AUS Tertiary Update
New National President for AUS
University of Canterbury
academic Maureen Montgomery will be the next National
President of the Association of University Staff following
an election for the position which closed last Friday. Dr
Montgomery, an associate professor in American Studies,
received 1506 votes against 938 received by Dr David Small,
a senior lecturer in Education, also from the University of
Canterbury.
In another ballot for AUS National Officers,
Dr Grant Duncan, a senior lecturer in Public Policy from
Massey University’s Albany campus, was elected the AUS
Academic Vice-President, collecting 590 votes against 577
for Dr Craig Marshall from the University of Otago. Grant
Duncan is a former National President of AUS.
Other
national officers elected for 2008 include Cate Wartho from
the University of Otago who will continue as the General
Staff Vice-President, Fiona Te Momo from Massey University,
Albany, who is the Māori Vice-President, Lynley Tulloch
from Waikato University who takes on the role of Women’s
Vice-President and Helen Kissell, from the University of
Canterbury, who will become the Library
Vice-President.
Associate Professor Montgomery said that
she is honoured to have been elected to the top AUS role,
having been an active member of AUS since taking up an
academic position at Canterbury in 1986. She has been on the
AUS national Council for a number of years, has been both
the national Women’s and Academic Vice-Presidents and has
served on the Branch Committee for a number of years,
including three as Branch President.
After spending the
last six years on the AUS Council, Associate Professor
Montgomery says she is well equipped for the position of
National President. “The last few years have seen a
transformation of the AUS with the development of national
bargaining, the Tripartite Forum and amalgamation
discussions,” she said. “I have been involved in the
decision-making that led to this positive transformation. I
understand these initiatives and will ensure their continued
success.”
Associate Professor Montgomery will take over
from Professor Nigel Haworth as AUS National President on 1
January 2008.
Also in Tertiary Update this
week
1. Maharey takes top Massey job - you may have read
it here first
2. $94m salary cost increase indefensible,
says National
3. Wananga heads back to financial
viability
4. Teaching excellence boosted with launch of
Ako Aotearoa
5. Student debt closes in on $9.4
billion
6. Policy changes to attract more international
students
7. Global look at higher education
8. A call
to defend academic freedom
9. Lecturers to receive over
£1million back pay
10. Australian universities fail
specialist test
11. University President pulls web
profile
Maharey takes top Massey job - you may have read
it here first
Speculation, first reported by Tertiary
Update in early July, that the Minister of Education and
former senior lecturer in Sociology, Steve Maharey, was a
leading contender to take up the vice-chancellorship of
Massey was confirmed last Friday with the announcement that
he will take over the helm of his old University. Although
the current Vice-Chancellor, Professor Judith Kinnear, will
retire in March, it is not known exactly when Mr Maharey
will leave Parliament and take up the position, largely
because it is understood he does not want to create the need
for a by-election in his Palmerston North seat prior to a
General Election, due later in the year.
Confirmation of
Mr Maharey’s appointment as Massey University
Vice-Chancellor appears to have pleased many within the
sector, with the Association of University Staff saying
that, as a former minister responsible for tertiary
education, he is ideally placed to lead one of New
Zealand’s major universities.
AUS National President,
Professor Nigel Haworth, said that Mr Maharey was
responsible for the initiation of many of the current
tertiary education reforms, particularly around the need for
collaboration across institutions in the sector, and in
relation to the distinctive contribution made by the
different types of institutions. “Mr Maharey's
contribution will be of immense benefit to the New Zealand
Vice-Chancellors’ Committee, particularly in relation to
governance reform, increased funding and greater cooperation
between institutions,” he said. “He will add real value
to the tripartite process and we also look forward to him
showing strong support for multi-employer collective
employment agreements within the sector.”
Similarly, Massey University students have reacted “enthusiastically” to the news that the top job at Massey has gone to Mr Maharey. Massey University Students’ Association President Paul Falloon says the decision was a wise one. “I’m excited that Steve is stepping in at a time when Massey needs a strong leader and someone who is willing to act in the interests of students, staff and other stakeholders,” he said. “I think Steve has already demonstrated that he has a genuine passion for Massey, and I’m hopeful this passion will mean a Vice Chancellor who will prioritise student welfare and world-class education and research above purely commercial considerations”.
