AUS Tertiary Update
National salary bargaining starts, government funding
released
The university unions’ bargaining team met
their management equivalents earlier this week to begin this
year’s negotiations for two multi-employer collective
emplyment agreements covering the sector. This initial
meeting saw agreement reached in principle on a
bargaining-process agreement with only a couple of
outstanding matters to be concluded with one of the
universities.
In advance of negotiations, lead advocate
and Association of University staff deputy secretary, Marty
Braithwaite, described multi-employer bargaining as an
important platform upon which unions and vice-chancellors
can address salary questions strategically and develop a
collaborative approach to long-term workforce planning.
“Only in this way,” he said, “can we overcome the
disparities in salary levels and structures that have
emerged over the last fifteen years of individual-university
bargaining.”
“Despite working with government and the
vice-chancellors over the last three years towards resolving
salary problems, the progress has been insufficient to
address international relativities and has done little
towards resolving those disparities,” Mr Braithwaite
added.
However, in this week’s negotiations, there was
considerable discussion around a proposal from two
universities relating to the presentation of claims. They
wished to have the substantive issue around the form of the
agreement (that is, for multi-employer or single-employer
agreements) resolved prior to debating other claims. The
reasoning given for this was that a number of the unions’
claims rely on employer acceptance of multi-employer
agreements. The outcome of this discussion was that this
matter will be debated and resolved as part of the
bargaining.
Also discussed was the number of union
representatives allowed per university and the number of
paid days’ leave permitted for those representatives to
participate in bargaining. While confirmation is yet to be
provided from one university, the number of paid days for
union representatives to attend bargaining is up to fifteen,
following which the number shall be reviewed and agreement
for more days, should they be needed, not withheld
unreasonably. It was initially claimed by some universities
that no more than two union representatives be permitted
from their university but this has not been
pursued.
Dates for further bargaining meetings, at which
the substantive claims for negotiation will be presented and
addressed, are 7 and 8 July in Christchurch, 16 and 17 July
in Wellington, 23 and 24 July in Christchurch, and 30 and 31
July in Wellington.
In a late development, the Tertiary
Education Commission has now released the breakdown of the
$15 million in new government salary funding for
universities for 2008. The government’s required split
between academic and general staff delivers a salary
increase of 1.53 percent for the former and 0.51 percent for
the latter, payable from 1 July.
Also in Tertiary Update
this week
1. Funding falling behind
inflation
2. Tutorials cut at Canterbury college of
arts
3. Million-dollar commercialisation for
Auckland
4. AUS and ASTE acknowledge passing of Monte
Ohia
5. Inflationary pressures on degree
standards
6. European doctoral-education body
launched
7. Asian-American higher-education success “a
myth”
8. High IQ atheism?
Funding falling behind
inflation
Education Review reports that the gap between
the rate of inflation and the annual increases in government
funding of tertiary education is steadily increasing and
likely, in 2009, to reach 2 percent, a figure estimated to
be worth approximately $40 million in operational funding to
tertiary-education providers. This, the greatest gap in
recent years, follows six years in which annual
inflation-linked adjustments have marginally fallen behind
the rate of inflation.
While per-student funding has
increased cumulatively by 16.7 percent since the beginning
of 2003, inflation over the same period has been 17.2
percent. This year’s funding is 2.2 percent higher than
last year but year-to-March inflation was 3.4
percent.
Education Review reports that some in the sector
are concerned that increased costs for food and fuel will
push inflation even higher than previously predicted. This
view receives considerable support from Reserve Bank
governor Allan Bollard, who recently predicted that CPI will
peak at 4.7 percent in September. That figure would leave
next year’s government funding about 2 percent short of
the rate of inflation, a shortfall of some $44
million.
The Tertiary Education Commission is reported as
saying that the 2009 increase in funding to the tertiary
sector was determined last December on the basis of the
preliminary half-year economic and fiscal update. This was
because, under the controlled-funding system, the government
has to budget for cost-of-living increases earlier than it
did under the old, forecast-driven system.
Tutorials cut
at Canterbury college of arts
Students at the University
of Canterbury’s college of arts are fearful that cuts to
the college’s funding will mean that the quality of their
education will be affected for the worse. The university’s
recently adopted implementation plan is aimed at saving $1.2
million in 2008, with $400,000 coming from frozen staff
positions and $800,000 from cuts in operating
expenditure.
Operational funding has previously met the
costs of tutors’ salaries but, as a result of the
reduction, many of the college’s programmes are cutting
back tutorials after the first year of study. A third-year
arts student, Mark Rahui, has told The Press, “You get the
feeling with students that they are getting cheated, and
with the restructuring of departments, it’s almost like
students are wondering when it’s going to
stop.”
“It’s also the reputation of the degree,”
he added. I don’t want to head out into the real world and
have people chuckle about an arts degree from Canterbury
like it’s a joke. I want to be just as prepared as
everyone else.”
University of Canterbury Students’
Association president, Michael Goldstein, reported anxiety
on the part of students as a result of fewer tutorials and
other impacts of the cuts. “For students, this doesn’t
improve the quality of education because it’s making class
sizes larger and not complementing that with tutorials,”
he said.
