Whackademia: An Insider's Account of the Troubled University
By Richard Hill
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About this ebook
Richard Hill
Richard Hill, M.A., M.Ed., M.B.M.Sc., D.P.C., is acknowledged internationally as an expert in human dynamics, communication, the brain, and the mind. He is an international lecturer and keynote speaker on the topics of neuroscience and psychosocial genomics, has developed special training courses for suicide prevention, and is the originator of the Curiosity Approach. As well as giving lectures to the psychological profession in Australia and the rest of the world, Richard has a strong ongoing engagement with the coaching and business community.Ernest L. Rossi, Ph.D., holds a diploma in clinical psychology and is the recipient of three lifetime achievement awards for outstanding contributions to the field of psychotherapy. He is a Jungian analyst, the science editor of Psychological Perspectives, and the author, co-author, or editor of more than 50 professional books and more than 170 peer-reviewed scientific papers in the areas of neuroscience, psychotherapy, dreams, and therapeutic hypnosis, many of which have been translated into a dozen languages. Ernest is internationally recognized as a polymath, a gifted psychotherapist, and a teacher of innovative approaches to facilitating the creative process.
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Whackademia - Richard Hill
foibles.
Introduction: Grounds for complaint
Working in a university is like being in a really bad British farce: lots of racing around with no clear direction.
SENIOR LECTURER IN EDUCATION, MELBOURNE
Academics have been reduced to administrators and facilitators of formulaic, googlised, dumbed-down education.
PROFESSOR OF POLITICAL SCIENCE, CANBERRA
Universities are knowledge department stores.
LINDSAY TANNER, FORMER FINANCE MINISTER AND NOW VICE CHANCELLOR’S FELLOW AT VICTORIA UNIVERSITY
Like most organisations in other industrial and commercial sectors – schools, hospitals, biscuit factories, banks and breweries – universities have over recent years experienced major changes to their workplace cultures. Australian academics are now subject to work regimes that few of their predecessors would have recognised barely thirty years ago. Economic rationalism, commercialisation, managerialism, corporate governance and other outgrowths of neo-liberal ideology have ushered in an entirely new way of thinking about what constitutes academic life, what universities are for, and what values these institutions represent.
The notion of universities as institutions for the collective good has been largely usurped by the need to survive in an increasingly cut-throat marketplace. The once stereotypical image of an academic – a middle-class, pipe-smoking patriarch with all the time in the world to contemplate lofty ideas – has been replaced by the current reality of workers immersed in the rush of corporate activity, mostly aimed at peddling their institutions’ educational wares and maintaining market share. This change has been accompanied by bureaucratic practices and corporate jargon common to other sectors – inputs, outputs, targets, key performance indicators, performance management, unit costs, cost effectiveness, benchmarking, quality assurance and so on – that together form a system dedicated to maintaining corporate discipline, brand distinctiveness and market share.
And if educational ‘products’ like degrees, diplomas and PhDs are to be sold on the open market, then it is necessary to ensure an acquiescent and disciplined academic workforce, one that publicly supports the corporate line, protects the brand and fulfils the onerous duties required of it. Constant monitoring and surveillance – through regulatory mechanisms of review, assessment and evaluation – ensure that compliance is achieved under the guise of transparency, accountability and quality assurance. As academics have themselves reported in numerous newspaper articles and research studies, the net effects of this formidable regulatory order have been a perceived lowering of professional status, a sense of being constantly surveyed and swamped by red tape, and the loss of creative license, intellectual freedom and something called ‘job satisfaction’. Needless to say, many academics also now report high levels of stress, depression and related anxiety disorders, as well as a desperate desire to flee the profession – a feeling most prevalent in Australia among the estimated reserve army of 67 000 casual employees who now represent about 60 per cent of the academic workforce.
Many academics also report that they cannot devote as much quality time as they would like to what they consider to be their most important activities – teaching and research – and that they waste considerable energy simply monitoring and reporting what they are doing, or grappling with the onerous demands of large numbers of needy students. Not surprisingly, this situation has led to a generalised state of existential malaise in which many disgruntled and disillusioned academics ponder what it means to be an academic in today’s university system.
