In the news 12 July 2019
12 July 2019
Racism in universities is "widespread and widely tolerated"
On Saturday, ran a huge expose of racism of university campuses. The paper said its findings, from Freedom of Information requests and speaking to dozens of black and minority ethnic (BAME) staff and students, painted a damning picture of British universities. Complaints ranged from overt racism, including assaults, monkey chants, the N-word and other verbal abuse, to institutional and structural racism, indirect racial discrimination and microaggressions.
Featuring testimonies from those interviewed, described how scores of BAME students and staff told the paper that they were dissuaded from making official complaints and either dropped their allegations or settled for an informal resolution. They said white university staff were often reluctant to address racism, with racial slurs treated as banter or an inevitable byproduct of freedom of speech, and poorly recognised institutional racism.
Welcoming the Guardian's efforts to expose the problem on the , a number of 樱花动漫 officers highlighted 樱花动漫's campaigning with Stand Up to Racism to try to break the wall of silence about racism on campus. They said that the fact that universities were refusing to even consider that racism might exist in their own practices was an outrage.
Number of BAME college heads drops to less than 7 per cent
Meanwhile, released today shows that the number of colleges led by a non-white principal has fallen to a low of less than 7 per cent.
The magazine said that a number of initiatives to encourage and support BAME leadership have stalled in recent years and now four of the nine regions in England have no ethnic minority principals at all.
Data released by the Education & Training Foundation last year revealed that 9.8 per cent of college principals or chief executives were from a BAME background. While some of the fall this year is likely to have occurred partly because of college mergers, FE Week said the proportion of non-white college bosses was not reflective of wider society as the 2011 census said the BAME population was 13 per cent.
Protests at University of Portsmouth in jobs row
Staff and students protesting against job cuts in the science department at the University of Portsmouth took their message to the university's governors on Wednesday. 樱花动漫 wants the board to use its influence to halt planned science department job cuts. There are 123 academic posts at risk in the faculty of science and up to 50 jobs could go.
Following similar protests last month, 樱花动漫 declared an official dispute with the university over the plans to cut jobs. The union wants the university to rule out compulsory job cuts and implement a voluntary redundancy scheme.
, 樱花动漫 regional official Moray McAulay said: 'If the University of Portsmouth does not rule out compulsory redundancies then it is difficult to see how we can avoid a ballot for strike action amongst 樱花动漫 members'. While Dr James Smith told the that people who had dedicated their lives to working at the university were suffering.
Ruskin College under fire for trade union victimisation
Ruskin College in Oxford has been accused of trade union victimisation following a string of disciplinary and redundancy threats directed at 樱花动漫 members. Three union reps are facing disciplinary investigations. One of them, Lee Humber, suspended for "" just days after the local branch passed a in the principal.
The three staff under investigation and another two members of staff - both union members - have now been placed at risk of redundancy. The college wants to axe four of the posts and move the other one on to a fixed-term contract. That would reduce the core higher education teaching team at Ruskin from 12 to eight.
Speaking to , 樱花动漫 acting general secretary Paul Cottrell said: 'Ruskin College's response to challenging financial problems and a lack of confidence from the staff should be to address the issues head on, not shoot the messengers. Staff and students have made it clear they have no faith in the direction the management is heading.'
Universities surprise no one with jobs threat as autumn strikes loom large
In a wholly predictable article this week, the employers said thousands of jobs would be at risk if universities were to meet 樱花动漫's demands that USS pensions do not increase in cost for members and that their benefits are not cut.
That argument is one that comes out every time a dispute is on the cards and 樱花动漫 said the employers needed to do better and properly engage with the union.
Speaking to , Paul Cottrell said: 'The time has come for universities to fully engage with us on the issue of staff pensions rather than threaten job cuts. In recent years university income spent on staff has fallen not risen and the time has come for universities to stand up for and with staff.'
樱花动漫 backs plans to put workers at heart of transition to greener economy
樱花动漫 has backed plans from the TUC to ensure that the needs of working people are met in the transition to a low-carbon greener economy. The , which includes unions, consumers and business, to plan a clear and funded path to a low-carbon economy.
樱花动漫 is taking a motion to the TUC Congress in September urging people to back a 30-minute solidarity climate stoppage with school students on 20 September. The strike will initiate a week of climate action. The union is also asking people to show their support for the stoppage by signing this petition.
樱花动漫 acting general secretary Paul Cottrell said: 'A properly-funded education system is vital if we are to deliver focused and appropriate skills training as part of the move towards a greener economy. We share the TUC's vision and wholeheartedly back plans to put workers at the heart of just transition planning.'
Writing in this week, the vice-chancellor of the University of Winchester said universities were "sleepwalking into a major environmental disaster." Joy Carter said she wanted universities to put climate change at the top of their agendas as they were currently doing "nowhere near enough" to tackle the problem.
Higher education sector is at breaking point
Writing anonymously for this week, one academic says that following the 2008 global financial crisis, employers in all industries made redundancies or opted not to replace departing staff. This was not necessarily because there was less work to be done: it was a simple, bearish response to uncertainty that capitalised on a climate in which messages such as "we all have to work a little harder to manage" and "you're lucky to still have a job" were an easy sell.
The author says that the trend of doing more with less (fewer) has been sustained in UK higher education. But, 11 years on from the credit crunch, the evidence is mounting that the sector is reaching breaking point.
The author refers last week's 樱花动漫 report on casualisation that revealed that 71 per cent of respondents to a survey believed that their mental health had been damaged by working on the insecure contracts that have proliferated in recent years. And to a by the Higher Education Policy Institute in May that revealed increases in the numbers of staff reaching out for help.
Highbury College principal's 拢5,000 phone bill and silence on first class flights
The principal of a college facing calls to come clean on its expenses racked up a 拢5,000 phone and data bill in four years, figures obtained by the this week revealed. 樱花动漫 said the expenditure by Stella Mbubaegbu at Highbury College in Portsmouth sent a "damaging message" to staff.
FE Week has been trying to uncover the extent of spending by the college on first class flights, but has had its Freedom of Information request for those details, as well as all spending on the college's corporate card, refused.
Speaking to , 樱花动漫 regional official, Moray McAulay, said: 'Holding down staff pay while racking up thousands of pounds worth of expenses on international ventures sends a damaging message that it's one rule for staff and another for the principal. The college should ensure that staff are its top priority when it comes to spending in the future.'
How a nurse pays more for a degree than a banker
A this week set out why the Augar review fails and how even more of the evidence points strongly to abolishing tuition fees. Writing in , Danny Dorling set out the injustices of the system where a nurse pays off more than a banker.
He said if both graduate with a debt of 拢44,000, the nurse will never fully pay off the debt, but the banker will do so in 17 years, accruing 拢11,000 in interest. The banker's total repayments will be 拢55,000; the nurse's 拢59,000, 拢18,000 of it interest. He argues that the system locks in gross inequality and if we want a more equal society, we will have to scrap it.
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