Pro vice-chancellor (arts), Professor Ken
Strongman, is quoted as saying that some operational funding
would be returned in 2009. “There will be a little bit put
back, but not very much, because we have taken all the
submissions made on our plan into account and made fewer job
cuts than intended. I completely agree that students are
better off with regular tutorials than not and I wish plenty
of money was available for that,” he
said.
Million-dollar commercialisation for Auckland
A
$36 million investment fund has been launched to assist
early-stage commercialisation of intellectual property at
the Universities of Auckland, Adelaide, and South Australia,
and Monash and Flinders Universities. The Trans Tasman
Commercialisation Fund has been established in collaboration
with Westscheme, a Western Australian industry
superannuation fund.
The New Zealand government, through
New Zealand Trade and Enterprise, is assisting Auckland with
overhead costs and similar roles are being played in
Australia by the state governments of Victoria and South
Australia. The Auckland city council is also supporting the
new fund in the expectation that it will result in the
growth of the local “knowledge economy”.
Dr Peter
Lee, the chief executive officer of Auckland UniServices,
the university’s commercialisation vehicle, said,
“Valuable university research-based intellectual property
currently lacks sufficient funding required to get it
through the critical early stages of commercialisation –
proof of concept, pre-seed and seed development stages –
so it can advance to being investment-ready.”
“These
are inherently risky and long-term investments,” he added.
“We found there was no significant current source of
private capital to support this process in New Zealand, so
we have worked hard to find an investor willing to back our
research.”
University of Auckland vice-chancellor,
Professor Stuart McCutcheon, said, “Not only do we expect
to increase the rate at which we are able to commercialise
ideas, we also expect to see this research translated into
many more successful spin-out companies that will locate in
and around Auckland. In turn, these new high-tech,
high-research companies will create a high demand for
skilled people, which has obvious economic benefits to the
region,” he concluded.
AUS and ASTE acknowledge passing
of Monte Ohia
The Association of University Staff and the
Association of Staff in Tertiary Education Te Hau Takitini
have acknowledged the passing of a great Māori leader,
Rereamoamo Monte Ohia, describing him as a tall tōtara tree
who has fallen. He was not only a renowned educationalist
but also an iwi leader and whānau-oriented person.
ASTE
national president, Tangi Tipene, said, “Our union mourns
the passing of such a great man. We recognise his
significant contribution across all levels of education,
particularly Māori education in the tertiary
sector.”
Monte held senior positions in wānanga,
polytechnics, universities, the New Zealand Qualifications
Authority, the ministry of education, and a range of
independent research organisations, boards, and councils, as
well as being a consultant to national and international
organisations. He was previously head of the Bay of Plenty
Polytechnic Māori School and, more recently, the pou
matua/executive director of the Christchurch Polytechnic
Institute of Technology, where he had held that position
since December 2005.
“Matua Monte worked unstintingly
with Māori staff and members of our union in and we are
proud to have had this association with him,” said Ms
Tipene. “His strength, knowledge, guidance, and wisdom
will be sorely missed by Māori in our sector. We wish his
whānau and friends the very best in filling the void left
by such a great rangatira,” she concluded.
ASTE
tauheke, Dr Huirangi Waikerepuru, said, “Kua maringi ngā
roimata ki runga te papa i te hinga atu o te tōtara nui o
te wao nui a Tāne. Takoto, takoto e te rangatira e Monte,
haere, haere, haere.”
AUS vice-president Māori, Dr
Fiona Te Momo, expressed her deepest condolences to te
whānau Ohia and added, “Matua Monte’s passing is a huge
loss to his whānau and te ao Māori as a whole, not only
for his depth of knowledge in kaupapa Māori education but
also as a great advocate for iwi Māori.”
World
Watch
Inflationary pressures on degree
standards
Degree standards in many British universities
are in danger of collapsing because lecturers are under
pressure to “mark positively” and turn a blind eye to
plagiarism, according to the man who was in charge of
safeguarding standards at Britain’s largest university.
Professor Geoffrey Alderman, former chairman of the academic
council at the University of London, warned that a
“league-table culture” has led to an explosion in the
number of first-class honours degrees awarded.
Latest
figures show they have gone up by more than 100 percent in
Britain over the past decade, from 16,708 to 36,645, at a
time when the undergraduate population has risen by just
over 40 percent. In a lecture at the University of
Buckingham, Professor Alderman also argued that universities
have been particularly lenient with overseas students
because they rely on them so heavily for fee income, so much
so that they turn a blind eye to plagiarism and cheating.
Universities currently rake in fees of about $NZ3.67
billion a year from students outside the European Union, who
can be charged the full cost of their courses. Their numbers
have soared by nearly 40 percent in the past five years,
bringing the total to just over 137,000. In the past decade,
only one of the United Kingdom’s top universities,
Cambridge, has reduced the proportion of firsts and high
seconds.
Despite this, Professor Alderman said,
“Standards of English literacy at UK universities are
often poor. To compensate for this, lecturers are pressured
to ‘mark positively’. This is particularly true in
relation to international students, whose full-cost fees are
now a lucrative and essential source of much-needed
revenue.”