The story of my own twenty-five years of academic work in both British and Australian universities (related in chapter 1) is, I suspect, a fairly typical account of personal disenchantment with a system that has gradually mutated into its present corporate form. The sense of excitement and ideological fervor which initially propelled me into an academic career has since been eroded by a stifling sense of obligation to the survival of the largely joyless institutions in which I worked. It wasn’t so much the drudgery of the business model that irked me – I found its application to the universities bemusing, mainly because it was administered so amateurishly. More disenchanting was the fact that many of my colleagues seemed so eager, or so easily resigned, to embracing it. I was constantly struck by how fellow academics in the arts and social sciences could teach courses involving ‘critical reflection’, yet remain so reluctant to apply such intellectual processes when confronting the questionable rationalities of today’s universities.
Instead, what I witnessed was a tendency among my colleagues to embody aspects of the new order even though, in private, many would berate the corporatisation of universities and promise to revolt or get out as soon as possible. Others clung desperately to the moral raft of pragmatism – ‘I have a mortgage and kids to support’; ‘I’ll never get a promotion if I cause trouble’ – or confined their critiques to journal articles, books and occasional newsletters. Yet others chose resistance through their trade unions and/or acts of industrial sabotage – faking workload calculations and avoiding performance reviews – or equally as effective, applying heavy doses of satire and ridicule, examples of which litter the pages of this book. But many also seemed to think that the system was just dandy, and the more commercialisation and quality control the better. After all, they argued, we are in the real world and there is no alternative.
Altered states
Despite these differing reactions there was one development on which everyone agreed: the nature of ‘academic’ work had altered significantly over the years, radically transforming the profession’s everyday activities. For instance, as time wore on I noticed that discussions in staff and other meetings tended to focus increasingly on workload allocations, attrition rates, grant acquisition and student enrolments, rather than any meaningful consideration of what we as academics were doing and why we were doing it. These vexed questions rarely surfaced in the new reality, other than to confirm the sector’s links to the wonders of the global market. To make matters worse, class sizes and administrative loads blew out and faculty administrators and school heads were handed extraordinary powers over academics. In the midst of all this, many academics had gradually morphed into docile subjects or, worse, remunerated zombies.
Academics now ply their trade in a system that encourages hyperactivity, obsessively measures and standardises everything, and is hell-bent on attracting and retaining students. So entrenched have these instrumental concerns become that in some universities an academic’s penchant for reading scholarly works or sitting in quiet contemplation during office hours is seen as a monumental waste of time. In short, today’s academics find themselves in a strange, perplexing world of conflicting realities in which public claims of excellence seem starkly at odds with what routinely goes on inside the modern university. This is a world in which vice chancellors, like many other corporate CEOs, draw hefty salary packages, totalling over a million dollars in some cases, while the majority of those who do the hard graft of teaching – casual employees – struggle along with risible job security, remuneration and hefty workloads in what comes close to a system of patronage. It’s also a world in which globetrotting vice chancellors, deputy vice chancellors and pro vice chancellors occupy plush offices, supported and even sustained by a bevy of personal assistants and administrators, while academics take on increasing amounts of on-line teaching and administration. Meanwhile, eager marketing and promotion personnel invent tacky brand adverts that are plastered everywhere from newspapers and cinemas to billboards and the sides of taxis and public buses.
Equally worrying for academics is the fact that universities, and academics in particular, remain firmly in the grip of negative public mythology. There remains a widespread belief that academics have it good when compared to workers elsewhere. In some cases this is probably true. As many university administrators are fond of pointing out (however erroneously), academics seem to be conspicuously absent from university campuses from about November to January. These same finger-pointers also allude to the relatively small number of formal teaching hours of most academics (especially when compared to school and TAFE teachers) and holidays masquerading as overseas conference attendance as damning evidence that they are pampered and spoiled employees. But these are merely the soft-targets of modern academic life. Copious evidence shows that Australian academics confront often insurmountable workloads across the calendar year, and that this seriously impacts on their health and well-being, and ability to perform core duties. Yet very little public recognition of this will come from government ministers or vice chancellors – although some of the latter, like Professor Paul Greenfield, the former vice chancellor of the University of Queensland, Professor Greg Craven of the Australian Catholic University, and Professor Steven Schwartz at Macquarie University have at least tried to highlight serious educational and other deficiencies in the system, as well as the failure to present a clear view of what higher education is for.
