Just so you don’t think I’m the only member of academic staff at Maynooth University who is desperately worried about the management shenanigans going on here, I am reblogging this blog piece by Conrad Brunstrom.
I suggest you read the whole article, and urge you to sign the petition therein, but here is a sentence that leapt out at me:
The morale of a university suffers when a fissure opens up between those who teach and research and those who “manage”.
An additional negative effect on morale arises when one sees teaching loads increasing and departmental resources being cut at an institution that already has the highest student-staff ratio in Ireland, and the University’s only response is to create new managerial positions all over the place. Every euro spent on “managers” is money taken away from teaching and research. Just this week we saw this one and this one. The advertisements for these positions both include
Maynooth University, a place of research and learning for over 15,000 students and almost 1,300 staff, is one of the fastest growing third level institutions on the island of Ireland, with ambitious plans for the future of its campus. The University’s campus master plan envisions the expansion and enhancement of the university estate to host over 20,000 students in a vibrant learning environment, supporting world-class research, outstanding teaching and learning, and a vivid cultural and sporting life, in a rich, diverse, green and sustainable campus. The University not only envisions major developments in the physical facilities and infrastructure of the campus, but also significant changes in how it is operated and used.
I have no idea where the number 20,000 has come from, nor how the Maynooth campus is going to accommodate this number of students, as it is already bursting at the seams. An increase on this scale will require a huge uplift in numbers of teaching staff, if we are not to collapse under the burden. The only argument I can see is that we need to have more students so we can support the dead weight of bloated management, under which we will be required to struggle.
