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WSWS : News
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Students protest lack of funding at University of Western
Sydney
By Tom MacDonald
27 March 2001
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A student meeting at the University of Western Sydney (UWS)
Campbelltown campus voted last week to organise a UWS-wide protest
rally on April 5 against over-crowded classes and inadequate facilities.
The rally will consider calling a student strike and will march
to a nearby university oval with shovels to dig up some of the
10,000 books that UWS authorities buried five years ago in order
to save money.
More than 60 students, academics and staff joined the open-air
meeting. Students were incensed that they face sub-standard conditions,
both as a result of funding cuts by the federal government and
a cost-cutting restructuring imposed by the UWS administration.
Many who spoke at the meeting expressed anger at the fact that
the wealthier and more established universities in Sydney's eastern
suburbs receive up to 50 percent more funding per student. UWS,
with more than 30,000 students on seven campuses spread across
Sydney's working class western suburbs, is one of Australia's
largest multi-campus universities. Yet its total revenue per student
is only $10,500 a year, compared to $15,000 to $17,500 at Sydney
University and University of New South Wales.
Students at all universities are being affected by overcrowding
and deep cuts in courses and staffing levels, but the impact is
particularly acute at UWS.
During the meeting, students complained of:
* tutorial or seminar classes of up to 60, making genuine discussion
impossible.
* cuts to administrative staff, with drastic effects on student
services.
* the shortening of semesters to 12 weeks to make way for summer
and winter fee-paying courses.
* shortages of library staff and services, including photocopying
machines, combined with the introduction of late loan fees.
* the scarcity and breakdown of computer facilities, which
are essential for study and research.
* queues of an hour or more at the student administration centre
and bookshop.
* overuse of casual tutors and lecturers.
* the introduction of privileged car parking for those with
the money to pay parking fees.
The meeting formulated a series of demands, including class
sizes of no more than 25; more staff, not less; abolition of fee-paying
courses; a return to full semesters; and increased funding for
library and other basic services.
Called on only a day's notice, the meeting followed a Daily
Telegraph report on the burial of books and the under-funding
of UWS. The books, believed to include first editions and rare
100-year-old volumes, had been donated to UWS after being discarded
by the University of Sydney. Lacking the funds to properly catalogue
and store the books, UWS officials simply used them as landfill.
Such an act is antithetical to the role of a university as a centre
of learning and culture. No consideration was given to donating
the books to charity.
Since the books were buried, the funding shortfalls have worsened,
both at UWS and at other universities, as the federal Coalition
government has deepened spending cuts begun under previous Labor
governments.
Since 1996, basic grants to universities have been reduced
by 6 percentalmost $600 million per yeardespite rising
enrolments. Universities have been forced to make up the gap by
introducing fee-paying courses, obtaining research funding from
corporate and government sources, and launching other commercial
activities, including business consultancies and overseas campuses.
Responding to the Telegraph article, federal Education
Minister David Kemp baldly denied any responsibility for UWS's
lack of resources. His spokesperson declared that total university
revenues had never been higher. But 10 years ago, the federal
government used to provide 95 percent of university budgets; now,
the figure is about 37 percent, with 23 percent coming from Higher
Education Contribution Scheme (HECS) fees paid by students and
40 percent coming from full-fee paying students and research funds.
In addition, government research grants are tied to establishing
partnerships with companies, so that research projects must be
tailored to commercial interests.
This funding system forces universities to fight against each
other for research grants and to attract fee-paying students.
The more elite universities, which have built up facilities and
reputations over decades, are aggressively pursuing potential
markets, pushing aside the less endowed universities that are
generally attended by a higher proportion of working class students.
In a letter to the Telegraph, Kemp claimed that UWS
was over-funded. He alleged that the wealthier universities taught
more expensive disciplines, such as medicine, engineering and
science, and that therefore UWS was receiving 7.3 percent more
than it should. In fact, UWS teaches science and engineering and
a full range of university courses, apart from medicine and a
handful of highly-specialised disciplines. Kemp also argued that
universities such as Sydney and the University of NSW had higher
proportions of students at post-graduate levels. If true, this
only indicates that students from Sydney's west are being denied
equal opportunities to undertake post-graduate study.
Like other university administrations, the UWS management has
not opposed federal government policies. Instead, it has curtailed
spending on basic services and student needs in an effort to compete
with rival universities. UWS academics have been pressured to
forge links with business and obtain research grants in order
to bring in the money to fund basic teaching.
UWS vice-chancellor Janice Reid last year pushed through a
restructuring plan, which she claims has cut administrative overheads
by 8 percent and will increase expenditure on courses by 14 percent.
As students have experienced, however, the first areas targetted
for cost-cutting have been library services and lower-level administrative
staffthose upon whom students and academics depend for assistance.
In 1999, students at the UWS Bankstown campus occupied the
administration building for nearly two weeks, forcing the management
to agree to class sizes of no more than 25 and a list of other
demands. In the subsequent merger of UWS into a single institution,
the UWS authorities have flouted this agreement.
See Also:
UWS students condemn lack of resources
"I don't agree with universities being funded commercially"
[27 March 2001]
10,000 books buried
at Australian university
[7 September 2000]
Australian university
students occupy campus over substandard conditions
[8 November 1999]
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