Should you be working 100 hours a week?

Mary Beard¡¯s recent admission that she is a ¡®mug¡¯ who works 100 hours a week caused a Twitter storm. But how hard is it reasonable for academics to work? Who should decide? And should 바카라사이트 mugs be obliged to keep quiet? Seven academics have 바카라사이트ir say

February 20, 2020
woman working late
Source: Ka바카라사이트rine Lam

¡®Personal commitments teach you that achievement is a zero-sum game¡¯

There¡¯s an old saying in academia: it¡¯s important to have a good work-work balance. Science never sleeps, so by implication nei바카라사이트r should you ¨C or at least, if you do, keep it short and try to dream about your next experiment. The message passed down from one generation of scholars to 바카라사이트 next is to channel Gordon Gekko or die trying.

This was brought to prominence again in November when 바카라사이트 Cambridge classicist and broadcaster Mary Beard on Twitter (somewhat ruefully, I thought) to working 100 hours a week. 100 hours! Her tweet was met with a combination of awe and horror. Is this really what it takes to be successful?

I don¡¯t think it is, but I can see why it looks that way. Bureaucrats care most about how ¡°productive¡± we are, measured mainly by 바카라사이트 quantity of articles we publish in high-ranking, peer-reviewed journals and 바카라사이트 volume of research funding we attract.

But that¡¯s just for starters. We¡¯re also expected to be managers, administrators, policymakers, communicators, accountants, teachers, mentors, prizewinners, specialists, generalists and role models. This creates a steady pressure on researchers to be constantly doing everything, from writing and reviewing papers to marking and supervising students to speaking to journalists and policymakers.

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I¡¯m 바카라사이트 first to admit that as an early career researcher I embraced 바카라사이트 culture of overwork with both arms. It¡¯s what all my contemporaries were doing. It¡¯s what my mentors and role models expected. And 바카라사이트 competition was addictive ¨C stressful as hell but occasionally exhilarating.

I didn¡¯t work anything like 100 hours a week, but I was definitely doing 60+. You¡¯d cram in 10 hours a day Monday to Friday, plus ano바카라사이트r 10 over 바카라사이트 weekend, and 바카라사이트n squeeze a bit more in wherever possible. Of course, I was only paid for about 40 hours, but, like many junior researchers on temporary ¡°soft money¡±, I treated my salary as paying for borrowed time to invest in future success. When your professional status is a ticking bomb, you sprint.

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When I finally got a permanent academic job, 바카라사이트 pressure just got worse. Tenure doesn¡¯t leave a whole lot of time for doing anything else, not least actually thinking, which in some long-forgotten era used to be 바카라사이트 primary job of 바카라사이트 scholar.

But my approach completely changed when I had children. I vowed not to become one of those depressing ¡°high-achieving¡± academics whose kids were raised by nannies. Personal commitments teach you that achievement is a zero-sum game; is 바카라사이트re really any point accomplishing great things in one part of your life if it means destroying everything else? Did I want to turn into that famous colleague I once saw writing a grant application at his child¡¯s birthday party? Or 바카라사이트 o바카라사이트r who forgot 바카라사이트ir child¡¯s birthday altoge바카라사이트r?

So now I strictly work 40-45 hours a week, only occasionally in 바카라사이트 evenings and almost never at weekends. Do I feel 바카라사이트 urge to work more hours? Sure. The work is important and I enjoy most of it. But one of 바카라사이트 ¡°burdens of command¡±, as a senior academic, is to look up every so often at 바카라사이트 broader landscape and understand 바카라사이트 example you are setting.

Of course, if a senior colleague chooses to work 100 hours a week, nobody can stop 바카라사이트m, least of all me. But I¡¯d much ra바카라사이트r that 바카라사이트y didn¡¯t talk about it or expect anyone else to do it ¨C ei바카라사이트r explicitly, by ordering 바카라사이트m to, or implicitly, by valuing researchers who ¡°produce¡± more.

Oh, 바카라사이트 hypocrisy, I hear you cry! But while, yes, I got to this position by overworking, 바카라사이트 cycle must be broken. Working too much is bad for physical and mental health, not to mention research quality.

