Advocate, March 2020

Page 6

◆ NEWS

COVID-19 exposes sector’s vulnerability While protecting human health and public safety is the primary concern of authorities in Australia and all over the world in dealing with COVID-19 (coronavirus), it has exposed how reliant the Australian tertiary education sector has become on international student income.

committed to offering students their courses online (notwithstanding the incredible difficulties of having to deal with China’s heavily restricted internet access).

Many workers in both the public and private tertiary education sectors are having to deal with the potential of lost work and income without a real safety net.

This has serious implications for the workloads of both academic staff in preparing courses, and professional staff in administering courses and enrolments in particular.

The Union has also urged universities to properly support those staff, both academic and professional, who have been directed to move teaching to 'online only' delivery in the event that in-person teaching on campus is suspended or deferred.

At the time of writing (28 February), Universities Australia estimated that up to 100,000 Chinese students were unable to come to Australia to begin the 2020 academic year, with no indication of when the Morrison Government’s travel ban (a week-by-week proposition) will be lifted.

The implications for casual academic staff are even more horrendous, with the prospect of little to no work if the travel ban continues and there simply aren’t any classes to teach.

If the ban continues for any significant time, Australian universities could potentially suffer a multi-billion hit to revenue this year. The Group of Eight (Go8) universities have the most Chinese students enrolled, and are therefore the most exposed. Fortunately they tend to be the most wealthy universities, and are generally in a better position to weather such a crisis. Monash University has delayed the start of the first semester by four weeks and the University of Sydney has extended enrolments until 31 March. But it isn’t only Go8 universities that are affected – the University of Canberra has invited international students who cannot get to Australia to defer their studies for first semester, while the University of Newcastle is one of several universities

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Casual staff adversely affected

NTEU has delayed a scheduled increase to our casual membership fees to relieve members suffering loss of income (see p. 50). The Union is currently considering further financial relief options. We are seeking a commitment from universities that casual staff will not suffer reduced income in the event of deferred semesters, cut shifts and closed campuses. NTEU National President Alison Barnes said 'We’ve written to Vice-Chancellors asking them to agree that those casual staff who would normally be working from day one of semester will not be worse off as a result of timetable changes due to coronavirus... Many of our casual academic members have not had work since well before Christmas. The prospect of cut shifts due to disrupted teaching timetables will mean they can’t pay their bills and put food on the table.'

ADVOCATE VOL. 27 NO. 1 ◆ MARCH 2020

Public funding cuts The reliance on international student income by the public tertiary education sector has been largely driven by longterm cuts to government funding, with more than $7 billion worth of cuts to university funding over the last decade, and billions more taken out of the Vocational Education and Training (VET) sector. In research published in the latest issue of the NTEU's academic refereed journal, Australian Universities’ Review ('What will follow the international student boom?' AUR, vol. 62, no.1, 2020, pp. 18-25), RMIT University's Angel Calderon details the dramatic changes in the mix of domestic and international students and the consequent revenue streams: 'The number of student enrolments in Australian higher education has increased from 441,074 in 1989 to 1.56 million in 2018. Over this period, domestic student enrolments have seen an annual average growth of 3.4% compared to 11.9% for international students…


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Articles inside

New NTEU staff Updating your membership details

3min
pages 54-56

Casual/sessional fee increase delayed due to coronavirus

1min
page 52

Qld Division goes solar & funds APHEDA Upcoming Friday Sessions for members

1min
page 53

Farewell from over the Ditch

4min
page 51

Sylvia Klonaris, CDU

3min
page 50

Kate Mattingly, UniSA

3min
page 49

Liberals’ digital ascendancy

4min
page 48

The surreptitious infiltration of private interests in public education

5min
pages 46-47

Faith no more

5min
pages 44-45

QUTE Conference 2020: Our Voice @ Work & Beyond

5min
pages 37-39

Who's out at work?

5min
pages 42-43

Working late, weekends and poolside

4min
page 36

Stop supercharging climate change

8min
pages 34-35

Unions must declare a climate emergency

7min
pages 32-33

Scientists' warning ignored for decades

4min
page 26

Bushfires spark green shoots of solidarity

9min
pages 27-29

Safe as Houses: Climate change & the Australian Dream

6min
pages 30-31

Where are we at with academic freedom?

3min
page 21

It gets a little bit lonelier each week

3min
page 17

Free and equal

5min
pages 22-23

Gerd case not over yet

2min
page 20

Invasion Day rallies call for real recognition

2min
page 15

Babies, breastfeeding and bargaining

3min
page 10

Waging war against wage theft in higher education

3min
page 8

Merry Christmas and a No, No, No

1min
page 11

Round 7 enterprise bargaining complete

2min
page 7

COVID-19 exposes sector’s vulnerability

3min
page 6

Adding up wage theft in Maths & Stats

4min
page 9

Scorched summer reminds us: climate change is union business

4min
page 4

Screening The Final Quarter across Qld

3min
page 14
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