$94m salary cost increase indefensible, says National
The National Party says a $94 million increases in the
cost of salaries at the Ministry of Education is
indefensible and it wants the Government to explain why
Ministry pay packets have jumped by 154 percent since 2002
while staff numbers have risen by only 450, or 16 percent.
Figures released to the Dominion Post under the Official
Information Act show $155 million was paid to 3348 ministry
staff in 2006-07, up from the $61 million paid to 2890 staff
in 2002. Since 2000, the number of Ministry staff earning
salaries of more than $100,000 has risen dramatically from
twenty-seven to 142.
National’s Education spokeswoman,
Katherine Rich, said it is a disgrace that Ministry pay
packets had surged when cash-strapped schools were falling
into deficit and cutting back on learning resources for
children. “The Minister has to explain this dramatic
blowout in costs. The growth in staff numbers alone is hard
to justify over that period,” she said.
The Dominion
Post reports the Ministry of Education Human Resources
Manager, Donna Hickey, as saying that organisational changes
since 2001 had skewed the figures, with the merger of 220
special-education and early-childhood staff having a marked
impact on staffing and salaries. “The surge in staff on
higher pay was partly due to staff moving to higher salary
brackets after annual pay reviews, but also reflected the
Ministry's increasingly complex role and the need to offer
market-related salary packages to attract senior staff,”
she is reported as saying,” she said.
Good news among
the information provided to the Dominion Post was that the
number and cost of both employment disputes and redundancies
have decreased. The number of employment disputes has
dropped from seven, at a cost of $88,648, in 2003-04 to two
in 2006-07, at a cost of $9,600. While there were ninety
redundancies in 2001-02, at a cost of more than $3 million,
that number had fallen to four in 2006-07 at a cost of
$195,863.
Meanwhile, the 2007 Annual Report of the
Ministry of Education can be found
at:
http://www.minedu.govt.nz/index.cfm?layout=document&documentid=12300&data=l
Wananga
heads back to financial viability
In what may be long
overdue good news, the New Zealand Herald reports that Te
Wananga o Aotearoa is forecasting a financial surplus this
year of between $3 and $4 million. The forecast surplus is a
positive turnaround for the institution which had earlier
been at loggerheads with the Government over allegations of
poor financial management and nepotism culminating in a
report from the Auditor-General which raised concerns about
accountability and conflicts of interest. A Crown Manager
was appointed in late 2005 to oversee financial
decision-making.
The Herald reports the Wananga’s Chief
Executive, Bentham Ohia, as saying the turnaround showed the
institution was shrugging off the past and moving on and
adding that the damage done to the institution’s
reputation during the furore was bad but not irreparable.
“The reputation challenge will continue to be a
challenge,” he said. “We will focus on the quality of
our programmes, the quality of our learning experiences for
our students.”
In 2004, Te Wananga o Aotearoa was the
country’s biggest tertiary-education institution, with
60,000 students and receiving $239 million in government
funding. This year, it will receive only $120 million in
government funding and have a roll of 40,000 students.
Mr
Ohia says that plans are under way to introduce eleven new
programmes next year as the institution does not want this
year’s projected surplus to be a one-off.
In what the
Herald describes as more good news for Mr Ohia, the Wananga
Council has voted unanimously to give him a new five-year
employment agreement.
The Crown Manager, Brian Roche, is
due to leave the institution at the end of the
year.
Teaching excellence boosted with launch of Ako
Aotearoa
Ako Aotearoa, New Zealand’s first Centre for
Tertiary Teaching Excellence, will be officially launched
next Thursday at Massey University’s Wellington campus by
the Minister for Tertiary Education, Dr Michael Cullen. Ako
Aotearoa is part of a $20 million government initiative to
boost the quality of teaching in all branches of the
post-school education sector.
