Implementing the new Workload Policy Heads of School Workshop April 2010.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Project Cycle Management
Advertisements

1 IOP Programme Leaders Away Day Equality and Diversity in Admissions Debbie Epstein Policy Development & Training Officer.
Head teacher Performance Management
Auditing, Assurance and Governance in Local Government
Important Points The SWF stands for Standard Workload Form. Workload is covered by Article 11 in the collective agreement. Your SWF is your personal contract.
Service to the University, Discipline and Community Academic Promotions Briefing Session Chair, Academic Board Peter McCallum.
NUT WORKLOAD CAMPAIGN The Next Steps STRB workload survey concluded: “no statistically significant changes in the numbers of hours worked by full-time.
Understanding the IEP Process
Trust Policy The Trust aims to maintain a workforce that is highly skilled, competent and flexible and one that puts the patient at the centre of maintaining.
School Development Planning Initiative
Date or reference Workload allocation and balancing: the Salford model UCML workshop, 13 March 2009 Janet Lloyd School of Languages University of Salford.
© Grant Thornton UK LLP. All rights reserved. Review of Sickness Absence Vale of Glamorgan Council Final Report- November 2009.
Executive Report to Council
ACU - Heads of School Forum Empowering the Head of School in Staff Management Pauline Croxon Manager, Employment Relations.
Minnesota Manual of Accommodations for Students with Disabilities Training Guide
Purpose of the Standards
Presented by Margaret Shandorf
Creating a Teaching/Professional Dossier Shea Wang, Ph.D Interim Faculty Evaluation Coordinator
1 CHCOHS312A Follow safety procedures for direct care work.
Care Options for NHS Continuing Health Care (CHC) Wirral PCT Board – 12 February 2008 Tina Long - Director of Strategic Partnerships Sheila Hillhouse -
APPRAISAL OF THE HEADTEACHER GOVERNORS’ BRIEFING
February 8, 2012 Session 3: Performance Management Systems 1.
Copyright Course Technology 1999
NSW Interagency Guidelines for Child Protection Intervention 2006 Briefing Information Session Child Protection Senior Officers Group.
FOLLOW UP SITE VISIT Dr Robert Schofield Dr Arthur Brown Advisors to the Quality Assurance and Accreditation Project Republic of Egypt.
Creating a Teaching Dossier Shea Wang, Ph.D Interim Faculty Evaluation Coordinator Oct. 21, 2013.
1 Collaborative Provision and External Examining Nicola Clarke Centre for Academic Standards and Quality Enhancement (CASQE)
2 ND EDITION ROD JONES Copyright © Pearson Australia (a division of Pearson Australia Group Pty Ltd) 2010 PowerPoint presentation to accompany.
PROMOTION AND TENURE FOR CLINICAL ATTENDINGS Rhonda Dick, M.D. Tim Martin, M.D.
1 Effective Senates: The Key Ingredients of Collegial Consultation Angelica Bangle, Chris Hill, Wheeler North, Beverly Reilly, Cheryl Stewart.
Building An Academic Career
EMPOWERING LOCAL SENATES Kevin Bontenbal, South Representative Stephanie Dumont, Area D Representative.
Gaining and Maintaining Supported Researcher Status Knowing the Rules of the Game June 2007.
Information for External Examiners involved in Academic Collaborative Provision - 12 Nov 2014.
Pensions – The Big Picture Andrew Nugent Assistant Head of Information Services The Pensions Board.
Academic Senate for California Community Colleges ­– Leadership Institute 2008 Basics for Effective Senates Shaaron Vogel Wheeler North Academic Senate.
ALNS Behaviour Policy. DFE - The Law Every school must have a behaviour policy. The governing body set the general principles. The governing body must.
General Staff Performance Reviews Campus Briefings
Integrated systems of care Presented by: Jolanta McCall Head of Paediatric Audiology/NHSP.
M ANAGING AND L EADING P EOPLE IN THE R ESEARCH C ONTEXT Future Research Leaders Program Module 7.
OFFICIAL – SENSITIVE English Language Requirement for Public Sector Workers Draft Code of Practice Consultation.
Managing Deployment Introductions. What do we understand by ‘academic staff deployment’. Contractual matters.
The Pay Agreement – An overview. The agreement is set out in the Framework document. The Framework also refers to national guidance which also makes up.
Distance Learning and Accreditation Heather G. Hartman, Ph.D. Brenau University Online Studies and SACS Liaison.
Minnesota Manual of Accommodations for Students with Disabilities Training January 2010.
Elementary School Administration and Management GADS 671 Section 55 and 56.
Tripartite Declaration of Principles concerning Multinational Enterprises and Social Policy (MNE Declaration) Multinational enterprises and social policy.
February, MansourahProf. Nadia Badrawi Implementation of National Academic Reference Standards Prof. Nadia Badrawi Senior Member and former chairperson.
PDR 2016 A Guide for Professional Staff 1. Plan 2. Progress 3. Review.
Academic Workload Allocation Model, or Teaching Load Database.
Friday 1 st December 2006 Careers & Employment Workshop Group B: Policy.
QA in HEIs: ZIMCHE’s Perspectives Workshop on trends in HE for BUSE Administrators 8-9 April 2016 Evelyn Garwe, Deputy CEO.
Cluster Host Preparation Meeting Autumn Term 1a Overview and Action Planning Judith Carter Senior Adviser Complex Needs/Vulnerable Learners
CHAIRS AND DIRECTORS ORIENTATION August 16, 2016.
Clinical Practice evaluations and Performance Review
Overview of Session Review of the 3 Pillar Documents
Promotion to Full Professor: Regulations and Procedures
A Guide for Academic Staff
Internal Audit Strategy Survey Results & Discussion
A Managers Guide to Parental Leave
Provost’s Merit Pay Initiative
A Guide for Managers for Academic Staff
A Guide for Professional Staff
The partnership principle in the implementation of the CSF funds ___ Elements for a European Code of Conduct.
A Guide for Professional Staff
A Guide for Academic Staff
European Labour Law Jean Monnet Chair of EU Labour Law Academic Year Silvia Borelli:
Finalization of the Action Plans and Development of Syllabus
Roles and Responsibilities
Presentation transcript:

Implementing the new Workload Policy Heads of School Workshop April 2010

Structure of the session Introduction and overview How well do you know the Workload Policy? Review of the context Draft Guidelines Scenarios and report back Other issues Next steps

Purpose of the session and guidelines Develop shared understandings across the Schools Empower School leaders to allocate the workload confidently and equitably taking into account work responsibilities not ‘counted’ in the metrics process Empower HoS to make on balance judgements aligned with the principles of equity and transparency

Key concepts Negotiation Flexibility Transparency Equity On balance

How well do you know the workload policy?

The context Workloads are an employment & industrial relations issue within a legal framework The ACU Staff Enterprise Agreement 2005 – 2008 sets out the “rules” for workload allocation: “Staff shall not normally teach more than 4 units in any one semester Staff will normally accumulate the equivalent of 360 contact hours per year … This includes 336 contact hours of teaching, supervision and administration and 24 contact hours of other approved academic related activities as defined by the policy”

The context The Academic Workloads Policy has been revised and the 360 “loaded” hours has become 1000 hours of teaching, supervision and administration and up to 500 hours for research. Heads of School must be careful not to allocate more than 1000 hours of teaching and related work – a breach of the Agreement could lead to a dispute which could be referred to either Fair Work Australia or the Federal Court.

The Context The Enterprise Agreement also expects that staff “… will be available for scheduled School, Faculty and University meetings, and for interaction and consultation with students and colleagues on a reasonable basis during the course of the daytime hours of University operation and/or other times in the case of other teaching patterns. The details of such availability shall be made publicly available to students, colleagues and the relevant Head of School. The manner in which these details will be published and recorded is to be determined by the Head …”.

