Thousands more university jobs at risk, union warns


Nathan Standley

Education reporter, BBC News

Getty Images A teacher is leaning over a student who is typing on a laptop. She is wearing glasses and a dark blue shirt and is pointing at her screen.Getty Images

Up to 10,000 university jobs could be at risk this academic year because of the “unprecedented crisis” in higher education, the union representing staff has said.

The University and College Union (UCU) said 5,000 job cuts had already been announced, but thousands more roles could be at risk because of gaps in university funding.

Universities UK, which represents 141 institutions, said vice-chancellors had faced “extremely tough decisions”, and called for “sustained action” from the government to bring financial stability to the sector.

The Department for Education (DfE) said the government had “inherited a sector facing serious financial risk” and taken “tough decisions” to address it.

Staff at a number of universities, including Dundee and Newcastle, have voted to strike because of the proposed cuts.

falling numbers of international students

One of those is the University of Sheffield, which has said it wants to save £23m in staffing costs, including both academics and other roles such as admissions and student-support officers.

The university said it was “carefully managing staff vacancies and offering a voluntary severance scheme to help avoid the need for compulsory redundancies”.

But Jenny Hughes, whose job in digital support is involved in the restructure, said she and her colleagues were still “really worried”.

BBC / Ann Gannon Jenny Hughes looks into the camera dispassionately. She has pink curly hair and is wearing a purple cardigan, with a rainbow lanyard around her neck. She is sat on a park bench with a university building in the background.BBC / Ann Gannon

Jenny Hughes is one of about 1,000 staff involved in Sheffield’s restructure proposals

“We don’t know if in six months’ time we’re going to have jobs – and if we do, where they will be or what we’ll be doing,” she said.

“We’ve got people who work directly with students – and they’re not able to make promises to them about what’s going to happen in the future.”

Linguistics lecturer Robyn Orfitelli, Sheffield’s UCU branch president, said the cuts would have “huge ramifications on the type of education students coming to the University of Sheffield can get”.

She said students were not being given enough information about the possible impact of the cuts.

Students in Sheffield told BBC News they were worried about losing lecturers despite paying higher tuition fees.

Student Mark said fees were “horrible”, but that “no one should lose their job”.

BBC / Rahib Khan A young man smiles into the camera. He is clean shaven and has long dark hair down to his shoulders. He has headphones around his neck and is wearing a great denim jacket. He is stood in a park with a Sheffield University building in the background.BBC / Rahib Khan

Mark says students should not have to choose between losing lecturers and paying higher tuition fees

History student Sam said he believes fees are “high enough”, adding: “I have no idea where the money’s going.

“I don’t get how I pay nine grand, and I have 200 course mates who also pay nine grand, and I still have six hours a week of contact time with the staff.”

A University of Sheffield official said it was “firmly committed to supporting our colleagues and continuing to work constructively with our trade unions, whilst protecting our excellent research, teaching and student experience”.

Overall, the university sector comprises about 206,000 academic and 246,000 non-academic staff, according to the latest data from the Higher Education Statistics Agency.

And financial problems are affecting universities in every part of the UK, despite different funding models in each nation.

Students from Scotland do not pay fees, because of government grants, while students in England pay £9,250 per year – rising to £9,535 next year as the government tries to boost income for the sector.

Those fees will be the same for students in Wales, where Cardiff University said it would need to cut 400 full-time jobs to tackle a funding shortfall, as well as closing some courses, with nursing, music and modern languages among the subjects at risk.

And in Northern Ireland, where universities are funded by a mix of £4,750-a-year fees and government grants, Queen’s University Belfast faced criticism in February over its decision to open a campus in India while planning to cut up to 270 jobs.

UCU general secretary Jo Grady said higher education was “on its knees” and an emergency fund was needed to protect jobs and courses in the short term before a new funding model could be developed.

A DfE official said the government was “committed to boosting the sector’s long-term financial sustainability and restoring universities as engines of opportunity, aspiration and growth”.

Additional reporting by Rahib Khan



Source link

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *