10 results on '"Szekeres, Judy"'
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2. Faculty Managers: A Constantly Changing Role
- Author
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Szekeres, Judy, primary and Heywood, Tony, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Faculty Managers: A Constantly Changing Role
- Author
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Szekeres, Judy, primary and Heywood, Tony, additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Professional Staff Carve out a New Space
- Author
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Szekeres, Judy
- Abstract
A 2004 paper, "The invisible workers" by Szekeres, lamented the "invisibility" of professional staff in Australian higher education. Even then, professional staff constituted more than half the university workforce, but they were defined by what they were not (non-academic) and they experienced a high level of frustration in their relationships with academic staff and with their institutions. This paper examines whether the situation for professional staff has changed in the intervening period. It would seem that by 2009, professionals had carved out a more critical space in the sector than they had been able to do by 2004. At senior levels, professionals are no longer restricted to specialist roles such as human resources or information technology or building services but have moved into the Pro- and Deputy-Vice-Chancellor space, roles previously reserved for senior academics. However, has there been much change in the junior or middle management roles? This paper considers the literature over the last six years as it relates to professional staff, look at the changing statistics in Australia around employment of professional staff, and consider what changes have taken place for professional staff at all levels.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Sustaining Student Numbers in the Competitive Marketplace
- Author
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Szekeres, Judy
- Abstract
The climate of competition for students in the higher education sector makes it imperative that institutions increase their marketing efforts, both domestically and internationally, to help sustain student numbers. In Australia, the Bradley Report and the government response, which will do away with quotas, allows for a much freer market than previously, including the entry of private providers into the undergraduate degree market. It will become more critical than ever before to improve student attraction. Added to this, the increasing pressure from European and US universities in the Asian market requires Australian universities to improve their marketing and student recruitment in the international space. This paper draws on the large volume of material related to marketing universities that exists. The literature has changed its scope over time, originally focusing on the publications universities produced, then the branding effort, and more recently, relationship marketing. This paper provides a meta-analysis of the literature in an attempt to suggest some possible improvements that institutions could implement to have an impact on student recruitment and help sustain, or even improve, student numbers.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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6. Service Provision to Students: Where the Gown Best Fits
- Author
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Schulz, Lucy and Szekeres, Judy
- Abstract
One of the challenges facing those responsible for service provision in universities is ensuring that service is provided at the right point in the organisation. Service delivery points can exist at the school/department level, faculty/division level or central unit/university wide level. This does not always follow organisational logic, common sense, the interests of stakeholders, or an organisational service strategy or plan. Many universities have established "one-stop shops" for student services. These have taken many forms and include a range of services, from student administration and student support services, to information technology support and cashier/student financial services. Different management arrangements, including the use of service agreements, have also been used across the sector in Australia. There are additional levels of complexity caused by multiple campuses, differences in the composition of the student body, differences in teaching arrangements, organisational structures and resource arrangements. This paper focuses on student administration and support services. It analyses a range of current models in universities and provides some suggestions for assessing the logic of the models, using a set of underlying principles to help make decisions. The paper considers the services provided, staffing and resource levels, organisational structures and student feedback.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. General Staff Experiences in the Corporate University
- Author
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Szekeres, Judy
- Abstract
The working lives of general staff in universities have been a rather closed book until recently, having been largely ignored in both academic and non-academic literature. When discussed or referred to, general staff have been depicted in problematic ways that, in recent times, can be associated with the prevailing discourse of "corporate managerialism". This paper attempts to redress this situation by illustrating some aspects of the lives of general staff in universities. In particular the paper considers how changes in universities, as they have become more corporate, have influenced the work, perceptions and constructions of working life as described by a group of general staff. (Contains 1 note.)
- Published
- 2006
8. The Invisible Workers
- Author
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Szekeres, Judy
- Abstract
Where are university administrators placed in texts that are centred around universities? There appears to be either a total confusion in terminology about administration or a complete disregard for administrators' work but in most cases administrative staff in universities are largely invisible. This paper explores a range of texts (academic, government reports and novels) and provides a picture of how the work of administrators and the staff themselves are represented. It examines how they are positioned in the organisation as people, as workers and as power brokers and provides a starting point for further research into how these workers see themselves. "There has been remarkably little systematic study of the roles and values of university administrative staff" (McInnis, 1998, p. 161). Maybe it is time that this was remedied.
- Published
- 2004
9. BOOK REVIEW.
- Author
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Szekeres, Judy
- Subjects
- *
UNIVERSITY & college administration , *NONFICTION - Abstract
The article reviews the book "The College Administrator's Survival Guide," by C. K. Gunsalas.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Administrative staff experiences in the corporate university
- Author
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Szekeres, Judy.
- Subjects
Universities and colleges ,College environment - Abstract
Thesis (PhDEducation)--University of South Australia, 2005. This portfolio concentrates on the experiences of administrative staff in universities. The aim of the portfolio is to examine the work and work experiences of administrative staff in the three universities in South Australia, particularly in the light of increased corporatisation of universities over the last fifteen years. Administrative staff are rarely discussed in the literature focused on universities as organisations and workplaces and yet they constitute over half the staff in Australian universities. They are growing in visibility and importance as universities become more corporate in their operation and structure. New occupations have come into existence as a result of the commercialisation of higher education and the accompanying increased government surveillance has resulted in greater professionalisation of administration and administrative work roles. This research brings these changes to the working lives of administrative staff in universities into focus and places their stories at its centre. This portfolio consists of a series of three sequential interrelated reports, each of which takes a particular approach to the working lives of administrative staff in universities. “Research report 1: The Invisible Workers: Representations of administrative workers in the literature around higher education” analyses a range of literature- academic, journalistic, government and fictional in the light of four discourses which are part of the meta-discourse of corporate managerialism. “Research Report 2: Who Keeps the Organisation Running?: Interviews about the working lives of administrative staff in universities” analyses a collection of interviews with administrative staff undertaken over a six month period across the three South Australian universities using a hybrid method based on grounded theory. “Research Report 3: Tell me a Story: A narrative analysis of stories in interviews” uses narrative analysis of stories told in interviews used in “Research Report 2” to gain a greater understanding of experiences common to workers located in specific universities and across the sector. “Meta-analysis: This is My Song: An auto-ethnographic account of the research project” is approached as an auto-ethnography of my own work story interwoven with the experiences of participants and selected literature to link together the findings of the first three Reports. This portfolio adds to the corpus of knowledge around the work of administrative staff in universities by illustrating a gap in the literature and addressing this by using the descriptions of experiences of some administrative staff in the three South Australian universities to gain a greater understanding of how they view universities as work sites.
- Published
- 2005
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