Unis offered as few as 1 in 100 casuals permanent status in 2021. Why aren't conversion rules working for these staff?
- Written by Elizabeth Baré, Honorary Fellow, LH Martin Institute, The University of Melbourne
Twenty years’ experience of casual conversion clauses[1] in Australian universities’ employment agreements shows these have not reduced the number of casual staff they employ. No one should be surprised at how few offers of conversion to permanent employment have been made following changes to the National Employment Standards[2] (NES) in March this year. Universities have reportedly offered fewer than 1 in 100[3] casual staff permanent status since then.
NES provisions require offers of continuing employment to staff members who meet several conditions. They must:
have been employed for the past 12 months
have worked a regular pattern of hours for six months
continue that pattern as a full-time or part-time employee. Grounds for non-conversion include the likelihood of a significant change to work requirements.
Academic conversion provisions include threshold and work pattern requirements similar to those in the NES. Some include other criteria such as:
being selected through an open (international) merit-based recruitment process
achieving specific performance standards
demonstrating potential for an academic career.
In part, this reflects a desire to protect the academic tenure system and the status of academic titles. Recruitment for continuing (tenured) teaching and research staff is based on open, merit-based competition. These academic staff serve a probationary period of three to five years.
Casual conversion could open “backdoor” access to a continuing academic role.
Read more: The casual staff who do 80% of undergrad teaching need more support — here's a way unis can help[4]
Why are conversion rates so low?
Some might see the low rates of casual conversion as reflecting a managerial desire to retain a lower-cost teaching workforce, underpinned by a drive to increase research output of continuing and fixed-term staff. However, it is likely few conversions occurred because:
threshold requirements could not be met as casual engagement for teaching is trimester/semester-based (13 or 16 weeks)
future teaching requirements are unpredictable, given recent decline in international students and changing student interests
there are underlying concerns about the impacts on the quality and capacity of the teaching and research workforce.
A non-conversion decision could be challenged in the Fair Work Commission. A successful challenge would pose a problem if universities wish to maintain academic recruitment standards and provisions.
How many staff are we talking about?
At the time of writing, no Higher Education Statistics[5] data for 2020 casual staff are available. The most recent are for pre-pandemic 2019. Furthermore, headcount data are not published.
Thus, a true understanding of the number of academic casuals depends on knowing the ratio of full-time equivalent (FTE) staff to actual headcounts.
We used a conservative ratio of 1:3 to calculate the headcounts in the chart below.
However, it is likely the ratio is 1:7 based on data provided[6] to the Senate Select Committee on Job Security. Using these ratios, between 48,000 and 110,000 people worked as casual academic staff in Australian universities in 2019.
In 2020, their numbers decreased significantly due to the COVID pandemic. One report[7] suggests 10,000 casual jobs were lost by late 2020. More than half are likely to have been academic staff.
Read more: More than 70% of academics at some universities are casuals. They're losing work and are cut out of JobKeeper[8]
Casual academics are not a homogenous group. They can be broadly categorised[9] as:
industry experts – professionals employed elsewhere who teach or supervise students in their discipline/area
faculty freelancers – work in multiple institutions, sometimes as consultants
returning academic staff – retired staff coming back on a casual basis
treadmill academics – qualified with research doctorates, aspiring to an academic appointment
apprentice academics – usually higher-degree candidates
In a NSW parliamentary inquiry[10] in September 2020, the then University of Sydney vice-chancellor, Michael Spence, emphasised the diversity of the academic casual workforce. Based on his evidence[11], 30% of his university’s approximately 3,500 academic casual employees might be categorised as faculty freelancers and treadmill academics.
These staff are the ones most likely to be disadvantaged by current employment arrangements. Nationally, we conservatively estimate about 20% of all casual academic staff fall into these two categories.
ShutterstockRead more: Dependent and vulnerable: the experiences of academics on casual and insecure contracts[12]
How can these problems be solved?
Put bluntly, arrangements for casual academic employment are messy. Universities struggle to fit modern teaching requirements into rigid 40-year-old industrial instruments. These were framed at a time when casuals were a small percentage of the workforce.
Casuals now form 31% of the university teaching workforce[13] in full-time equivalent terms. As individuals, they outnumber full-time and part-time teaching staff.
The diversity of tasks they perform suggests a “one size fits all approach” is not appropriate.
Conversion processes are not the solution. We suggest universities and the union work together to review national and international practice. This would involve:
a census of casual academic staff to determine how many there are, who they are and what they do
a review of the work they do to determine appropriate pay and contemporary forms of engagement for academic work
changes to the Higher Education Industry – Academic Staff – Award[14] to enable fixed-term employment for teaching
simplifying arrangements for annualised hours contracts
establishing guidelines or thresholds to be met for a staff member to work in a fixed term or continuing position that better reflect the pattern of teaching over the trimester/semester teaching year.
Such an approach requires vision, leadership and institutional and peer recognition of the valuable contribution of casual academic staff.
Read more: COVID hit casual academics hard. Here are 5 ways to produce a better deal for unis and staff[15]
References
- ^ casual conversion clauses (www.fairwork.gov.au)
- ^ changes to the National Employment Standards (www.fairwork.gov.au)
- ^ fewer than 1 in 100 (www.theguardian.com)
- ^ The casual staff who do 80% of undergrad teaching need more support — here's a way unis can help (theconversation.com)
- ^ Higher Education Statistics (www.dese.gov.au)
- ^ data provided (www.aph.gov.au)
- ^ One report (www.universityworldnews.com)
- ^ More than 70% of academics at some universities are casuals. They're losing work and are cut out of JobKeeper (theconversation.com)
- ^ broadly categorised (melbourne-cshe.unimelb.edu.au)
- ^ NSW parliamentary inquiry (www.parliament.nsw.gov.au)
- ^ his evidence (www.parliament.nsw.gov.au)
- ^ Dependent and vulnerable: the experiences of academics on casual and insecure contracts (theconversation.com)
- ^ 31% of the university teaching workforce (www.dese.gov.au)
- ^ Higher Education Industry – Academic Staff – Award (www.fwc.gov.au)
- ^ COVID hit casual academics hard. Here are 5 ways to produce a better deal for unis and staff (theconversation.com)