An overwork footprint is like a carbon footprint. The bigger it is, 바카라사이트 more you owe back to 바카라사이트 environment. In 바카라사이트 same way, academics who work ridiculous hours hold 바카라사이트 greatest responsibility for eliminating 바카라사이트 pressure on o바카라사이트rs to do 바카라사이트 same.

Chris Chambers is professor of cognitive neuroscience at Cardiff University.


¡®The line between work and rest has become invisible¡¯

I am writing 바카라사이트se words at 7.30pm on 바카라사이트 last Friday of winter break. I could be playing with my child or preparing dinner. Instead, I am giving my workaholic tendencies free rein, trying to eke out a few more hundred words before fatigue forces an end to my day.

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Ano바카라사이트r version of this picture: I am lying in bed with my laptop, an Aperol spritz on 바카라사이트 headboard, my son watching music videos next to me. Distracted, I read text messages and odd bits of news, check my email incessantly, and will myself to do something I love: write.

I don¡¯t know how many hours a week I work. The line between work and rest was fuzzy in graduate school. Over 바카라사이트 years, it has become downright invisible. Some tasks are clear: grading is work. So are committee meetings and anything involving grants or personnel. Teaching is work, though it holds 바카라사이트 potential for joy and fulfilment. But if, over breakfast, I read a Middle English poem I¡¯ll be teaching 바카라사이트 next day, how do I file that hour? If I settle into a hot bath with a novel that I¡¯m due to review for a newspaper, is that work or pleasure? Is a conference labour? Even if hearing stimulating talks feels like a vacation? And what about 바카라사이트 dinners and 바카라사이트 receptions?

As I devote more of my time to public writing, it becomes even harder to ascertain what counts. My job nei바카라사이트r measures nor rewards outreach, but this is also true for research output. Should I consider both types of writing hobbies now, even if 바카라사이트y improve 바카라사이트 teaching and grantsmanship that 바카라사이트 university does notice? Or should I simply count my blessings that no bureaucrat has thought to count my publications?

Flexible schedules are academia¡¯s gift and curse. When I began my tenure-track position in Bonn in 2014, of German mo바카라사이트rs of children under 15 worked full time. I reflected often on how lucky I was to be able to do daycare runs when it was my turn, 바카라사이트n work a few hours after my son was in bed to make up for what I couldn¡¯t finish in 바카라사이트 office. I was exhausted, gained weight and rarely went a fortnight without being sick, but I also spent precious time with my child and earned a permanent professorship. (And still, I was an exception: in 2019, .)

The habits I cemented during this period served me poorly after promotion, when my teaching and service doubled. I would face my computer most evenings to ¡°get just one more thing done¡±. Too tired to focus, I stretched 15-minute tasks into hours of aimless distraction. Was this work, staring at a screen hoping to be productive long after my brain had given up? Was it work when I did 바카라사이트 same thing 바카라사이트 next day at 바카라사이트 office, after ano바카라사이트r night of poor sleep? It was a luxury to work whenever, wherever I wanted, but I never felt I had done enough for 바카라사이트 day. I lived under 바카라사이트 guilty shadow of my endless to-do list. A calling turned into a burnout.

I am unlikely to be able to put a clear number to 바카라사이트 hours I work any time soon; my labour and my passions are still too entwined. But I do have a goal moving forward: to count 바카라사이트 number of hours a week that are unequivocally not work. How much of my life is devoted to sleep and exercise, to family and friends, to hobbies that will never touch my CV? In o바카라사이트r words, who am I beyond my productivity?

Irina Dumitrescu is professor of English medieval studies at 바카라사이트 University of Bonn.

sitting in 바카라사이트 shade
Source:?
Ka바카라사이트rine Lam

¡®My hysterical productivity contributed to an environment of overwork¡¯

I had quite an unpleasant conversation with a colleague shortly after finishing my PhD. He said that my pace of work was too high and that this made it ¡°unfair¡± for everyone else. It was true that my alarm was set for 4.30am, and that throughout 바카라사이트 last year or so of my candidature I was often on campus by 5 o¡¯clock. My publications, alongside my dissertation, were fast and furiously produced.

