ruth Dyson, will launch the DVD this evening, with other
speakers including Helen Kelly in her role as Vice-President
of the NZCTU and Philippa Hall, Director of the Department
of Labour’s Pay and Employment Equity Unit.
Research
capability gets the thumbs-up
The level of university
research and its alignment with business and government
priorities is improving, as is research income that
universities earn from funding sources that are subject to
peer review, according to a major report just published by
the Ministry of Education. The report says that around 29
percent of New Zealand’s PBRF-eligible staff were assessed
as having produced original and innovative research, while
around 6 percent of PBRF-eligible staff produced highly
original and innovative work that was esteemed by the
international academic community. The number of students
being awarded PhDs is increasing and the completion rates
for PhDs rising.
State of Education in New Zealand 2006
provides an extensive overview of education in 2006 using
data mostly obtained during 2005. The report provides a
system-wide assessment of key aspects of the education
system and of education outcomes that can be monitored over
time. It also highlights national trends in various areas,
considers how New Zealand compares with other countries in
education and skills development and helps identify key
issues to inform strategic planning, policy, research and
information priorities.
In its analysis of the
tertiary-education sector, the report looks at
participation, achievement, international education and
research. Among the findings are that 41 percent of students
starting bachelor degree qualifications have successfully
completed their study after five tears and 58 percent of
those starting at postgraduate level have completed after
five years, while 37 percent of those starting at sub-degree
level have completed within the same time. Rates of
completion have not changed much over the years, with some
areas declining slightly.
Demographic characteristics are
reported to make a difference to tertiary completion.
Younger students do better than older ones at bachelor
degree level, while older students do better once adjusted
for such study differences, as older students being more
likely to study part-time or combine work and study. Women
have higher completion rates than men, but the gap narrows
the higher the qualification. Asian students have the
highest completion rates, while Maori and Pasifika students
have lower rates, more particularly at postgraduate
level.
State of Education in New Zealand 2006 can be
found
at:
http://educationcounts.edcentre.govt.nz/publications/homepages/State-of-Education/index.html
3000
Modern Apprentices complete training
Three thousand
Modern Apprentices have now completed their training, proof,
according to the Minister for Tertiary Education, Dr Michael
Cullen, that the Government’s revitilisation of trades
training is continuing to bear fruit. Dr Cullen made the
announcement during a visit to Auckland yesterday to
congratulate carpenter Phillip Newport, the 3000th Modern
Apprentice on completing his training.
Latest statistics
show that at 31 December 2006 there were 9466 Modern
Apprentices in training, 13 percent more than in December
2005. Total industry trainees in 2006 numbered 123,859, up 5
percent from 2005.
The Modern Apprentice scheme was
introduced by the Government in 2000 to improve the
participation of young people in trades training.
The
2006 Budget allocated an additional $34.4 million over four
years to expand the number of Modern Apprenticeships to
14,000 by December 2008. As at 31 December 2006, there were
9466 Modern Apprentices in training of which 91 percent were
male and 9 percent female. Of the total number, 76.9 percent
were European/Pakeha, 15.1 percent Maori and 3.1 percent
Pacific peoples.
The building, construction, engineering
and motor engineering trades accounted for 41.8 percent of
total Modern Apprentices. Not surprisingly, the highest
number was in Auckland, which, at 2284, was 17 percent more
than December 2005. Of these, 511 were in building and
construction, about 36 percent of all building and
construction Modern Apprentices.
Open Polytechnic’s top
mark in audit
New Zealand’s largest polytechnic says
it has received top marks after an academic audit by
Institutes of Technology and Polytechnics Quality (ITP
Quality). It means that the institution, which specialises
in distance education, has Quality Assured Status for the
next four years.
The audit team concluded that The Open
Polytechnic is performing commendably in the design and
delivery of learning materials and provides a range of well
resourced and effective support mechanisms for students. The
report noted the forward thinking nature of the Polytechnic
in tying digital communication technologies together with
its course design capabilities, ensuring it remains an
integral member of the network of tertiary provision in New
Zealand.
The audit team identified eleven examples of
good practice and a number relating to delivery and student
support. Eight recommendations were made to improve policies
and procedures, including the re-design of the
quality-management system.
The Chief Executive of The
Open Polytechnic, Dr Paul Grimwood, says staff at the Lower
Hutt-based institution work extremely hard to ensure they
deliver a high quality of service to their learners and
stakeholders, and the outstanding audit result reflected
that. “We have a strong internal audit culture at The
Open Polytechnic which ensures that we continually monitor
and update our organisational processes to reflect the
changing needs of our organisation,” he said. “No
corrective actions were signalled in the ITP Quality audit,
which shows the robustness of those internal
measures.”
ITP Quality conducts academic audits based
on twelve academic standards developed by the sector and
carried out by a team of three or four auditors. Those
polytechnics teaching at degree level usually include an
auditor with experience in degree teaching/research. When an
institution has successfully met the twelve standards, ITP
Quality grants the award of “Quality Assured Status” for
a period of four years.
International student slump
confirmed
International student numbers continued to fall
in 2006, with an 8 percent drop in the number of students
and a corresponding drop of more than 10 percent in
tuition-fee income overall, according to a report in
Education Review.
The report says that education
providers lost $7.365 million in tuition-fee revenue from
international students last year. Polytechnics and private
tertiary establishments were among the hardest hit, with
drops in income of 17 and 15 percent respectively.
Income
overall was down 11 percent, from $641.3 million in 2005 to
$567.7 million last year.
The two colleges of education
remaining at that time showed the biggest proportional drop,
from $4 million to $2.7 million. Polytechnics also saw a big
drop in income, down 17 per cent from a high of nearly $80
million in 2005 to just under $66 million last year, while
university income was down 9 per cent from $335.17 million
in 2005 to $304.9 million in 2006.
Among private
providers, PTE income fell 15 percent, from $48.6 million in
2005 to $41.2 million in 2006 and English-language-school
income fell 7 percent, from $57.68 million in 2005 to $53.42
million last year.
Education Review says the figures
showed the total cumulative number of foreign fee paying
students in New Zealand in 2006 was 76,173, down 8 percent
from the 82,629 recorded in 2005. Of last year’s students,
33,000 were at publicly funded tertiary providers and 30,770
at private tertiary providers.
Worldwatch
US falling
behind in degree attainment
The United States is falling
behind other developed nations in terms of the share of its
population with a college degree, and the gap will widen
substantially unless the nation makes post-secondary
education much more accessible, according to a report
released this week.
The report, Hitting Home: Quality,
Cost, and Access Challenges Confronting Higher Education
Today, says that, if current patterns persist, the United
States will have 15.6 million fewer bachelor and
associate-degree holders by 2025 than it needs to keep up
with its top economic competitors.
To avoid such an
outcome, the report says that the US needs to increase its
annual degree production by more than 37 percent, which will
require graduating many more students who are members of
minority groups, from low-income families or beyond the
traditional college age. Based on the assumption that 55
percent of the residents of competing nations will have at
least an associate degree by 2025, some US states, such as
Arkansas and West Virginia, need to increase their degree
production by more than double.
The report was prepared
by Jobs for the Future, a Boston-based research
organisation, as part of a multi-year project called Making
Opportunity Affordable which has as its goal expanding
college access.
Chronicle of Higher
Education
University funding to rise by 6 percent
The
Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE)
announced this week that it will make available £7,137
million in funding for 2007-08 to universities and colleges
in England. The total grant represents an overall cash
increase of 6.4 per cent compared with 2006-07.
The
funding increase will allow for an additional 33,000
full-time-equivalent (FTE) students for 2007-08 and a
further 16,000 in 2007-08 and 2008-09 to support growth in
key areas, such as foundation degrees, courses co-funded
with employers and Lifelong Learning Networks which enable
students following vocational courses to progress into and
through higher education. The allocation will also provide
for a 2.75 percent increase in the unit of funding per
student for teaching, a 2.7 percent increase in funding for
widening participation and a 5.4 per cent increase in
research funding.
Additional funding of £25 million
will be allocated for certain very-high-cost science
subjects that are important to society and the economy but
may be vulnerable because of relatively low student demand.
These are Physics, Chemistry, Chemical Engineering, and
Mineral, Metallurgy and Materials engineering.
HEFCE
Chief Executive, Professor David Eastwood, said that the
settlement was a good one for universities and colleges,
providing both stability in terms of their forward planning
and a healthy rate of growth.
Meanwhile, The Times Higher
Education Supplement says that scores of academics will be
denied research grants, postdoctoral research positions will
be scrapped and hundreds of PhD students could be prevented
from embarking on academic careers after the Government
announced it would take £68 million away from research
councils’ budgets.
The money will be taken from the
eight research councils to help fill a shortfall in the
Department of Trade and Industry’s budget.
One source
on the board of a research council estimated that the cuts
could mean about 3,000 fewer research grants would be
available for research across the sector and the loss of
many postdoctoral research positions.
US university sues
Government
The University of Nebraska at Lincoln has sued
the United States Government to try to force it to respond
to a petition filed twenty-one months ago by the institution
as part of the process of hiring a Bolivian historian. It is
understood to be the first time that a US higher-education
institution has gone to court to counter what critics say is
a growing number of cases in which the Government has kept
out foreign scholars for ideological reasons.
In June
2005, the University submitted a visa petition on behalf of
the Bolivian whom it had hired as an assistant professor of
History and Ethnic Studies. The petition simply sought to
establish that the historian has the professional
qualifications to apply for a visa for the job.
Since
then, officials have not acted on the petition, instead
telling the University that the matter is under
consideration.
The lawsuit argues that the US Citizenship
and Immigration Services, the part of the Department of
Homeland Security to which the petition was filed, has no
legal reason to hold up consideration of the case.
Meanwhile, the American Association of University
Professors has filed a lawsuit against the Government on
behalf of noted Muslim scholar, Tariq Ramadan. Late last
year, the Government confirmed that it was banning Professor
Ramadan from entering the country after having allegedly
provided “material support” to a terrorist organistion
in violation of the Patriot Act. The allegation was based on
several donations, which were declared to authorities, that
Ramadan made between 1998 and 2002 to Palestinian relief
organisations registered in France. In 2003, after Professor
Ramadan’s final donation, the organisations were deemed by
the US to be terrorist ones.
Chronicle of Higher
Education and AAUP
Porters immunised against
students
Porters at the illustrious Cambridge University
in England are being immunised against hepatitis, saying
that the binge-drinking culture among students means that
consumption of excess amounts of alcohol and resultant
vomiting has become more common than the consumption of vast
amounts of information and its regurgitation in exams and
essays.
Contract cleaners at some of Cambridge’s
colleges are reported to be getting hepatitis jabs routinely
and are said to be “furious over a recent puking surge”.
They blame “swotty straight-A types away from home for the
first time”.
Several Cambridge colleges have now banned
drinking games at formal dinners and imposed a limit of half
a bottle of wine on undergraduates at the events, while many
of the University's notorious drinking clubs have also been
banned.
From the London Evening
Standard
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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