It is as if academics have been shackled by the myths of the past, unable to get it across to a largely disinterested audience that their work demands are injurious to health, happiness and good education. As such, academics have become, at least in policy discourse, shadow figures in the public eye. This is a situation made all the worse by higher education commentators – including senior academics and government ministers – who make little or no mention of academics or the challenges they face in the current system.
But it’s not only the cultural and structural aspects of professional work that concern academics. They also point to the effects these are having on the nature and quality of so-called higher education. As I note in later chapters, the rigid and formulaic approach to university teaching, with its links to economic and vocational imperatives, and despite all the latest expert teaching theories and technological wizardry, is in many cases delivering a narrow and low-grade education for their students. Numerous employers, and even some vice chancellors, have begun to complain, and complain bitterly, about the one-dimensional nature of modern university graduates.
As this book indicates, what worries many academics is how growing commercialisation and the constriction of curriculum content to suit certain vocational, market-orientated ends has impacted on how and what students learn – and ultimately upon their capacity to become active citizens in a thriving, participatory democracy. Many academics argue that instead of simply encouraging graduates to pursue their personal ambitions of career, job readiness, professional status and high salaries in a competitive market culture, the role of universities should be to develop pedagogical practices that produce more ‘rounded’, more globally aware and ‘citizen-minded’ students who subscribe to an ethic of the common good.
Marketplace academics
Despite the fact that universities continue to graduate students across a range of disciplines who go on to make important contributions in various walks of life, altered funding arrangements in Britain (where arts, humanities, social sciences, law and business courses will no longer receive government subsidies), the questioning and disappearance of liberal arts courses in some Australian universities, and the funnelling of funds to applied science research, have all signalled a shift to more hard-nosed economic priorities. Add to this the proliferation of business schools (many with questionable reputations), the teaching of what critical theorist David Harvey derides as free-market, capitalist economics, and the fact that today’s architects of de-regulated tertiary education invariably equate higher education with economic growth, and it is not too difficult to see why universities have embarked on their current trajectory. Whatever the claims of university mandarins, it is clear that these institutions have become a constituent element in the market-driven ambitions of the neo-liberal state.
It is worth pausing at this stage to consider briefly what is meant by an ‘academic’. According to the Commonwealth Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations (DEEWR) in 2010 there were just under 50 000 full-time and fractional full-time academic staff in Australian universities working in regional and metropolitan campuses across a range of disciplines. Over 31 000 of these undertook both teaching and research, slightly under 16 000 specialised in research, and a small crop of 2000 or so concentrated exclusively on teaching. As to what exactly is meant by an ‘academic’, there is simply no agreed definition. I have long thought – naively I’ll admit – that academics mostly undertake research and publish their findings in scholarly outlets and then apply their insights in teaching situations and occasionally speak out on matters of public concern. They might do a bit of administration and community and professional service, but their focus is research and teaching.
I have come to learn, however, that none of these assumptions hold true in the current tertiary system. For instance, if we take teaching and research as our yardstick, then many of those who work in Australian universities would – despite the categorisations of DEEWR – probably not qualify as academics because many of them do little or no research. In some quarters, however, there is a push for more ‘teaching only’ positions, with the insistence that these employees are still ‘academics’ simply by virtue of the fact that they work in universities. On the other hand, casual employees, the majority of whom (around 57 per cent) are women in their thirties, do a lot of teaching – in fact, that’s all that most of them do! Half or more of the tertiary teaching load, and up to 80 per cent in some courses, is done by casual staff, albeit with few if any of the benefits afforded to full-time academic staff.
