This year my partner and my brother both left academia. They are part of a nation-wide changing of the guard at most universities in Australia and many overseas.
Over 17,000 Australian university jobs disappeared in 2020, Universities Australia estimated. It predicted more to come. By May this year an estimated one in five positions in higher education had been lost, according to an Australia Institute analysis.
Universities have lost billions in revenue during the COVID-19 pandemic. They saw no alternative to reducing the biggest expense on their books: staff salaries.
So Minister Alan Tudge says he is “surprised” that more than 17,000 families lost a job from higher ed lst year.
— NTEU ~ Secure jobs, now! (@NTEUNational) February 3, 2021
Now that he is aware, what’s the plan to #SaveHigherEd? @naamanzhou pic.twitter.com/Hf4rS5pdVL
1. Is your role secure?
Alarmingly, up to three-quarters of staff in several universities are on casual or fixed-term contracts. Even before COVID-19, the higher education sector was criticised for mass casualisation of its workforce. In defence, this trend is being seen across Australia as employers increasingly look to manage overheads in pursuit of economic efficiencies. Unfortunately, casual academics have also been the hardest hit by COVID-related impacts on universities. This includes their unrecognised (and therefore unpaid) hours of work required to set up online courses and support business continuity. There is hope: there are calls to transfer casual staff to fixed term or continuing positions. Anecdotally, executive staff are hearing these calls. Some universities are investigating their options to recognise the work casuals do through flexible but more secure employment arrangements. Academics in continuing positions may feel lucky, and let’s not forget their employer-provided superannuation is nearly twice as generous as in most other industries. When considering jobs in other sectors, be aware they may not offer the generous leave provisions for academics. This includes longer-than-typical sick leave, parental leave, recreational leave and long-service leave.2. Is the flexibility worth the workload?
Ask any academic whether they have enough time to complete the work their role requires of them; the answer will be a firm “No”. Unmanageable workloads pose a serious risk to mental health. However, “success” in an academic career typically requires individuals to defy the odds when it comes to producing high-volume, high-quality work. Early-career academics usually feel overwhelmed by such an expectation. It can drive them to leave the industry. In response to this challenge, academic workload models now exist in many universities, despite concerns raised overseas about their value in improving working conditions.Jobs crisis looms for generation of Australian researchers – Pandemic piles pressure on junior academics as universities forced to make redundancies https://t.co/fHhwo6MjPA#academia #researchers #Australia
— ResearchProfessional (@ResearchProfes) August 25, 2020