An academic and a university manager have produced a joint paper contrasting the managerial philosophy of Taylorism with âacademic (Laurie) Taylorismâ.
Margaret Wilson is faculty manager of business and management at Regentâs University London. Philip Carr is professor of psychology (behavioural economics) at City University London. Their paper, âManaging âacademic valueâ: the 360-degree perspectiveâ, has just been published in Perspectives, Policy and Practice in Higher Education.
For many years, they write, they have had discussions, âsometimes heated by the fire of our different professional perspectivesâ, on how all the staff in a university can come together around the goal of âcore academic valueâ.
Yet the two âsidesâ often seem to be at loggerheads.
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As evidence of this, Ms Wilson and Professor Carr cite an article published in Times Higher Education,ÌęâLaurie Taylor on academics v administratorsâ (28 May 2015), in which the sociologist and author of The Poppletonian argues that âwhat used to be a mildly patronising relationship between dons and their administrative servants has now become more and more like a battle for controlâ.
A genuine âfocus on the central mission of the universityâ, the paper suggests, ârequires strategies to be put in place to align the perspectives, beliefs, attitudes and behaviours of all university staffâ. It also requires people to be willing to face up to their own stereotypes.
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Many academics, the authors write, see managers and administrators as âtoo inflexible as regards regulations, processes and proceduresâ, and as sometimes âencroaching on academic judgementâ. They fail to take on board that the managerial team âknow they must adhere to policy and procedures, often with external scrutinyâŠand often have little latitude in how they go about their daily activitiesâ.
Managers and administrators in their turn, continue Ms Wilson and Professor Carr, may think that academics are âtoo focussed on their own pet projectsâ, âunavailable when needed (âworking at homeâ)â, âinflexible with respect to timetablingâ â and âsometimes, arrogant, dismissive, superior in attitudeâ.
Nonetheless, such barriers are not absolute.
The paper cites another °Ő±á·ĄÌęarticle, âUniversity managerialism âcan boost academic freedomââ (21 August 2015), showing that âprofessional managers can actually boost collegiality among scholarsâ (even if cynics suggest that ânothing gets academics working together better than a shared hatred of managementâ).
One simple suggestion for âovercom[ing] divisionsâ is âdevolv[ing] managerial and administrative functions to departments and schoolsâ, since âa quiet word is usually a more effective means of communications than a, often protracted, flurry of emailsâ.
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âMany universities have gone down the path of centralisation of âsupportâ services and whereas there may be short-term financial savings there are likely to be long-term psychological costs which are bound to lead to actual financial costs,â they write.
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