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Caution: heavy load

Published on
January 5, 2017
Last updated
January 5, 2017

The findings reported in the article 鈥Even top teachers 鈥榥ot recognised or compensated鈥, warns research鈥 (News, 22 December) 鈥 that top teachers at research-intensive universities don鈥檛 see their passion for and commitment to their work matched by their institutions 鈥 were very recognisable.

At my Russell Group university, I don鈥檛 feel that teaching is valued, even though there have been some improvements for people on teaching-only contracts, who now have a career path for the first time.

Teaching loads are still measured in terms of the number of modules a lecturer contributes to, rather than the number of students you teach. This means that teaching 80-100 students on a module counts the same as teaching 10-12 students (or as few as six, as some colleagues do).

In my quite specialised department, which has a very low staff-to-student ratio, I鈥檓 one of the few who attract large numbers of students from other departments. I鈥檓 told that this is what the department needs because we鈥檙e under pressure because of overstaffing, but I pay a high price in terms of my workload. I鈥檝e had excellent evaluations for years, but this barely seems to count for promotions. Having a workload model helps because I can finally quantify what I鈥檓 actually doing, but it hasn鈥檛 resulted in a fairer division of labour; so I wonder how I should challenge the fact that my teaching (and admin) load is currently at 75 per cent of my nominal hours 鈥 leading to much overwork to catch up with research and publications.

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meme
Via timeshighereducation.com


I鈥檝e seen this problem with workload models in my institution. It鈥檚 crazy that people get allocated the same number of hours for a module regardless of the number of students who take it. Certainly, a minimum number of hours is needed to prepare any module, regardless of class size. But the time demands of marking, organising seminars, dealing with general queries and so on are clearly higher with large classes.

I also wonder about the gender and status of those who end up teaching the large first-year undergraduate classes. It鈥檚 rare to see the big-name white, male professors taking on such 鈥渄irty work鈥 in our institution. Maybe the occasional 鈥済uest lecture鈥 in their own specialism, but that鈥檚 it鈥

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SteveTT
Via timeshighereducation.com


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