Once again, academics find ourselves in dispute with our employers. And yet again, many of us feel very conflicted about this. I am currently making sense of the alternative "possible worlds" in which I live by thinking of myself as Schrodinger's striking academic.
Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay
As long as
no-one looks too closely, I am striking and not-striking simultaneously.
It depends on
when you look as to whether I am striking or not striking.
Unlike the cat,
the transition can go both ways.
I am striking
because universities need to manage workloads, promote equality, minimise
precarity. We are not cogs in a machine to be worked ever harder: we’re at
breaking point.
I am not
striking because students aren’t items on a production line. I care about their
progress.
I am striking
because pay and pensions need to keep up to attract the next generation into a demanding
career.
I am not
striking because my day-to-day work is not visible to my managers. This may be
“industrial action”, but academic inputs and outputs are not tightly coupled.
I am striking
because it seems that this is the only way to encourage management to listen.
I am not striking
because, based on my employer’s standard working week, I had worked my hours
for 2019 by 5th September. I’m not sure what it means for my
employer to withhold pay when I’m working for free anyway.
I am striking
because I am standing on picket lines, not crossing picket lines… even if I am
then doing a full day’s work from a location off campus.
I am not
striking because I have deadlines and there isn’t the slack in the system to
catch up later. See note on workloads. No-one else will look after my mental
health, so it’s up to me.
I know I am not alone, but that doesn't make the ambiguity any easier. Here's hoping for progress soon...
I know I am not alone, but that doesn't make the ambiguity any easier. Here's hoping for progress soon...
Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay
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