AUS Tertiary Update
Increasing salaries should be election focus:
Increasing
wages and salaries in New Zealand should be a major focus of
debate in election year rather than lowering taxes and
cutting government spending, according to the Association of
University Staff. The union argues that the current debate
on tax cuts is too narrow and that it would be more
productive to concentrate on lifting wages and salaries to
levels comparable to those in Australia and other countries
with which New Zealand competes for labour.
University
staff are voting this week to decide whether to initiate
bargaining for national collective employment agreements as
one measure to try and address international salary
disparities. The national agreements would replace current
enterprise-based ones, negotiated separately at each
university.
AUS national president, Associate Professor
Maureen Montgomery, said that New Zealand weekly wages in
2007 averaged around $731.04, compared with the $NZ1029.26
in Australia. “Such a significant difference in the
spending power of New Zealand workers will not be addressed
by tax cuts of between $15 and $20 a week; it is up to
employers to lift their game and substantially increase wage
levels,” she said. “During the era of the Employment
Contracts Act, New Zealand wage and salary levels dropped
from being broadly equivalent to those in Australia to being
around 30 percent behind.”
Associate Professor
Montgomery said it is ironic that there are a large number
of Australian companies in New Zealand paying their workers
significantly less than their Australian counterparts, while
at the same time taking huge profits out of the country.
“Higher levels of productivity have been used as a
justification for higher wages in Australia, but we do not
accept that New Zealand workers are generally any less
skilled or hard-working than their Australian
counterparts,” she said.
New Zealand universities
recruit more than 50 percent of staff from the international
market, yet salaries remain as much as 25 percent behind
Australia, even when adjusted for cost of living.
Also in
Tertiary Update this week
1. Buchanan to appeal ruling on
reinstatement
2. AUS women’s vice-president
elected
3. International enrolments down
again
4. Student debt millstone, not milestone, say
NZUSA
5. “Crippling” cuts questioned
6. Waikato to
buy Michael King house
7. Apology ordered for drug
critique
8. Another clash of cultures
9. Honour
restored after 66 years
10. No confidence in
redundancy-happy VC
Buchanan to appeal ruling on
reinstatement
The Association of University Staff has
confirmed that an appeal will be filed in the Employment
Court on behalf of Dr Paul Buchanan claiming that he should
be reinstated to his position as a senior lecturer at the
University of Auckland.
The Employment Relations
Authority recently ruled that Dr Buchanan had been
unjustifiably dismissed from his employment at the
University, but it declined to reinstate him. Dr Buchanan
was awarded more than $65,000 in lost wages and
compensation.
The university summarily sacked Dr Buchanan
in July last year on the grounds of serious misconduct after
sending what was described in the media as an angry email to
a student, a United Arab Emirates national. In the email,
which was widely reprinted, Dr Buchanan spoke bluntly of the
student’s very weak academic performance and lack of
aptitude for graduate study and said that he did not believe
her excuse for not delivering her final assignment on the
due date.
AUS deputy secretary Marty Braithwaite said
that reinstatement is the primary remedy where dismissal is
found to be unjustified and that this is an important issue
for Dr Buchanan, particularly given that the effect of the
loss of his job is effectively to end his academic career in
New Zealand.
It is not known at this stage when an appeal
will be heard.
AUS women’s vice-president
elected
Sandra Grey, a lecturer in the social policy and
sociology programmes at Victoria University with an MA(Hons)
from the University of Auckland and a PhD from the
Australian National University (ANU), has been elected
women’s vice-president of the Association of University
Staff. Dr Grey’s union involvement began in 1988 when she
became a shop-floor delegate in the NZ Journalists’ Union
and extended to university activism when she was elected
president of the ANU’s Postgraduate and Research
Students’ Association in 2002.
Since 2006 she has been
a member of the AUS Victoria branch committee and a
representative on the national staus of women committee. In
those roles, she has been involved in debates and campaigns
around childcare, promotions, workloads, and
timetabling.
Dr Grey identifies a number of major issues
for women in tertiary education: “These include the
‘glacial’ progress towards equity and the particular
effects of the almost $10 billion student debt on women, who
take longer on average than men to pay off the debt. In
addition, there is the use of casual employment contracts,
with their disproportionate impact on women, and the lack of
recognition, in many instances, of the value of the
contribution of general staff women to academic
endeavour.”
“I guess what is important is to is to
recognise that gender inequities do exist and, while they
are not easy to overcome, it is essential that we take them
seriously,” she concludes.
