Academic staff in tertiary institutions say they are overworked and undervalued. Recent changes in education provision and funding have meant that providing safe, equitable and reasonable workloads is an increasingly difficult management task. The paper arises from a joint union/management working party that surveyed historical and current contexts, including approaches used to assess and allocate academic work in a variety of tertiary institutions. We surveyed regulatory provisions contained in tertiary education collective agreements and found there was no single solution, given the diversity of the sector. Nevertheless we have identified workload models that provide a framework for discussion and negotiation between unions and managemen...
The shift of Higher Education into a business model has led to an increasing use of a casual so-call...
Significant factors within UK higher education include explicit competition, regulatory demands and ...
Internationally, universities are increasingly seen as being part of the wider community, which has ...
The pressures on UK higher education (from explicit competition and growth in student numbers, to s...
In quantifying and qualifying the scope of academic labour, workload models serve multiple ends. The...
The global financial crises have resulted in huge increases in the number of tertiary students deman...
Embarking on a large-scale research project to investigate aspects of academic workload management, ...
This chapter investigates the role and practice of Workload Allocation Models (WAM), as managerial d...
The recommendations of the ‘Bradley Review’ of higher education in Australia identified a clear need...
The Australian higher education sector has undergone significant changes over the last two decades, ...
Purpose – To present empirical research on the adoption of workload allocation models (WAMs) within...
The focus for this thesis has been on the management of academic workloads, stimulated by surveys hi...
Higher education in the United Kingdom (UK) is under increasing pressure to manage the workload of i...
Increases in the number of tertiary students demanding higher education, referred to by Musselin (20...
Internationally, much has changed in the governance of universities since the adoption of corporate ...
The shift of Higher Education into a business model has led to an increasing use of a casual so-call...
Significant factors within UK higher education include explicit competition, regulatory demands and ...
Internationally, universities are increasingly seen as being part of the wider community, which has ...
The pressures on UK higher education (from explicit competition and growth in student numbers, to s...
In quantifying and qualifying the scope of academic labour, workload models serve multiple ends. The...
The global financial crises have resulted in huge increases in the number of tertiary students deman...
Embarking on a large-scale research project to investigate aspects of academic workload management, ...
This chapter investigates the role and practice of Workload Allocation Models (WAM), as managerial d...
The recommendations of the ‘Bradley Review’ of higher education in Australia identified a clear need...
The Australian higher education sector has undergone significant changes over the last two decades, ...
Purpose – To present empirical research on the adoption of workload allocation models (WAMs) within...
The focus for this thesis has been on the management of academic workloads, stimulated by surveys hi...
Higher education in the United Kingdom (UK) is under increasing pressure to manage the workload of i...
Increases in the number of tertiary students demanding higher education, referred to by Musselin (20...
Internationally, much has changed in the governance of universities since the adoption of corporate ...
The shift of Higher Education into a business model has led to an increasing use of a casual so-call...
Significant factors within UK higher education include explicit competition, regulatory demands and ...
Internationally, universities are increasingly seen as being part of the wider community, which has ...