Managerial ¡°amateurism¡± and ¡°toxic work environments¡± are forcing large numbers of academics to leave the UK sector, according to those who have quit.
More than 700 scholars who have left their roles recently ¨C or are considering it ¨C were surveyed on their reasons why for a?paper published in?the .
It finds that toxic work environments (including managers and excessive workloads), a ¡°violent awakening¡± following the pandemic on what working conditions academics were prepared to accept, and the belief that trying to improve conditions in the sector is a ¡°lost cause¡± were major factors driving academics away.
While the extent of a ¡°great resignation¡± is not yet apparent, the report says, ¡°the strength of emotion propelling [academics] towards and over this threshold appears indisputable¡±.
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¡°UK academia is unmistakably presented by our survey respondents as a brutal work regime; a contemporary serfdom, where productive output is prioritised well and above any interest or concern in staff welfare,¡± the report says.
Campus resource collection: Well-being in higher education
Richard Watermeyer, professor of education at the University of Bristol and co-author of the report, noted that 11 per cent of respondents had gone on to work at non-UK institutions, suggesting that while the appetite to work in higher education remains, the problems lie within working conditions in the UK.
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Professor Watermeyer also argued that the financial struggles at universities could be placing greater pressure on university leaders, making them ¡°too busy¡± to address the ¡°toxic¡± culture complained of by academics and thus failing to implement more ¡°human-centric¡± styles of leadership.
The funding crisis seen at universities across the UK is also leading to ¡°an awful lot of people that are anticipating institutional failure¡±, he said, which creates further instability and questions over workloads for those who are left following mass redundancies.
The report notes that ¡°perceived ineffectiveness of repeated bouts of industrial action¡± conducted by the University and College Union in recent years ¡°has saturated feelings of hopelessness and sealed our respondents¡¯ decision to leave¡±.
It further argues that ¡°the villainization of senior leaders, while understandable if predictable, places further strain on already fractured relationships within institutional communities¡±.
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This perceived ¡°villanization¡± risks cementing issues of toxic leadership, Professor Watermeyer argued, because it can prevent talent wanting to enter leadership roles.
¡°If all we ever do is bash leadership and therefore make the idea of leadership something that for a lot of people becomes a source of real trepidation, anxiety, or even complete antipathy, then you cut the talent pipeline,¡± he said.
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Print headline: ¡®Brutal work regime¡¯ driving out UK scholars
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