TEU Tertiary Update Vol 13 No 45
Government cuts $250 per student
A Ministry of Education report published this week shows that funding per equivalent full time student fell 3.2 percent between 2008 and 2009
The report, Outputs
and outcomes of the government’s tertiary education
expenditure 2005-2009, shows that while the
government's student achievement component funding increased
between 2008 and 2009 by $70 million or 6.3 percent, this
failed to match the combined effect of inflation and a rise
in equivalent full-time students of 7.5 percent
The large rise in students meant that government funding
increases were only enough to cover about half of the extra
students.
TEU national president Dr Tom Ryan
said that the report clarified the debate around tertiary
education funding.
"The minister has
repeatedly argued that funding is increasing, while those in
the sector say all they see is budget cuts, redundancies and
increased staff/student ratios. The fact is that the
minister's new money barely goes half way to covering the
cost of all the new students who we and the government are
both encouraging to get an education. The net result is that
there was $250 less for every student in 2009 than there was
in 2008."
"Students in 2009 would have needed an
extra $100 million to get the same level of investment in
their future as students in 2008 had. Students in 2010 and
2011 risk falling further behind as staff at tertiary
institutions get by with reduced resources and less support
per student," said Dr Ryan.
Also in Tertiary Update this week:
- Pike River mine disaster stuns Tai Poutini
- Jobs, jobs, jobs
- Employment rights erode with passing of bill
- Lincoln-Telford merger gets green light
- NZQA given more power over PTEs
- Other news
Pike River mine disaster stuns Tai Poutini
The Council of Trade Unions has expressed its shock and sadness at the news of the second explosion at Pike River Mine and the likelihood that none of the 29 trapped miners has survived.
CTU president Helen Kelly said: “This
is a dreadful event and one which nobody should have to
endure in these times. Everyone has the right to go to work
in the expectation of coming home safe and well at the end
of the day”.
Through the week-long drama, staff
and students at Tai Poutini polytechnic have been providing
meals to rescuers and families. Some of the trapped men are
graduates of the institution’s mining programmes. Many TEU
members around the West Coast have family and other
connections to the missing miners.
TEU has been
offering what little support it can through the miners’
union, the EPMU. TEU national president Dr Tom Ryan,
incoming national president Dr Sandra Grey, national
secretary Sharn Riggs, and Tai Poutini Polytechnic TEU
co-branch president Simon Dixon wrote to the EPMU earlier
this week to send a special message of support and strength
to all involved, and their families.
Jobs, jobs, jobs
While many tertiary education staff around the country have faced restructuring and redundancy this year as tertiary institutions look to cut costs and reduce staff numbers, there is one oasis of job growth in the sector. The Ministry of Education started advertising this weekend for assistant policy analysts, policy analysts, senior policy analysts, chief policy analysts, a business analyst, a senior manager of tertiary policy, and a student loan programme manager, all positions being in its Tertiary Education Group.
Given the dramatic
redundancies at the Tertiary Education Commission last year,
and the government's apparent preference for the Ministry of
Education to be its main source of policy advice, rather
than the commission, it is not surprising that the Ministry
appears to be increasing its capacity to provide advice on
tertiary education.
As recently as August the
Public Services Association announced that the Ministry was
cutting over 100 jobs, However, Tertiary Update
understands that those cuts did not impact on the Ministry's
Tertiary Education Group
TEU national president
Dr Tom Ryan said it was important that the policy support
the TEC was previously funded to provide is
replaced.
"The apparent growth of the Ministry's
Tertiary Education Group shows how politically-driven last
year's attacks on the commission were. Just as a good
tertiary education system needs to pay for good people out
in the various tertiary education institutions around the
country, so it also needs good people in its central
bureaucracy," said Dr Ryan.
"But maybe this
means there is an opportunity for some of the many good
people who lost their jobs in the sector this year to find a
job advising the minister on tertiary education?"
Employment rights erode with passing of bill
The government's employment relations amendment bill, which aims to take away many employment rights from workers, passed its third and final reading in parliament this week.
The new law
means that the 90-day trial period for new employees has
been extended to all workplaces. It also removes
reinstatement as the primary remedy for unfair dismissal,
makes it easier for employers to fire workers without
following the proper process, and reduces the right of
workers to meet their own union at their
workplace.
Council of Trade Unions president
Helen Kelly said unions are not sitting back in
defeat.
"We will continue to campaign against
this government's attack on work rights and its continuing
failure to take adequate action against
unemployment."