A consortium of
institutions, headed by Massey University and including AUT
University, the University of Canterbury, Christchurch
College of Education, UCOL, and Manukau Institute of
Technology, won the contract to establish the Centre last
year. It comprises a national centre at Massey Wellington
and regional hubs in Christchurch, Palmerston North and
Auckland.
Ako Aotearoa Director, Peter Coolbear, says the
cross-sector approach will include all tertiary teaching and
training at universities, polytechnics, wananga, private
training businesses, in workplaces and in the community.
“Good teaching is often hidden,” he said. “Ako
Aotearoa aims to get good teaching out of the closet and
grow New Zealand’s educational capability.”
Next
week’s launch appears to be the second, after a powhiri
and blessing in July. The next launch will be followed by a
public lecture by Dr Coolbear on fostering the best possible
educational outcomes for learners in New Zealand’s
tertiary-education sector.
Student debt closes in on $9.4
billion
As total student debt in New Zealand closes in on
$9.4 billion, the Annual Report of the Department of Inland
Revenue (IRD) shows that more students are borrowing money
and fewer are paying off their loans. A New Zealand Press
Association story says the IRD report shows that total
student debt grew from $7.4 billion to $8.4 billion during
2006-07. About 11,950 students paid off their loans this
year compared with 16,287 the previous year and, as at 30
June 2007, there were 499,259 students with loans compared
with 470,507 the previous year. The median value of a
student loan was $11,097 in 2006-07 compared with $10,652
the previous year.
Policy changes to attract more
international students
From late November, international
students will be able to stay in New Zealand for up to
twelve months, instead of six, on a job-search permit while
they look for skilled work. Under new policy, announced
yesterday by Minister of Immigration David Cunliffe,
international students will find it easier to work in New
Zealand and remain here as permanent migrants.
Announcing
the new policy, Mr Cunliffe said that there is increasing
competition for skilled graduates and the country needs to
allow international students enough time to find a job in
their area of expertise here in New Zealand and not run the
risk that they will go elsewhere. Current graduates on a
six-month permit will be given an extra six months.
“It
is important that we facilitate residence for qualified
international graduates who have experience of living here
while they study. In many cases, these are precisely the
type of skilled workers we need in New Zealand,” Mr
Cunliffe said. “These changes set out an easier pathway
for students to gain residence. I will also be releasing
details next month of the Skilled Migrant Category policy
changes that I announced earlier this year. This will
include a refined definition of skilled employment and some
adjustments to the recognition of qualifications at the
lower end of the quality scale. This will ensure that our
skilled residence policies focus on those migrants with an
appropriate level of skill and expertise.”
Mr Cunliffe
also said that a significant number of international
students are choosing to keep their skills in New Zealand
once they have finished their studies. Research has found 27
percent of all international students who began study
between 1999 and 2001 gained residence or stayed in New
Zealand to work.
Worldwatch
Global look at higher
education
In what has been described as a world-first
development, a team of more than thirty higher-education
journalists based in twenty-five countries around the globe,
including New Zealand, have joined to produce a free weekly
online newspaper, University World News.
University World
News is the first high-quality international newspaper
dedicated to providing coverage of all the key aspects of
higher education and will be distributed to higher-education
institutions, research organisations and government
departments on every continent except, apparently,
Antarctica.
Managing Director of University World News,
Diane Spencer, said the free-to-subscribe paper is being
published at a time when international competition and
collaboration between universities is growing apace. “It
has never been more important for higher-education managers,
researchers, scholars and government officials to keep
abreast of developments in the increasingly globalised world
of universities, and in their rival and partner institutions
worldwide,” she said. “University World News is
committed to providing such coverage.”
The online
newspaper will be published every Monday and will provide
exclusive reports from its correspondents around the world
as well as analyses, features, global round-ups on key
issues and links to higher education stories from other
leading newspapers.
The University World News website
will also offer information on grants and higher-education
research, news from tertiary organisations, employment
opportunities and other developments as well as featuring
myriad links to higher-education organisations and bodies
worldwide.