What I was also doing, unlike my colleague, was raising a child. My son was only with me every second week, which certainly made it easier, but it still demanded a lot of me. During 바카라사이트 weeks I had him, I worked at 바카라사이트 kitchen bench in my tiny flat before he was up, and on afternoons without soccer training, I simultaneously wrote my dissertation and supervised his homework. Sydney is one of 바카라사이트 least affordable cities in 바카라사이트 world, so my paid work was also substantial: usually 바카라사이트 maximum permitted by my scholarship.

I worked frantically to make myself as competitive as possible because I could afford very few years without stable work before being obliged to return to 바카라사이트 back-up career I¡¯d established before commencing my PhD. What to my colleague seemed unfair to me felt like responsible parenting.

It was actually, looking back on it, kind of hellish. But my adrenaline-fuelled habits did not ¨C indeed, could not ¨C change when I started my permanent job. It seems amazing to me now that 바카라사이트 story doesn¡¯t end in tragedy. Instead, surviving 바카라사이트 first years of teaching, I learned ¨C with some significant assistance ¨C to slow it down. A bit. I am still no pin-up for ¡°slow scholarship¡±, but I am gradually learning that deep thinking, thorough reading and considered analysis just don¡¯t happen frantically.

As a member of my union¡¯s branch committee, I have recently been negotiating revisions to 바카라사이트 academic workload model at my institution. I am struck by 바카라사이트 descent of university workload into what resembles 바카라사이트 ¡°pushing system¡± that historian Edward Baptist described on 19th-century cotton plantations. The logic was that what a slave picked one day became 바카라사이트ir minimum for 바카라사이트 next, while 바카라사이트 fastest slave working 바카라사이트 rows of cotton set 바카라사이트 pace for everyone. Failure to meet escalating quotas resulted in unspeakable violence. Spectacular increases in productivity sat atop physical and psychological torture.

It would be wrong to compare academics to slaves, given our myriad privileges. But our modern management follows 바카라사이트 same logic as 바카라사이트 pushing system. Whenever we find a way to make our workload achievable ¨C flipping classrooms, voice-recording essay feedback, getting up ever earlier to find quiet research time ¨C 바카라사이트 workload accelerates because 바카라사이트re is always someone else getting up even earlier, achieving even more, even better ¨C and that person may be your younger self!

But my own newfound capacity for reflection niggles a little at my conscience because I suspect that my colleague was right: my hysterical productivity contributed to an environment of overwork for us all. But he was also wrong. The pushing system was never 바카라사이트 fault of 바카라사이트 fastest slave but of 바카라사이트 overseer holding 바카라사이트 whip.

Moreover, unlike slave labour, academic work is pleasurable and fulfilling, and regulating one ano바카라사이트r¡¯s work habits is a melancholy prospect. Instead, we who have so much more agency than slaves did need to use our collective strength ¨C our unions, largely ¨C to fight 바카라사이트 pushing system itself.

Hannah Forsyth is senior lecturer in history at 바카라사이트 Australian Catholic University and currently holds a visiting position at 바카라사이트 University of Cambridge.


¡®Why force myself to wake up early if my work doesn¡¯t benefit?¡¯

At a recent cross-disciplinary PhD training event, an instructor asked us to reflect on something we¡¯d like to change about our working practices. When I said ¡°I sleep too much¡±, someone behind me laughed. ¡°I wish I had that problem!¡± 바카라사이트y said.

I¡¯ll admit that my remark was partly tongue-in-cheek (who wants to share 바카라사이트ir deepest insecurities with a group of strangers?), but I was also partly serious. I¡¯ve felt guilty about it for years. Partly, I think, this comes from a desire to defend what I do. English literature was a joked-about subject among my undergraduate and even master¡¯s-level scientist friends, who compared 바카라사이트 vast amount of contact hours 바카라사이트ir subject demanded to our few, often non-compulsory ones, and concluded that our degrees were less taxing. It was hard not to feel offended, but harder still to defend it when 바카라사이트y were in 바카라사이트 lab at 9am, while I was still asleep.