"There are 150,000 New Zealanders
officially unemployed, yet the Government's response is to
weaken everyone else's job security as though that was the
root of the country's economic problems," Ms Kelly
said.
"It seeks to weaken wage bargaining when
our wages are falling further and further behind
Australia's."
The government also passed changes
to the Holidays Act, which now means that one week of annual
leave can be bought back by employers from workers.
It also means that employers can now require a
doctor’s certificate for even one day’s absence. Until
now an employer was supposed to have reasonable grounds for
believing a worker’s sickness was not genuine if a sick
note was to be required in the first two days of
illness.
Lincoln-Telford merger gets green light
The minister for tertiary education, Steven Joyce, last week advised that Cabinet has accepted the Lincoln University-Telford Rural Polytechnic merger proposal.
The merger, which will now take place
on 1 January 2011, will see Lincoln's roll swell to about
3,600 equivalent full-time students, up from 2,700 this
year. Lincoln vice-chancellor Professor Roger Field said
that he expected that there would be no job losses or
immediate course changes.
Professor Field and the
chief executive of Telford, Jonathan Walmsley, told staff at
their two institutions last week that the fundamental reason
for the merger is to protect and improve land-based
education delivery and increase student opportunities for
access to quality land-based education. Their memo to
staff notes:
"For both institutions, 2011 will
largely be business as usual in terms of day-to-day
activities and student experience. However, we will be
working to achieve full integration of both institutions as
Lincoln University, with Telford retained as a Division of
the University as?? a sub-brand."
The memo
states that the merged entity will be making offers of
employment to Telford staff within the next 2 weeks.
Lincoln has told the Press it is committed to retaining
Telford's sub-degree courses, but also wanted its
students to study at a higher level, especially in
agriculture and agricultural science.
NZQA given more power over PTEs
NZPA reports that the National and Labour parties are both supporting measures aimed at providing greater accountability and higher standards for private training establishments (PTEs) involved in export education.
The minister for tertiary education
Steven Joyce announced last week that the government is
introducing changes
in the Education Amendment Bill (No 4) next year, which
will give the New Zealand Qualification Authority (NZQA)
greater powers to monitor, investigate and enforce
compliance PTEs, and raise the threshold to register as a
PTE.
Mr Joyce said legislation around PTE
registration has not kept up with the changes and growth in
the sector over the past 20 years.
"The current
measures available for managing performance in this sector
are insufficient in today's conditions. NZQA's work to
drive improvements in the lowest performing PTEs is
currently hampered by the out-dated nature of the
legislative provisions and inconsistencies within
them."
The legislation will also allow PTEs to
keep more money when refunding international students who
withdraw from a course. Mr Joyce says this will remove the
financial incentive for students to downgrade their courses
once onshore and change to other providers who provide much
cheaper courses which may be of lower quality.
Labour's tertiary education spokesman, Grant Robertson,
welcomed the changes and said some PTEs were not up to
scratch.
"While there are some high quality PTEs
working with international students, there are others who
are not meeting standards and a few who are just ripping
people off," he said.
Mr Robertson said that if
the NZQA was to be given an increased role in ensuring
higher standards were met, it would need a boost in
resources and capacity.
Other news
Tertiary Education Union national industrial officer Irena Brorens said she was outraged and shocked council members voted yesterday to double their fees. Tutors have had nothing in two years, except a one-off payment of $700, she said. At yesterday's council meeting in New Plymouth, councillors voted 6-2 for an increase which works out about double the current rate for council members. "How can they justify doubling their pay and giving us nothing?" Ms Brorens asked – Daily News
A cautionary tale about ranking
institutions: Alexandria University in Egypt had been placed
a surprisingly impressive 147th on the Times Higher
Education Supplement's list of top universities (only two
places behind the University of Auckland). But, behind the
headlines, Phil Baty, deputy editor of Times Higher
Education, acknowledged that Alexandria’s surprising
prominence was actually due to "the high output from one
scholar in one journal" — soon identified on various blogs
as Mohamed El Naschie, an Egyptian academic who published
over 320 of his own articles in a scientific journal of
which he was also the editor! –New
York Times
In the wake of the military,
shopping malls, and mosques, universities have become the
latest target of the Pakistani Taliban, sowing terror among
faculty members after a number of killings and kidnappings
of prominent academics in the north-western region of the
country - University
World News
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TEU Tertiary Update is published weekly on Thursdays and distributed freely to members of the Tertiary Education Union and others. You can subscribe to Tertiary Update by email or feed reader. Back issues are available on the TEU website. Direct inquiries should be made to Stephen Day, email: stephen.day@teu.ac.nz