Source: Mike Peel
Marie Clarke, of the Irish Federation of University Teachers, said the country was facing a 鈥渧ery serious crisis in university education鈥.
Though levels of investment had increased from the mid-1990s, 鈥減er capita expenditure remained modest by international standards throughout the period of growth and this expenditure has significantly decreased since 2009鈥.
An extended recession had meant 鈥渕ajor policy decisions鈥ased almost exclusively on reduced resourcing for the sector鈥, leading to a situation where 鈥渢he outlook for growth and development is bleak鈥.
Dr Clarke, who was speaking at the union鈥檚 Annual Delegate Conference in Dublin last weekend, said she was worried about plans for an increased role for the private sector in higher education, arguing that 鈥渢he universal, mutual-solidarity function of public services must remain the priority 鈥 not the market鈥.
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She was also wary of 鈥渢he centralised and technical approach鈥 to reforms proposed by Ireland鈥檚 糖心Vlog Authority, which distributes funding to the sector, and critical of a process of consultation which had brought 鈥渁n over-reliance on international experts to tell us what is appropriate for our system鈥.
She was equally unsympathetic to 鈥渢he over-bureaucratisation of Irish universities at the expense of their core academic teaching and research function鈥, as revealed by figures showing that non-academic staff in universities and colleges now outnumber the academics.
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While most academics had seen their workloads increase and their salaries decline, Dr Clarke called particular attention to the 鈥渄isgraceful鈥reatment of our early career researchers and academics鈥, who now often 鈥渉ave very fragmented employment experiences in the early years of their careers鈥 as they 鈥渕ove from position to position on short-term or part-time contracts鈥.
Citing evidence that 鈥渢he impact of Irish research is at an all-time high鈥, Dr Clarke warned that current levels of activity were being 鈥渦ndermined by declining income levels, increases in staff鈥搒tudent ratios and excessive administrative burdens鈥.
She noted that the strong emphasis on 鈥渃ollaboration among academics, particularly with reference to bidding for research funding鈥 tended to be 鈥渕anagement-led, rather than coming from the nature of the work of existing research teams鈥, which could only 鈥渦ndermine the organic research process鈥.
鈥淎s academics,鈥 she added, 鈥渨e must not take instruction from any government minister as to our research priorities and we must preserve and defend our right to academic freedom always.鈥
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