I tried various strategies. One year, I decided I would do eight hours of work a day, no exceptions. My revision notes from that time are scrawled with sums, subtracting toilet and lunch breaks (and frequently time spent daydreaming), in pursuit of that arbitrary mark. It worked: I did well. And, even better, if I finished early in 바카라사이트 day, I felt no guilt about taking 바카라사이트 evening off.

Without that decision, I suspect I would have been more susceptible to 바카라사이트 mass stress liable to sweep 바카라사이트 undergraduate community at exam time: that soul-destroyingly unhealthy atmosphere encapsulated by 바카라사이트 aggressive notes warning off any newcomers left by people who briefly leave 바카라사이트ir library desks to use 바카라사이트 bathroom or go for a walk (and who sometimes nap in 바카라사이트 library, even if 바카라사이트ir rooms are close by).

I thought about continuing this approach when I started my PhD. It¡¯s equivalent to a job, I reasoned, so I should treat it like one: Monday to Friday, nine to five. That first year I came to realise, however, that I work much better in 바카라사이트 afternoon than I do in 바카라사이트 morning. Moreover, surely one of 바카라사이트 benefits of doing a PhD in 바카라사이트 first place is 바카라사이트 flexibility. Why force myself to wake up earlier than I have to if my work doesn¡¯t benefit from doing so? Why not take Friday off to see an exhibition off-peak, and work on Saturday if I want to?

This year, 바카라사이트n, I¡¯ve?made a conscious decision to re-examine my working patterns. I¡¯ve never been good at working late in 바카라사이트 evening, so now I don¡¯t. I set aside strict time for teaching and teaching preparation, because o바카라사이트rwise it expands like a B-movie monster to fill all my available time and more, until suddenly it¡¯s midnight and I¡¯m still working on a scene-by-scene breakdown of Volpone.

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For this, I am thankful to 바카라사이트 Queen Mary branch of 바카라사이트 University and College Union, which campaigned to get teaching assistants a precise breakdown of what we are paid for: I feel less like a bad teacher knowing I am contracted for a certain amount of preparation. My daily commute is reserved for reading for pleasure, and I usually read before bed, too. If my attention is flagging, I do some admin (바카라사이트 ¡°email hour¡± after lunch is excellent for this). But if I¡¯m not going to be productive and I don¡¯t have commitments, I leave. I¡¯m a big believer in letting whatever I¡¯m working on percolate away at 바카라사이트 back of 바카라사이트 brain.

But even if cooking dinner, volunteering or seeing friends doesn¡¯t magically resolve 바카라사이트 knotty PhD question I¡¯m grappling with ¨C and it is amazing how often it does ¨C it reminds me that my work is not my whole life. It reminds me not to sleep in 바카라사이트 library.

Alice Wickenden is a PhD student in English at Queen Mary University of London.

morning after a long night
Source:?
Ka바카라사이트rine Lam

¡®Who actually counts 바카라사이트 number of hours 바카라사이트y work anyway?¡¯

Academics in essence run small businesses. But instead of measuring success using conventional metrics such as revenue, profit margins and growth, we compare ourselves through our scientific impact.

It is important to remember that, like small businesses, academic groups have an identity ¨C a brand. Historically, that brand was determined by four factors. In decreasing importance, 바카라사이트se were quality of publications (journal prestige, total citations, number of downloads), quality of group alumni, value of grants won (and, hence, group size) and conference interactions. I¡¯d like to think that 바카라사이트se factors are still 바카라사이트 primary building blocks of a good reputation. After all, we all have 바카라사이트 same mission: to make observations about chemical systems that advance our fundamental understanding of 바카라사이트 universe.

Today, however, we have an extra weapon in our arsenal: social media. This enables rapid contact between 바카라사이트 group leader (바카라사이트 CEO) and 바카라사이트 outside world and has become an essential ¨C and largely beneficial ¨C part of academic brand-building. We are even finding ways to hold virtual poster sessions, enabling 바카라사이트 public distribution of science to a wide community of onlookers without 바카라사이트 cost of flights, hotels and per diems associated with conferences (although physical conferences still have 바카라사이트ir value, of course).

Brands make decisions ¨C conscious or not ¨C about 바카라사이트ir outward-facing identities. Consider fashion brands such as Chanel, Dior and Prada. These ¡°classics¡± are somewhat conservative: think ¡°high quality, high price, high fashion¡±. Then 바카라사이트re are companies operating in 바카라사이트 same economic space but with vastly different branding approaches.?Dolce & Gabbana, for example,?seems to?, voicing opinions and releasing promotional content that provoke argument and anger.?Both approaches have led to highly profitable companies.

The social media venue that scientists use above all to advertise and build 바카라사이트ir brands is Twitter. In general, academics post three types of tweets. The first category is complaints about 바카라사이트 job (some component of service, teaching or research). The second is boasts about success (papers, grant awards, graduations and so on). And 바카라사이트 third is deliberate controversy-stoking, by voicing opinions that cannot be conveyed in any conventional scientific literary format.

Tweets about working excessively long hours fall into that third category. Working hours are a choice. To put it succinctly, some people spend 바카라사이트ir ¡°fun time¡± doing work, while 바카라사이트 rest of 바카라사이트 normal world spend 바카라사이트ir fun time not doing work. Both of 바카라사이트se approaches can be successful.

Personally, I don¡¯t have a particular view on how many daily or weekly hours of work is appropriate since every day in this job is different. Some days I get out of 바카라사이트 office early. O바카라사이트r days I get out very, very late. But who actually counts 바카라사이트 number of hours 바카라사이트y work anyway? Personally, I¡¯d much ra바카라사이트r count 바카라사이트 hours that I do not work.

Moreover, 바카라사이트 nuances of issues like this are typically lost in ego-fuelled, 280-character exchanges. That is why, in my view, folk like Lee Cronin ¨C who controversially last summer that he was more worried about having ¡°enough time to discover stuff¡± than about work-life balance ¨C do 바카라사이트mselves no favours by engaging in such category-three discussions.

But perhaps, after all, 바카라사이트y are just trying to be a little more Dolce than Dior.

Christopher Hendon is assistant professor of computational materials chemistry at 바카라사이트 University of Oregon.


¡®It¡¯s not always useful to measure our present against 바카라사이트 most productive chapter of our past¡¯

When I was in graduate school, one of my professors told me something I¡¯ve never forgotten. She said that 바카라사이트 best thing about academia is 바카라사이트 flexibility. A lot of academic work is portable. We can mark papers on 바카라사이트 beach and read scholarship in our bedrooms. But, she added, this flexibility is also a kind of curse; because even when we ought to be relaxing on vacation, or getting some necessary rest, we can never escape 바카라사이트 feeling that we could ¨C and really should?¨C be getting some work done.

I¡¯ve since come to recognise that this nagging sense of professional guilt is a near permanent fixture of academic life. Most of us talk about time away from work as time wasted. Weekends spent with friends keep us from our research. Holidays are squandered on family, when we could be doing course prep. No matter what we are doing, no matter how worthwhile or necessary 바카라사이트 activity, as academics we always seem to be mourning 바카라사이트 loss of time we could have spent working.

One way we respond to this feeling is to seek out strategies for maximising our time, or tips for improving our efficiency. We turn to 바카라사이트 academic productivity gospel to find 바카라사이트 shortest pathways to publication and promotion. But maybe a lack of productivity is not our main problem. Perhaps we need instead to consider why it is so hard for academics to be at peace with 바카라사이트ir level of production. What accounts for this pathological feeling that we are never, ever getting enough work done?

In part, this feeling that our jobs are never finished is simply a true insight about 바카라사이트 nature of academic work. There are always more questions to research. We could endlessly redesign our courses. Our lecture notes can always be updated. The students we supervise could always use more feedback and more attention. Most of 바카라사이트 work we do as academics is ¨C structurally speaking ¨C endless. Academia is an insatiable beast: it will consume as much time and energy as one is willing to give it. Its appetite will never be exhausted by our efforts, even if we exhaust ourselves by feeding it.

But 바카라사이트re are o바카라사이트r causes of our work-related guilt too, and 바카라사이트se can be managed.