The Legal Context The “availability” provisions have to be balanced against the “Right to Request Flexible Working Arrangements” which is one of the National Employment Standards (NES) of the Fair Work Act. Staff who are responsible for a child under school age (or a child up to 18 years of age who has a disability) now have the right to request flexible working arrangements. These include changes in hours of work, changes in patterns of work and changes in location of work.

The Context The request must be lodged by a staff member in writing with a copy to HR The University can reject a request for flexible working arrangements “only on reasonable business grounds”. The University must respond to the request in writing within 21 days, and if the request is refused, “ …the written response must include details of the reasons for the refusal”.

The Context HR has updated the Guidelines for Work/Life Balance Arrangements to include a “Right to Request Flexible Working Arrangements”. Staff making such a request are asked to consider the potential impact on their School including on their colleagues Heads of School may need to consult with the Timetabling Unit regarding formal requests

The Legal Context The other legal consideration is that under Occupational Health and Safety law, staff members must have an unpaid break of at least 30 minutes after they have worked for 5 hours.

Draft Guidelines Scenarios

Scenarios – Report back

Workload and Research Issues

Should we be using the research active definition to allocate workload? Current Situation 350 for research active 350 for PhD Amount allocated for papers would not cover the time spent in researching the literature, collecting and analysing data and writing the publication Possible alternatives? Take the whole idea of research active out of the workload (keep PhD) Allocate higher workload for those who produce outputs to compensate for the “real time” it takes to do research RECOMMENDATION: As research intensive and teaching intensive positions will affect these issues, we should not change the policy now but should keep it as an issue to be raised at that time

Staffing levels and quality of publications What do we expect of research for a Level A versus a Level E academic? What do we expect of the Level E academic with a significant administrative role (HOS, Associate Dean) versus the Level E academic who is doing no administration? What are our expectations regarding the quality of journals in which academics publish? Should workload be used to reward those who publish in quality journals? RECOMMENDATIONS That there should be no difference in the expectations for Level A and E with regard to research output at this time. Research intensive and Teaching intensive should have different expectations. That workload should not be used to reward publishing in A or A* journals. The research office should consider other reward options.

Collaborative Research Does the current workload policy cater for fostering collaborative research? How do we encourage senior staff to mentor others and to write papers with them? Workload for writing a refereed journal article is 150 split pro-rata between authors - How do we make the split? How should the formal research mentoring program be recognised in the workload model? RECOMMENDATIONS Split can be negotiated by the writing team and percentage contribution of each team member recorded on Research Master Mentoring program should have workload associated with it – no suggested hours at the moment as program is still being developed

Fostering new research in your school What if staff in your school have not been doing research in the past or have been publishing in the non-HERDC recognised journals and conferences? What about the person who is not research active but wants to start a new research project now and needs time to collect data etc? What about the new staff member at ACU? Does the teaching-research nexus that we aspire to affect decisions regarding research hours for “teaching intensive” staff? RECOMMENDATION An amount of 150 hours may be allocated by the HOS for general research and scholarly activity to those staff who are not undertaking a PhD and who are not yet research active. A clear understanding of what each staff member will achieve during those 150 hours should be negotiated at the time of the staff member’s annual performance review.

Academic streaming Goal 4 of the ACU Strategic Plan states that: “The University will establish an appropriate staff profile…” The University’s Transitional Plan states that: Appropriate academic staff “streaming” policy and procedures are developed and implemented (the University will) … implement streaming of academic staff members into 3 categories – research intensive, teaching and research and teaching intensive The Timeframe is to “Deploy by 2011 academic year”

Other Issues – Open Discussions

Software issues

New unit

Adding a row Edit and deactivate

Hours for research (not equal)

Number of students changed from 4 to 24 Will not automatically update hours to be taught and marked

Hours are not updated

Use of Excel vs HTML

Future changes to the Policy?

Next steps Complete the Guidelines – Projects vs non-projects Lunch-box sessions for assistant HoS and others Sessions for new Heads of School Others?????

Thank you