Dr Grey’s research
interests centre on the ways in which citizens can bring
about social and political change and, in particular,
development of a greater understanding of the changes
brought about by collective actions such as social movements
and interest groups. She is currently working on a major
research project, for which she received a Marsden fast
start grant, looking at the interaction of union, women’s,
and anti-poverty movements in New Zealand since the late
1960s.
International enrolments down again
Education
Review reports that international student enrolments are
down again this year in at least seven of the country’s
eight universities, but that only one, Massey University,
reports an initial fall in domestic numbers. Among them,
five universities began the year with a total of 1314 fewer
equivalent-full-time students (EFTS) than last year for an
estimated $24 million loss in fees alone. Two more reported
a decline in international numbers but did not give
figures.
Massey had the biggest numerical fall, with 367
fewer international EFTS than last year, a drop of 19
percent. It also reported a fall of 260 domestic EFTS at the
beginning of the year to a total of 14,554, thus continuing
its steady domestic decline since 2000, when it recorded
18,742. Massey is reported, however, as expecting some
slight growth over the course of the year.
There follows
Victoria University, with a 270, or 19 percent, drop in
international EFTS from the same time last year and AUT with
a decrease of 272, or 14 percent. The University of
Canterbury dropped 237, or 16 percent, and the University of
Auckland 162, or just 7 percent of international EFTS.
Auckland, however, reported a small increase, 0.7 percent,
in domestic enrolments.
Lincoln University had not been
able to provide figures to Education Review in time for
publication but reported an overall drop in international
EFTS and in postgraduate domestic EFTS and an increase in
domestic undergraduates and international postgraduates. It
is reported as blaming the drop in initial postgraduate EFTS
on a tight labour market.
Similarly, Waikato did not
provide figures but has been reported as saying that total
enrolments are up in spite of a decrease in international
numbers. The University of Otago would not provide figures
until its council had been briefed.
Student debt
millstone, not milestone, say NZUSA
Students and
graduates all around New Zealand are marking collective
student debt reaching an astonishing $10 billion today with
events and protests highlighting the inequity of the
student-loan scheme and the unsustainability of a debt-laden
generation.
“Family formation, home ownership, business
start-up, and retirement savings are all widely known to be
severely negatively affected by student debt. Add to that
the contribution of this debt to New Zealand’s increasing
‘brain drain’ and you have a recipe for disaster,”
said New Zealand Union of Students’ Associations
co-president Liz Hawes.
“The millstone of debt
burdening an entire generation is an indictment on a
first-world country that values education and promotes a
knowledge economy. But with commitment and leadership from
the government it is possible to turn the tide”, she
added.
The 2007 NZUSA Student Income & Expenditure Survey
identified significant increases in students’ living costs
and debt, with average student debt rising 54 percent since
the survey was last conducted in 2004, and now topping
$28,838. “Lack of access to allowances and high tuition
fees are the key contributors in driving students to debt.
It’s clear that action from government in these areas
would significantly reduce debt for individuals and
families, and have positive effects on the economy”,
concluded Ms Hawes.
At the University of Otago, students
are marking the occasion with a protest on the registry lawn
in the form of a massive birthday party for the student debt
monster. As well as a variety of party related activities,
including free food and a horizontal bungy, students can
register their protest by completing a birthday card with
their name, year of study, and student loan debt and sending
it to the parliamentary offices of Pete Hodgson, minister
for tertiary education.
“Crippling” cuts
questioned
South Island polytechnics are said to be
facing what one chief executive describes as “crippling”
cuts as a result of a focus on in-region provision by the
Tertiary Education Commission (TEC), according to a report
this week in The Press.
Telford Rural Polytechnic is said
to have had a 20 percent reduction, Aoraki Polytechnic has
lost 150 of its 670 land-based EFTS, and West Coast
Polytechnic 480 EFTS, but not in land-based training.
Telford’s EFTS had gone to the Waikato, Taranaki, and
Nelson Marlborough, to institutions which are alleged to
lack the expertise or capacity to handle the work and who
would be subcontracting it out.
Jonathan Walmisley, chief
executive of Telford, whose campus is in south Otago but
which has students scattered around the country, is quoted
as saying, “It was a major blow to see this was the way
they were heading. The tertiary education strategy clearly
allows for specialism. The biggest concern is not this 20
percent which will have an impact, but should they continue
this policy we could reach a stage where we become
non-viable.”
Wendy Smith, Aoraki chief executive,
describing the policy as a “blunt tool”, questioned the
wisdom of changing and redistributing land-based provision
“at significant cost and high risk”.
According to The
Press, however, TEC director tertiary network, David
Nicholson, said that Aoraki and Telford had been
subcontracting out most of the training. Noting that
specialist areas would remain with the original
institutions, he described the transferred EFTS as relating
to “lower-level more generic” training being picked up
by other regional providers as “part of an increased focus
on meeting the needs of their regional
stakeholders”.
“Telford continues to be a successful
provider within the tertiary system. There is no evidence
that a 20 percent reduction in its 2006 provision is a
risk,” he added.
Waikato to buy Michael King
house
The University of Waikato has bought the house
built by the late New Zealand writer and historian, Michael
King, in Opoutere, near Whangamata on the Coromandel
Peninsula. Dr King and his wife, teacher, editor, and
publishing consultant Maria Jungowska, died in March 2004
when their car left the road on a notorious stretch of state
highway 2 at Maramarua. It is intended that the house will
be used as a retreat for university staff and, possibly,
visiting academics, and this is seen as the beginning of
other tributes.
Waikato vice-chancellor, Professor Roy
Crawford, said that Dr King had played an important part
within the university. His long association with Waikato
began in the late 1960s and 1970s with his MA and his PhD.
He was a fellow of the department of history in the early
1990s and, in 1994, spent the year as writer in residence.
Eight years later he returned as senior fellow in history.
He was made an honorary doctor in 2002 and had been working
on a history of the university when he died in 2004,
although this has never been completed.
Professor
Crawford said that, when Dr King’s children, who live in
Wellington and Christchurch, decided to sell the house where
their father did so much of his writing, the university was
given the chance to continue its link with the eminent
historian.
“We see it as a wonderful opportunity to
honour Michael King’s memory by keeping his house as a
place where staff can further their research, or small
groups of staff or graduate students can use it for research
or writing,” said Professor Crawford.
Some mementos of
Dr King’s will remain in the house, as will his large
writing desk, although this remains the property of the
family. Professor Crawford said the house would not be a
shrine to the writer, but it is hoped it would be an
inspiration to those who spend some time there.
World
Watch
Apology ordered for drug critique
THE University
of Queensland (UQ) in Australia is facing accusations of
curbing academic freedom after asking a senior lecturer to
apologise to a pharmaceutical company for comments he made
about the cervical-cancer vaccine Gardasil. UQ senior
lecturer in general practice, Andrew Gunn, had recently told
ABC Radio National he had misgivings about the recently
developed drug.
Dr Gunn said concerns included “its
marketing as a solution to cancer of the cervix when at best
it’s expected to prevent about two-thirds of cases; the
incorrect and dangerous perception that it might make Pap
smears unnecessary; and the difficult question of the best
age to give a vaccine whose effect might yet prove to wear
off before many recipients even start having sex”.
His
comments prompted CSL’s public affairs director, Rachel
David, to write to UQ’s then vice-chancellor describing Dr
Gunn’s comments as inappropriate given the long-standing
relationship between the university and the company in
Gardasil’s development. In response, UQ secretary and
registrar, Douglas Porter, wrote asking Dr Dunn to provide a
written apology to CSL stating that the comments were made
by him in his personal capacity and were not endorsed or
authorised by the university.
Rejecting the idea that
identification of an academic position could be seen as
endorsement by the institution in which it is held,
Doctors’ Reform Society president Tim Woodruff said that
the call for Dr Gunn to apologise seemed to ignore the
university’s own policies on academic
freedom.
“Different views on economics, law, climate
change, and almost everything else are frequently expressed
in the media by academics with no suggestion that the views
are endorsed by their university,” he said. “The only
difference in this case would appear to be the determination
by the university to override its own principles of academic
freedom in the face of commercial concerns.”
From
Janelle Miles in the Courier Mail
Another clash of
cultures
Lecturers at Keele University in the United
Kingdom’s Midlands, supported by staff from other
universities, demonstrated for the second time this year
outside their council meeting last Thursday. The protests,
as well as other “action short of a strike”, are partly
in response to proposals to make thirty-eight of 67 academic
staff in the school of economic and management studies
(SEMS) redundant and, more significantly, partly in defence
of the university’s long-standing commitment to “the
ideas of broad, liberal education, of free thinking, and of
bucking trends”.
