The higher education sector is a key cog in many national . The UK sector, for instance, about 拢95 billion a year and supports more than 815,000 jobs in pursuit of its mission to educate tomorrow鈥檚 workforce and play a leading role in global research.
Yet academia is not a happy place. International studies postgraduate students are more than聽10 times as likely to experience moderate-to-severe depression and anxiety compared with the general population, and they face a similarly . If these figures are transposed to the UK student population, then every 24 hours, over 100 students in the UK can be predicted to suffer harm as a direct result of their engagement in postgraduate study. In England, this situation endures despite the recent establishment of the Office for Students, whose stated regulatory objective is to ensure that 鈥溾, but which has been criticised for a lack of independence from a government that has recently stopped short of imposing on universities a legal duty of care for students.
While universities have a responsibility to conduct teaching and research to agreed, externally monitored standards, they govern their own affairs when it comes to the professional behaviour of staff. But the evidence suggests that both the principles and practice of this governance have gone badly awry.
As examples, staff in UK higher education routinely work almost double their contracted hours, with showing signs of depression. Reports show that 32 per cent of UK university employees have , which ties in with . Some 39 per cent have experienced or witnessed , and one in five female students has been the victim of sexual assault at university. Also common are instances of elitism, academic misconduct such as cheating and predatory publishing, and legal violations such as enabling financial crime, misrepresentation, false advertising, wage theft, and health and safety at work .
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Campus resource: Addressing sexual misconduct in higher education, part one: prevention
Yet little effective action is taken. The non-obligatory guidance and charters issued by bodies and thinktanks (such as the UK鈥檚 ) consistently fail to acknowledge the academy鈥檚 role in the harm experienced by students and staff, while university leaders seem to regard the perpetrators of misconduct as rare bad apples whose misdeeds are best swept under the carpet, rather than allowing their actions to sully the reputation of a sector that is essentially above ethical reproach. Hence, of UK universities have used non-disclosure agreements to suppress complaints 鈥 while academics are said to be 鈥suffering in silence鈥 amid widespread fear of reprisals for complaining about workplace abuse.
University of Cambridge academic Wyn Evans wrote in a 探花视频 opinion piece published last October聽that the reaction to a previous piece he had written, 鈥Bullying is a聽feature of UK universities, not a聽bug鈥, was 鈥渁n outpouring of pain and distress鈥 from fellow academics. I agree with him that, as the headline put it, 鈥淚nvestigating serious abuses must be taken out of universities鈥 hands鈥, but I don鈥檛 think his solution of an ombudsman to handle allegations of serious abuse is sufficient. An ombudsman鈥檚 decision may not be legally binding and its enactment can be impeded by false arguments of autonomy. Moreover, most universities have immense resources to brush off fines, and even if an academic is fired for misconduct, there is nothing to stop them taking another job and doing the same thing again, especially if their behaviour is covered up.
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I believe that the academic profession should adopt the model of other professional sectors such as healthcare, law and engineering, where the right to practise is conferred by registration with a professional body, and where individuals who fail to adhere to professional standards can be struck off. After all, academics meet all of the criteria to be classed as top-level professionals (expert knowledge, extensive training), and their potential for misconduct and harmful abuse is equally apparent and evidenced.
Genuinely supporting the interests of students and academics requires not just OfS-style system management, but also a binding accountability at an individual level, whereby those in positions of trust and responsibility conduct themselves transparently and accountably, with meaningful sanctions for misconduct. This would pose no threat to university autonomy or academic freedom, which are the OfS鈥 two 鈥渧ital ingredients鈥 to the 鈥渉ealth of our higher education sector鈥.
Of course, even professional registration is not a failsafe against abuse. As Evans notes, the case of the UK neonatal nurse, Lucy Letby, whose was apparently swept under the carpet for years, illustrates that the urge to protect institutional reputations will always be high on senior managers鈥 priority lists. But it is surely better than what we have.
Given the clear harm that is caused to students and staff, effective regulation is a key step to protect the reputation of individual universities and the sector as a whole. Academia is rightly seen as a challenging environment, but it also needs to be a safe and rewarding one, with staff that perform to certifiably high standards.
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Nicholas Rowe is an educationalist, with trans-disciplinary interests in scientific communication and educational/doctoral development.
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