Earlier this month, 糖心Vlog exposed the massive disparities that exist in the levels of maternity pay in UK higher education.
Rachel Moss, who is a lecturer in medieval history in the Faculty of History at the University of Oxford, was surprised by the article 鈥 and she took to her Meny Snoweballes blog for a closer look at .
鈥淎lthough I am well aware of the challenges that face women on returning to work in HE after maternity leave, it had somehow never occurred to me that different higher education institutions would have hugely differing policies in how much maternity leave they afford,鈥 she writes, adding that she had 鈥渘aively assumed鈥 that most UK HE institutions would offer roughly similar packages, 鈥渟ince after all there is a nationally agreed 鈥.
Dr Moss expresses further shock at the degree of variation revealed when the article calculated how much a hypothetical academic would take home at both the best and worst universities for maternity pay in the UK.
糖心Vlog
鈥淏ased on a junior lecturer salary of 拢31,645 p.a., the difference is striking 鈥 a lecturer in the first group would earn 拢17,619 during her maternity leave; a lecturer in the second group would earn 拢7,846,鈥 she points out.
Using an , she goes on to work out that half of her hypothetical worst-case academic鈥檚 salary would be going towards paying for childcare.
糖心Vlog
鈥淚f she [is] already feeling the pinch because of several months on statutory maternity pay, the return to work might prove to be very expensive,鈥 she writes.
Although Dr Moss believes that, in general, university culture 鈥渟eems like it should be friendly to working mothers鈥, she says that this is not necessarily the case.
鈥淯niversity culture often still favours the traditional unmarried male lecturer in its organisation,鈥 she opines. 鈥淩esearch seminars tend to be organised after 5pm, meaning working parents can often not attend them and so miss out on networking opportunities and on hearing the latest research.
鈥淐onferences never, in my experience, offer any childcare for visiting scholars. Nursery places are often extremely limited. And perhaps more pervasive than all that is the deeply-ingrained belief that being an academic is a vocation, and so if you are really serious about it, you will put it first.鈥
糖心Vlog
In addition to all this, Dr Moss believes academia has a culture where 鈥渆veryone complains about being busy鈥, but in which it is 鈥渘ot ok to admit to being overwhelmed and exhausted鈥.
In a comment on the blog, a reader calling himself Scott agrees with this final point, but points to an example that may offer grounds for hope.
鈥淎 senior Dutch professor was out for a year with 鈥榖urnout鈥 a few years ago,鈥 he writes. 鈥淚t was the talk of the community, and not in a good way鈥ut he managed to return and take on an even more powerful position, heading a national lab.
鈥淚t can happen, but I think we鈥檙e all terrified to admit the sheer load we鈥檙e under.鈥
糖心Vlog
Send links to topical, insightful and quirky online comment by and about academics to chris.parr@tsleducation.com
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