While some academics do more teaching or research than others, all face the daily grind of over-administration – a major source of complaint amongst the nation’s scholars, mainly because it impedes their ability to concentrate on activities such as teaching and research. Administration has taken on a life of its own in today’s universities and is central to the maintenance of a system devoted to the delivery of a branded product called ‘higher education’. But not any sort of education. Australian university education is delivered through a quasi-market mixture of public and private funding that is tethered to particular instrumental goals like job readiness, professional careers and the promise of hefty incomes. As consumers, or my preferred term, ‘shoppers’, students have come to expect a product – a degree, diploma or doctorate – that will equip them to compete for jobs in the employment marketplace. As noted, this equation between higher education and job orientation has been constantly reinforced by policy-makers and senior university advocates who draw links between higher education and productivity, the economy, economic growth and GDP, as if these were the only measures of success. Contributing to the economy, of course, means engaging in that world on its terms, including a commercial ethos that requires (as we shall see in chapter 2) the full promotional powers of marketing and public relations personnel, of which there is now a veritable army in the tertiary sector.
One of the keys aims of this enterprise is to keep incomegarnering student-shoppers rolling through the doors in what, after the removal of government caps in 2012, will be one of the most de-regulated systems of higher education in the world. But while student-shopper numbers have begun to mushroom, the same is unlikely to be the case among permanent academic staff. In fact, fulltime academics are a diminishing breed, outnumbered by a growing band of casual staff, administrators, and middle and senior managers who have become bit-players in mini-empires that constantly seek to expand their activities domestically and overseas through new courses, on-line services and swanky (actual and virtual) designer campuses.
Academics – continuing and otherwise – have also had to confront the realities of what has been termed ‘massification’, whereby increasingly large droves of student-shoppers have been elevated to the status of royalty. The most revered of these regal shoppers are the full-fee-paying overseas students, who provide about 18 per cent of student income to universities and, according to Access Economics, contributed $9.6 billion to the Australian economy in 2009. Unfortunately, large numbers from this premium clientele have dropped away over the past couple of years, mainly because of ‘reputational issues’ (like the bashings of Indian students and perceptions of poorquality education), the over-valued Aussie dollar, and better value for-money in other countries.
To offset what is a significant loss of income – and any ensuing institutional panic – the federal government in 2011 loosened visa restrictions, allowing overseas students more generous entry requirements and the possibility of two years of employment following graduation. Additionally, many universities significantly eased their student entry requirements, while others have begun to draw more and more funds from charitable donations, bequests and endowments. Some universities even employ their own students in call centres to hunt down funds from alumni in order to bolster institutional coffers, or have attempted to poach students from other universities – despite this being in breach of their own university rules. Other universities have flogged off the equivalent of the Crown Jewels – buildings and, in the case of the University of Sydney, a painting by Picasso – to fund various infrastructure developments. Sydney, Monash, Macquarie and the University of Central Queensland have all taken the option of shedding both administrative and academic staff. Faced with a $36 million debt caused by the downturn in overseas student numbers, La Trobe University in Melbourne has also considered lay-offs, as well as imposing levies on those faculties which fail to meet their enrolment targets – an interesting variation of rubbing salt into the wound.
Given such developments, it is hardly surprising that academics are nervous about job security, which for casual staff is just about non-existent anyway. For the more permanent employees, the notion of tenure – once a cherished feature of scholarly life – is largely a thing of the past. Academics, like employees in other sectors, now find themselves vulnerable to the vagaries of market forces. In effect, this has served to act as yet another regulatory mechanism, helping to ensure that all remains relatively quiet on the academic front. Not that academics have remained quiet for long. Struggles over enterprise bargaining agreements, staff-room disputes and a generalised culture of disaffection and complaint has taken hold.
Purposeful complaint
Although this book records a lot of complaints about the things that academics find disagreeable, odd, boorish, stifling, restrictive, irritating and downright toxic in today’s university system, it has a higher purpose: namely, to highlight the parlous state of Australia’s higher education sector and the urgent need to do something about this.
Most people complain some or all of the time about their pay and conditions – it’s a simple fact of working life. Some readers may nonetheless find it irksome that seemingly well-paid employees appear to be droning on about how hard their professional lives have become. But as mentioned above (and as I demonstrate in greater detail in later chapters) most of the academics who undertake teaching are in fact lowly-paid casual staff who share little or none of the job security held by their colleagues on continuing contracts. Many casual academics consider that the full-timers have it good when compared to themselves, and there is some truth in this when it comes to pay and conditions. But none of this discounts the altered realities of the work culture of all university academics, nor the fact that significant numbers of them find the current regime oppressive, overwhelming, injurious to health, and antithetical to their ideas of a scholarly life.
It is of