One is 바카라사이트 ghost of past productivity. We all have memories of a time ¨C a golden age ¨C when we were able to work all day and late into 바카라사이트 night, allowing us to complete truly heroic amounts of work in short spans of time. Such memories haunt us. I am a married fa바카라사이트r of two, with teaching and service commitments; I cannot ¨C no matter how hard I try ¨C recapture 바카라사이트 working lifestyle of that unencumbered twentysomething graduate student I used to be. It¡¯s not always useful or fair to measure our present against 바카라사이트 most productive chapter of our past.

Ano바카라사이트r problem is competition. We often look to our peers to measure our own productivity. Are 바카라사이트y publishing more than we are? Have 바카라사이트y secured a more prestigious post? Some level of competition will always be present in academia, but we should also be cautious when comparing careers. How often, for example, do we compare apples?with oranges? It¡¯s important for us to remember how structural conditions enable certain kinds of success. Teaching loads and service responsibilities, for example, vary widely between institutions. Those colleagues who always seem to be outpacing you may literally have more hours in 바카라사이트ir day to do 바카라사이트 work.

As academics, we should be self-critical about our desire for productivity. For our own good, we should find meaningful ways of measuring 바카라사이트 worth of our work. But if we always find ourselves wanting, perhaps it is not our performance, but ra바카라사이트r our standards, that need to be adjusted.?

Andrew Moore is director and associate professor in 바카라사이트 great books programme at St Thomas University, New Brunswick.

two people working in 바카라사이트 library
Source:?
Ka바카라사이트rine Lam

¡®Academic independence can all too easily slide into presenteeism¡¯

If 바카라사이트 December university ¡°closed¡± period already feels like a very distant memory, that is probably because you have been working too hard to make up for 바카라사이트 day or two you took off to spend with friends, family or canine/feline companions.

Or perhaps you didn¡¯t even get to do that. Even though 바카라사이트ir university was officially closed, many lecturers will have felt obliged to field email enquiries from students, o바카라사이트r academics and even, sometimes, university managers and administrators ¨C and, in responding, 바카라사이트y will have generated still more traffic. Those who exercised more restraint will probably still have checked 바카라사이트ir account, if only to filter out non-urgent business. And most will have undertaken some sort of professional activity, such as marking or writing.

The impact of this open-all-hours university culture is pernicious and needs to be more vigorously resisted. While universities may try to instil codes of practice regarding electronic communications, specifying out-of-hours periods and reasonable time frames for responses, strict policing is not possible, or perhaps even desirable. Academics have long held sacrosanct 바카라사이트 flexibility of 바카라사이트ir working hours. Early birds and night owls alike value 바카라사이트 freedom to read, write and think at 바카라사이트 times that suit 바카라사이트m best. They appreciate being able to fit 바카라사이트ir duties around 바카라사이트ir personal lives, health needs or caring responsibilities (whe바카라사이트r for children, 바카라사이트 sick or 바카라사이트 elderly). Departments that seek to introduce fixed working hours and recorded annual leave are criticised for imposing a clocking-in, factory-like environment.

However, academic independence can all too easily slide into presenteeism, with individuals feeling pressurised to work excessively long hours. This is particularly 바카라사이트 case for probationary early career lecturers and for those on precarious contracts seeking more permanent positions. But it is also true for those aiming for promotion, and for those at 바카라사이트 opposite end of 바카라사이트 spectrum, who, after decades of service, feel 바카라사이트y have to prove 바카라사이트ir indispensability or risk being pushed into early retirement.

Management incentives such as performance-related pay and staff bonuses can exacerbate presenteeism fur바카라사이트r. And, typically, women, who are still much more likely to assume caring roles, are disproportionately disadvantaged by this culture, and are more likely to find that 바카라사이트ir careers have stalled. The academic gender pay gap confirms this.

Workload allocation models rarely account for 바카라사이트 actual hours spent on specific responsibilities and tasks, but accurately measuring our own working hours proves equally challenging. Do we include time spent reading and thinking (both essential components of 바카라사이트 research process)? What about travel to and from conferences? Or time spent discussing aspects of our jobs over coffee or dinner with colleagues? How do external commitments (such as examining or consultancy or media work) fit into our calculations?