Specifically, the action is about
SEMS’s bucking of the widespread trend to become a
conventional business school dominated by business
interests. It has the only industrial relations unit left in
Britain that is not based in a business school and “it
takes trade unions seriously”.
Last year, a review
committee recommended replacement of SEMS by a business or
management school, abolition of its distinctive MBA, and the
closure of courses in economics and industrial relations.
The university accepted the report, concluded that many of
the staff did not have “an appropiate skillset to support
the change”, and commenced to prepare for
redundancies.
While Keele vice-chancellor, Professor
Janet Finch, expresses a strong personal commitment to
social science disciplines, University and College Union
(UCU) members see it quite differently. “Many people see
us as deeply unfashionable, though I think what we do is
relevant and contemporary,” says Keele UCU action
committee chair Mike Ironside. “The vice-chancellor has
her heart set on creating a conventional business
school.”
Keele University was established half a
century ago to enshrine the dream of its founder, Lord
Lindsay, of uniting the two cultures: the arts and the
sciences. He intended the university to be the place that
taught “the arts person to understand how the scientists
thought and the scientist to keep in touch with the
arts”.
From Francis Beckett in the Education
Guardian
Honour restored after 66 years
Robert Yasui
was a pre-medical student at the University of Oregon when
he and nineteen other Japanese American students were
expelled from the university in the spring of 1942. They
were swept up in the mass roundup at the start of World War
II that sent about 120,000 Japanese Americans, most of them
US citizens, to what were called internment camps.
That
put an abrupt end to Yasui’s ties to the university and,
for the past 66 years, while he built a successful life as a
surgeon in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, nothing connected him
and the university that he attended briefly. But last
Sunday, Yasui, now 84, and three other former students were
back on campus for the university to award honorary degrees
to all twenty of the expelled students on what President
Dave Frohnmayer called “a day of many emotions, of joy and
regret”.
Recalling a dark chapter in American history,
President Frohnmayer declared that the students were
“forced to defer their dreams” as fear stalked West
Coast communities after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
“Now, 66 years later, we, this university, have an
opportunity to address those actions that led to this great
wrong,” he said.
Yasui walked slowly with the aid of a
cane to the front of the room to receive his degree. He was
joined by Samuel Naito, 86, a member of one of Portland’s
most prominent business families, who was a UO sophomore in
1942; Alice Kawasaki Sumida, 85, of Portland, who for years
was a nurse at Providence Hospital; and Midori Funatake
Komoto, 86, also a nurse, who lives in Ontario.
The
university, which rarely grants honorary degrees, awarded
nineteen bachelor’s degrees and one master’s
degree.
From The Oregonian
No confidence in
redundancy-happy VC
Staff at Bournemouth University have
delivered a damning vote of no confidence in its
vice-chancellor, Professor Paul Curran. Members of the
University and College Union (UCU) delivered the verdict on
Professor Curran, who has made 100 academics redundant since
taking over in September 2006, through a ballot of its local
members.
The ballot, which delivered a scathing verdict
of 93.4 percent for no confidence, followed mounting
disquiet over Professor Curran’s changes to the
university’s educational character. Staff have complained
that his approach to a wide variety of employment matters
and a recent round of compulsory redundancies left them with
no option but to censure him.
Last October, Professor
Curran incurred the wrath of his staff when he criticised
the teaching at the university and suggested it was only
Bournemouth’s climate and proximity to the coast that
attracted students to the university. Distancing themselves
from his comments, staff refused to condone Professor
Curran’s approach to public relations or to badmouth the
university themselves.
Following the announcement of the
ballot result, UCU branch secretary Paul Freedman said,
“This result shows the degree of anger and disappointment
at the current actions of the vice-chancellor and his
management team. We are not against change but it has got to
build on our educational assets and retain the goodwill of
staff. Our fear is that the very bedrock of what makes a
decent university will be trashed in a headlong rush to
change.”
UCU general secretary, Sally Hunt, said,
“Staff at Bournemouth have had to take this drastic step
because of the actions of their vice-chancellor. No
university can ever lose sight of its primary functions and
expect to retain the respect of the academic world. UCU
fully supports the staff at Bournemouth and the
vice-chancellor must listen to their concerns at his plans
and also his recent actions.”
More international
news
More international news can be found on University
World News:
http://www.universityworldnews.com
AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
distributed freely to members of the Association of
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the AUS website: www.aus.ac.nz. Direct inquiries should be
made to the editor, email:
editor@aus.ac.nz.