He continued, “I have heard it seriously
argued that international students who plagiarise should be
treated more leniently than British students because of
‘differential cultural norms’. It is indeed rare,
nowadays, for habitual plagiarists to be expelled from their
universities.”
From Richard Garner in the
Independent
European doctoral-education body
launched
The inaugural meeting of the European University
Association (EUA) Council for Doctoral Education was held at
the University of Lausanne in Switzerland earlier this
month. The new council will help formalise doctoral training
within Europe and provide a focus for global dissemination
of European work in this field.
“It was clear that the
council wants to be a forum to share experience and learn
from good practice in other universities but at the same
time protecting Europe’s unique diversity in this area,”
said Dr Alexandra Bitusikova, programme manager at the EUA.
“We don't want to over-regulate or to harmonise
everything; we don’t want the same doctoral programmes all
over Europe; but we can still learn a lot from each
other,” Dr Bitusikova said.
Discussion over the three
days focused on defining key priority areas to be addressed
for advancing doctoral training in Europe. Five main themes
emerged: improving the supervision of PhD candidates,
particularly through better training and monitoring of
supervisors themselves; enhancing institutional cooperation,
notably through the development of joint doctoral programmes
and double degrees; introducing new structures such as
doctoral schools within institutions to manage doctoral
education; better provision of skills training for doctoral
candidates, particularly “transferable” skills; and
enhancing quality control and evaluation of PhD
programmes.
Dr Bitusikova said there were definite
regional differences in the uptake and development of
doctoral education in Europe. “In northern parts, the
reforms are already in place but in the southern and eastern
European parts many universities still need to do a lot of
work,” she said.
“We definitely will be a partner of
the Council for Graduate Schools in the US and Canada.
We’d like to be the voice of European return-intensive
universities, all universities that award PhDs should be
return-intensive,” Dr Bitusikova said.
From Alan Osborn
in University World News
Asian-American higher-education
success “a myth”
When “too good to be true” fails
to be either good or true, long-term repercussions can be
devastating and pervasive, according to a new report that
challenges long-held beliefs about Asian-American and
Pacific Islander students’ academic success. The report,
Asian-Americans and Pacific Islanders – Facts, not
Fiction: Setting the record straight, details “why false
assumptions can lead to misinformed policy and practice that
can be harmful to Asian-American and Pacific Islander
students”.
The United States census bureau estimates
that there are now almost 17 million Asian-Americans and
Pacific Islanders in the US. The umbrella term AAPI
represents 48 ethnic groups, who are seen as “studious,
self-sufficient high achievers”. Asians, however, have
varied backgrounds, cultures, and educational and financial
attainments and should not be homogenously lumped together,
according to the report.
In fact, while many
Asian-Americans perform extremely well and are solidly
represented in top universities, AAPI students are evenly
distributed in community and four-year colleges and are not
“taking over” US higher education, as one myth suggests.
Another debunked myth is that AAPI college students only
pursue degrees in science, technology, engineering, and
maths.
“To successfully meet the needs of all our young
people, schools and colleges must recognise that students
differ. Institutions must involve everyone in efforts to
meet individual needs: students, parents, advocates,
teachers, and administrators," said Gaston Caperton,
president of the College Board.
High IQ atheism?
Belief
in God is much lower among academics than among the general
population because scholars have higher IQs, a controversial
academic has claimed. In a forthcoming paper for the journal
Intelligence, Richard Lynn, emeritus professor of psychology
at the University of Ulster, argues that there is a strong
correlation between high IQ and lack of religious
belief.
In the paper, Professor Lynn, who has previously
caused controversy with research linking intelligence to
race and sex, says evidence points to lower proportions of
people holding religious beliefs among “intellectual
elites”. The paper, which was co-written with John Harvey,
who does not report a university affiliation, and Helmuth
Nyborg, of the University of Aarhus, Denmark, cites studies,
including a 1990s survey, that found that only 7 percent of
members of the American National Academy of Sciences
believed in God. A survey of fellows of the Royal Society
found that only 3.3 percent believed in God at a time when a
poll reported that 68.5 per cent of the general United
Kingdom population were believers.
Professor Lynn asks,
“Why should fewer academics believe in God than the
general population? I believe it is simply a matter of the
IQ. Academics have higher IQs than the general population.
Several Gallup poll studies of the general population have
also shown that those with higher IQs tend not to believe in
God.”
In India, however, a different picture emerges.
Indian scientists are apparently split down the middle over
their belief in the existence of God, according to a
nation-wide investigation.
One-quarter were firm
believers and another quarter atheists or agnostics, with
the balance unsure or not responding. However, one-third
believed in the existence of sins and deeds of a past life
and life after death, one-quarter belived that holy people
can perform miracles, and 40 percent approved of the ritual
of seeking religious endorsement of a space launch.
From
Times Higher Education and Telegraph India
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 University Staff and
others. Back issues are available on the AUS website:
www.aus.ac.nz. Direct inquiries should be made to the
editor, email:
editor@aus.ac.nz.