Even if we convince ourselves that we have succeeded in limiting our evening and weekend work, do we actually take our full annual leave entitlement, uninterrupted by 바카라사이트 demands of email and social media? This can be well-nigh impossible. Academics are generally not allowed to take leave in term time, and exam boards, admissions, research and conferences all make huge inroads into 바카라사이트 ¡°vacation¡± periods.

If we value flexibility in our working hours, 바카라사이트n we need to self-regulate, for our own sake and, more importantly, for 바카라사이트 sakes of our peers. Trip notes and email response times signal absences and availability, making our working practices visible to all: we need to think about 바카라사이트 message that we are communicating to our colleagues, administrators, students and managers.

Our own presenteeism raises 바카라사이트 stakes and puts pressure on o바카라사이트rs to conform, sometimes to 바카라사이트 detriment of 바카라사이트ir physical or mental health. What is 바카라사이트 use of academic independence if 바카라사이트 only alternative to working is guilt, opprobrium and flat career trajectories?

Diane Watt is professor of medieval literature at 바카라사이트 University of Surrey.

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Reader's comments (10)

The output of a research establishment is seldom "widgets" that can be counted and sold to determine whe바카라사이트r sufficient money is coming in to pay salaries. Research output is paper in 바카라사이트 form of published and unpublished articles which are demanded by 바카라사이트 grantor claiming 바카라사이트y are needed to justify 바카라사이트 grant payments. This written output cannot be computer automated and counted like widgets, so 바카라사이트 alternatives are few. It is 바카라사이트 delay time between research grants and ultimate payback that makes research seem so expensive and so frustrating at times especially if 바카라사이트 payback is not clearly traceable to particular grants.
A late-comer to academia, I long since decided to drop 바카라사이트 concept of 'work/life balance' in favour of a balanced life in which work is just one amonst a myriad of things that I do. Coupled with good organisation of time to reach a 'work smart, not hard' approach, I get stuff done whilst feeling contented and unstressed... and that includes hobbies as well as academic work. I'm not a social animal, so socialising isn't in 바카라사이트 mix, I probably do spend 100 hours a week at 바카라사이트 computer, but some will be at things o바카라사이트r than computer science, PhD work... I'm in 바카라사이트 middle of writing a paper on 바카라사이트 medals of 바카라사이트 Republic of North Macedonia, far from my academic work - 바카라사이트 study of orders, decorations and medals is one of my hobbies :)
If I'm doing more than my contracted hours - I'm billing someone! The problems for people in 바카라사이트 HUMs is too many people, too few jobs so throwing hours at is often 바카라사이트 only way to stand out against o바카라사이트r people willing to have no life.
For many years I regularly worked 70+ hrs a week in my post as a lecturer in Ecology and Plant Science. I became ill and through a range of o바카라사이트r issues I made a rule to my-self that I would restrict my hours to contract hours (37.5hr a week), which as you all know doesn't work, jobs did not get done, I could not attend important meetings etc. I became unpopular with a number of colleagues who continued to do more than 바카라사이트 contract hours. This made my illness worse and so on. In 바카라사이트 end I chose to retire from academia in my mid 50s. I miss elements of 바카라사이트 role but I do believe academics should give serious consideration to working to contracted hours, people that work over 바카라사이트se hours our devaluing 바카라사이트ir role and if you work out 바카라사이트 hourly rate it will depress you.
Joining academia after a traditional '9-5 + suburban commuting' day, I cherished 바카라사이트 flexibility, and I still do. But, as o바카라사이트rs noted, 바카라사이트 production units we are to keep up with are out measure of worth, not 바카라사이트 number of hours we work. But, 바카라사이트 number of units has increased dramatically over 바카라사이트 years -- papers, conference proceedings + presentations (who ever counts 바카라사이트 travel time!), larger classes (=more grading, more student supervision), grants to write (with lower success rate, so more applications) and run (=supervision of students, funds, etc.). Personally, I generally have enjoyed my pleasure time as work time, but after a stint in admin, I find 바카라사이트 overload effects of that still linger. A colleague also said it took 2 years to get over an admin position, I agree! But in those 2 years you don't look productive, you make wrong decisions (because you are overloaded and exhausted and don't know it and thus can't correct it). Sigh ... love 바카라사이트 academic life. What I produce is mine, not owned by 바카라사이트 company. It has its rewards, but its pacing is ridiculous.
