2013, Vol. 48. Academic Work, Working Conditions and Job Satisfaction
Permanent URI for this collection
Jeśli chcesz przejrzeć artykuły znajdujące się w tej kolekcji wybierz przycisk Tytuł
Browse
Browsing 2013, Vol. 48. Academic Work, Working Conditions and Job Satisfaction by Issue Date
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item Academic Work, Working Conditions and Job Satisfaction (CPP RPS 48/2013)(Center for Public Policy Research Papers Series, 2013) Kwiek, Marek; Antonowicz, DominikIn this analysis of changing academic work, working conditions and job satisfaction in Europe, we will present the academics’ assessment of facilities, resources, and personnel. Subsequently, an overview will be provided about the academic workloads and allocation of time between the four major types of academic activities: teaching, research, service, and administration. A further section will discuss job satisfaction and, related to it, the academics’ income. The chapter provides a general picture of the variety of views and activities in 11 European countries, where differences between junior and senior academic staff as well as between academics at universities and at other higher education institutions will be presented, whenever relevant. As will be shown below, the facilities and resources are predominantly assessed positively by European academics, with the least positive scores for research funding. Thereby the ratings of those active at universities are more positive than those active at other higher education institutions, and we note substantial differences as well in the assessments of junior and senior academics. Assessments are by and large most positive in five countries: Finland, Norway, Switzerland, the UK and the Netherlands. Self-declared hours spent on academic work vary as well between European countries, between junior and senior academics, and between academics at universities and other higher education institutions. The longest hours spent at work in higher education institutions (when classes are in session) are reported on average of all academics in Ireland, Italy and Poland and the shortest in the Netherlands, Norway, and Portugal. The weekly mean time ranges from 27 hours per week (junior staff in Norway) to 52 hours per week (senior staff in Germany). Senior staff works longer hours than junior staff in all countries analysed.