University World News can be found at:
www.unversityworldnews.com
A call to defend academic
freedom
Saying that they are fed up with an “aggressive
incursion of partisan politics into universities’ hiring
and tenure practices,” five prominent academics in the
United States have issued a call to “defend the
university” and gathered dozens of backers in what they
view as a new way to bolster academic freedom.
The Ad Hoc
Committee to Defend the University has issued a statement
and is asking professors and others to sign on. The
statement says that, in recent years, universities across
the US have been targeted by outside groups seeking to
influence what is taught and who can teach. They say that,
to achieve their political agendas, these groups have
defamed scholars, pressured administrators and tried to
bypass or subvert established procedures of academic
governance. As a consequence, faculty have been denied jobs
or tenure and scholars have been denied public platforms
from which to share their viewpoints. The Committee says
this violates an important principle of scholarship, the
free exchange of ideas, subjecting them to ideological and
political tests. These attacks threaten academic freedom and
the core mission of institutions of higher education in a
democratic society.
The organisers of the Committee are
Joan W. Scott, a professor of Social Science at the
Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton and former Chair
of the American Association of University Professors’
Committee on Academic Freedom, Jeremy Adelman, Chair of
History at Princeton University, Steve Caton, Director of
the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at Harvard University,
Edmund Burke III, Director of the Center for World History
at the University of California at Santa Cruz and Jonathan
R. Cole, Provost Emeritus of Columbia University.
More
information can be found
at:
http://defend.university.googlepages.com/home
From
Inside Higher Education
Lecturers to receive over
£1million back pay
Twenty-two Northern Ireland
lecturers have each been awarded back pay of between £8,000
and £22,000 after an industrial tribunal ruled that they
had been wrongly underpaid for five years. Around seventy
others who were not properly paid are likely also to receive
payments expected to take the total payout to over £1.6
million. The University and College Union (UCU) says that
several further-education colleges failed to place newly
appointed lecturers on the appropriate point of a new salary
scale.
The UCU official for Northern Ireland, Jim
McKeown, said that college employers were told repeatedly
they were wrong in not paying proper salaries from September
2001. After failing to remedy the problem, the case was
taken on behalf of the twenty-two staff.
Mr McKeown said
that the UCU is using the Freedom of Information Act to find
out how much the employers spent on legal costs defending
the action and added that they had spent public funds trying
to defend the indefensible. “Their actions were completely
wrong,” he said, “yet it is the taxpayers who foot the
bill. The real culprits in this affair have escaped
scot-free.”
Australian universities fail specialist
test
Australia does not have one world-class
“specialist” university, according to a report on the
nation’s tertiary institutions. Despite the nation’s
lack of a specialist university, however, the Australian
National University (ANU), with its focus on science and
humanities, was ranked as the best in that country by the
Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social
Research.
The ANU edged out Melbourne University in the
latest rankings of the country’s public institutions and
their international standing, which for the first time takes
into account university specialisation.
The author of
the study, Ross Williams of the University of Melbourne,
said that, apart from ANU’s move to the top, there were no
significant changes to the rankings when university
specialisation was taken into account. “We have
institutions that are more specialised than the others, but
they don’t shoot up terribly in the rankings,” he said.
“This finding reflects the fact that Australia does not
possess outstanding specialist institutions such as the
London School of Economics, the Swiss Federal Institute of
Science and the Indian Institute for Science. We don't have
any institutions in Australia that are specialised and
world-class.”
From The Australian
University
President pulls web profile
The President of Salisbury
University in the United States has removed her Facebook
profile after being questioned about apparently
unprofessional captions posted alongside photos on the web
page.
Janet Dudley-Eshbach had a photo on her profile
showing her pointing a stick toward her daughter and a
Hispanic man with a caption saying she had to “beat off
Mexicans because they were constantly flirting with my
daughter”. A caption accompanying a photo of a tapir
referred to the large size of the pig-like animal’s
genitalia.
Dudley-Eshbach removed her profile from the
social networking website hours after reporters asked her
about the captions. While she did not return calls from the
media, she issued a statement apologising and saying that
she was learning about the positives and negatives of public
networking sites such as Facebook.
From Associated
Press
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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