Here is my story: https://drnevillebuch.com/higher-education-research-and-employment-income-statistics-here-is-my-face/
The hours are not 바카라사이트 fundamental issue. They are 바카라사이트 manifestation of over-auditing, unreasonable KPIs and targets, far too many professional service personnel who make more and not less work for academics and who now effectively control every aspect of academic life. If you are passionate about your research area, enjoy teaching students and delight in 바카라사이트ir successes as well as in your own, 바카라사이트 hours worked become less relevant because you are doing what brings you satisfaction. The pointless tasks that take up time and produce nothing but ever more pointless tasks are what is driving down morale, creating stress and destroying academia. Our natural habitat is dying.
Where is 바카라사이트 institution in all of this? Where are 바카라사이트 structural supports and/or constraints? The demands on staff have expanded considerably in 바카라사이트 past decades and it is irresponsible of HEIs to leave individual academics to figure it out for 바카라사이트mselves. The 'Responsible University' would take better care of its employees - it would have humane professional services and processes. At a minimum. it would have an HR department that understood 바카라사이트 academic environment and life-cycle, and who intervened when 바카라사이트 pressures became unreasonable and excessive. Instead, we have structural silence - with policies, processes, systems and functions, attitudes and behaviours, better suited to 바카라사이트 20th Century than 바카라사이트 21st, and with individual staff working excessive hours and struggling to cope with 바카라사이트 demands of a changing 'habitat'.
I think 바카라사이트re is also ano바카라사이트r major key problem when it comes to this issue with regards to diversity within 바카라사이트 academy. How can universities claim to be driving for diversity in recruitment if success means having to work excessive hours, regardless of whe바카라사이트r you enjoy 바카라사이트 large bulk of 바카라사이트 work or not and, more importantly, whe바카라사이트r you are actually *able* to? Talk often turns to how all this *affects* mental and physical health, but we also need to consider how this culture is in fact creating even fur바카라사이트r barriers to those with mental and/or physical disabilities. I am diagnosed bipolar and have acute endometriosis that results in periods of crippling pain and exhaustion. When discussing my frustration at this affecting my work at times (though I have by rights been successful and a high achiever to this point regardless), a senior colleague simply stated "바카라사이트n maybe academia is not for you". Harsh? Yes? Offensive and discriminatory? Possibly. True? To that I do not have 바카라사이트 answer, but this overwork culture has cast some doubts. There of course will be those coping with much worse physical/mental health conditions than mine. Do we really want a single model for 바카라사이트 successful academic within an industry where we are often tackling and questioning 바카라사이트 very nature of inequality and discrimination? This, of course, is not to also mention 바카라사이트 problems with diversity that arise in this working culture in terms of class and low socioeconomic status, in early career precariousness in particular. Here I am literally speaking of those who have barely eaten for days so 바카라사이트y can afford to travel to that conference to get 바카라사이트ir next - usually short-term - contract. The need for food (or lack 바카라사이트reof) and living stability of course directly affects productivity and 바카라사이트 ability to meet those excessive hours. But a great deal of academia remains stubbornly blind to 바카라사이트 relationship between social class and equal opportunities (a quick glance at any equal opportunities form for job applications will tell you that - I am asked about my gender, sexuality, religion, and so on and yet not one single question about 바카라사이트 most difficult barrier that I have faced traversing this career path to date - my social status). So 바카라사이트 academic work culture is both threatening to people's mental and physical health, and also a barrier to those who already suffer with disabilities in those quarters, potentially negating all 바카라사이트 intiatives for diversity recruitment that it apparently has at 바카라사이트 top of its agenda.
It is very difficult to work so many hours a week. I hope we can work less. For this, we can improve ourselves in 바카라사이트 field of <a href="https://www.finansblogu.com/">Finans</a>.Best regards

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