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Expect some surprises in second survey of Hong Kong academics

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Some are beginning to say that the days will soon be over when universities can attract the best and brightest. As salaries drop and workloads increase, as autonomy takes a back seat to assessment, and as academic values joust with managerial efficiency, the best and brightest young minds may veer away from a career in academia.

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After all, universities in future may be able to survive by hiring a few international high-flyers to boost their position on global league tables while employing more part-timers on a course-by-course basis to handle the heavy teaching loads. In this way, universities can reduce costs and avoid many headaches. As Hong Kong ponders over its vision to become an international education hub, these are such options to consider. Moreover, Hong Kong may be in step with global changes, where part-time academics are already the norm in some countries and more academics now carry name cards with the phrase 'have doctorate, will travel'.

During the decades when Hong Kong was a one or two university town, the academic atmosphere was elitist and sleepy, few staff did research and teaching a couple of courses per year was the core of the job. Now, it is a nine-university metropolis with shouts about infringement of academic autonomy, where tenure can take a decade or so to earn, where research has become the core of academic life, and teaching loads have grown exponentially.

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In 1993, Hong Kong participated in the First International Survey of the Academic Profession organised by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. At that time, Hong Kong had the youngest academic staff across the participating countries, but it was male dominated, with most working full time. Only three-quarters of academic staff had doctorates, and there were few recruits from the mainland. As 1997 approached, salaries had already shot through the roof. As the 21st century unfolded, short-term contracts became the norm, salaries were cut, and more academics worked part-time. On the positive side, women were hired and promoted in greater numbers (although all university heads are still men), and many talented mainland scholars have been attracted from overseas to work in Hong Kong.

The Second International Survey of the Academic Profession will take place this month in more than 20 countries, including Hong Kong and the mainland. Local academics will have an opportunity to indicate how their professional life, including teaching and research, has changed.

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