AGREEMENT |
Phase One |
It is agreed that: |
1. |
All scale points on the
Lecturer, Senior Lecturer and Principal Lecturer Scales shall be
increased by 9.6% with effect from 1st September 1990. All scale points
for Researchers shall be increased by 9.6% with effect from 1st
September 1990. The minimum salary for Heads of Department shall be
increased by 9.6% with effect from 1st September 1990 to £26,304.
(Annex 1). |
2. |
The part-time hourly rates shall be increased by 9.6% with effect from 1st September 1990. The new rates of pay shall be: |
|
Categories I, II/III |
£19.94 per hour |
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Category IV |
£17.00 per hour |
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Category V |
£12.47 per hour |
3. |
The categories of work shall be defined for all purposes with effect from 1st September 1990 as follows: |
|
Categories I, II/III |
All courses of higher education defined in accordance with the provision of Schedule 6 of the Education Reform Act (1988). |
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Category IV |
Study or courses above the level of the General
Certificate of Secondary Education or comparable level leading directly
to the Ordinary National Certificate, or courses or parts of courses of
a comparable standard. |
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Category V |
Courses other than those described above. |
4. |
The next annual review shall take effect from 1st September 1991. |
5. |
Lecturers shall be subject to a
contractual requirement for exclusivity of service. Clauses 13, 14, 15
and 16 of the Agreed Contract of Employment shall be automatically
incorporated into contracts of all lecturers with effect from 1st
February 1991. |
6. |
The clause in the ACAS Report on "Post
Termination Restrictions" (Recommendation 6) shall only be included in
a lecturer's contract when it can be justified as being necessary and
reasonable, such as in the case of the lecturers dealing with the
"protectable interest" of the employer (i.e. trade secrets or customer
connections). |
7. |
The clause requiring a probationary period of 12 months shall only be included if either of two conditions are met. |
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Condition 1 |
The lecturer is a new entrant to teaching in higher, or further education. |
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Condition 2 |
The lecturer has significantly different job responsibilities. |
8. |
All lecturers shall be subject to a
contractual requirement for staff appraisal and development as detailed
in Recommendation 3 of the ACAS Report and as included in clause 12 of
the Agreed Contract of Employment and set out in the Staff Handbook. |
9. |
Staff appraisal and development shall
be introduced and implemented for staff at the level of Head of
Department (or equivalent) and above by 31st August 1991. Staff
appraisal and development will be implemented for all lecturers by no
later than 31 August 1992. |
10. |
Any individual with responsibility for
carrying out appraisals shall receive adequate training. The Standing
Committee shall be responsible for monitoring the introduction and
operation of the staff appraisal system. |
11. |
All new appointments and lecturers
gaining promoted posts on or after 1st February 1991 shall be appointed
on the Agreed Contract of Employment. |
Phase Two |
It is agreed that: |
1. |
All lecturing staff on the Lecturer,
Senior Lecturer and Principal Lecturer Scales shall transfer to the
Agreed Contract of Employment, as soon as practicable, but by no later
than 31 August 1992. |
2. |
When a lecturer transfers to the Agreed
Contract of Employment they shall receive a single lump sum payment of
£500 if the transfer is on or before 31st August 1991, and will
immediately be moved one incremental point on their current scale. If
the transfer is on or after 1st September 1991 they shall receive a
single lump sum payment of £500 increased by a percentage identical to
the percentage change in the annual increase in the Retail Price Index
for August 1991 and will immediately be moved one incremental point on
their current scale. |
3. |
A lecturer employed between 1st April
1989 and the date of ratification of this agreement, on a contract with
terms and conditions comparable to those of the Agreed Contract of
Employment shall be entitled to receive an additional increment on
their current scale. The additional increment shall be paid when the
lecturer transfers to the Agreed Contract of Employment. |
4. |
Lecturers who are employed on
incremental points 4 of the Senior Lecturer or 3 of the Principal
Lecturer and are not entitled by virtue of the provisions relating to
salary bars to receive an additional increment shall receive an
additional increment and shall progress to incremental point 5 of the
Senior Lecturer or 4 of the Principal Lecturer respectively. Those
lecturers on the Agreed Contract of Employment who do not satisfy the
bar progression criteria shall be entitled to proceed to points 5 and 4
respectively of the Senior Lecturer and Principal Lecturer scales. They
shall not be entitled to progress any further up the incremental scale
unless and until they have satisfied the provision relating to salary
bars. These arrangements shall apply mutatis mutandis to staff
transferring from the Lecturer to Senior Lecturer scale. |
5. |
The pace of implementation of all
aspects of Phase Two of the agreement shall be determined by the
institution after consultation with the recognised unions locally. |
6. |
An additional incremental point shall
be added to the maximum of the Lecturer, Senior Lecturer and Principal
Lecturer scales (Annex 1). Only those staff employed on the Agreed
Contract of Employment shall be eligible to receive payment on the
maximum incremental points. |
OTHER MATTERS OF AGREEMENT |
1. |
Staff Handbook It is agreed that institutions shall have a Staff Handbook which shall contain: |
|
1. |
Agreed national text on- |
|
1.1 |
Guidelines for the determination of duties of lecturing staff. |
|
1.2 |
Entitlements and procedures for sick leave and sick pay. |
|
1.3 |
Entitlements and procedures for maternity leave. |
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1.4 |
The currently operative salary scales and the methodology of implementation. |
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2. |
Reference to matters which are to be determined locally (inter alia): |
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2.1 |
The appraisal scheme (the ACAS framework at Appendix 1 is recommended as a model). |
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2.2 |
Grievance Procedures. |
|
2.3 |
Disciplinary Procedures. |
|
2.4 |
Equal Opportunities. The
institution's policy on Equal Opportunities should be included in the
Staff Handbook. Where a separate institutional statement does not
already exist the following may be appropriate: "(The
Institution) is committed to providing equal opportunities for
lecturers in their recruitment, selection, promotion and training; to
the pursuance of non discriminatory policies in cases of selection for
redundancy and to the avoidance of discrimination in agreements on pay
or conditions of service. In this context discrimination means
discrimination on grounds of colour, race, nationality, or ethnic or
national origins, creed, sex or marital status". |
|
2.5 |
Leave of Absence. |
|
2.6 |
Travel expenses. |
|
2.7 |
Indemnification and insurance. |
|
2.8 |
Facilities for training and education. |
|
2.9 |
Any matter flowing from Recommendation 1 of the ACAS Report. |
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3. |
Procedures adopted locally for: |
|
3.1 |
Redundancy. |
|
3.2 |
Premature Retirement Compensation. |
2. |
Consistency of Treatment The
parties should consider consistency of treatment as a desirable goal,
both in relation to terms and conditions of employment in the HE sector
and to forms of recognition and involvement of the recognised unions in
each employing institution. |
3. |
Standing Committee There shall be a Standing Committee constituted in accordance with Recommendation 13 of the ACAS Report: 'The terms of reference of the Standing Committee should be as follows: |
|
i) |
To draft agreed model contractual clauses on the following matters (in the light of head I above and Appendix IV): - sickness - discipline and grievance procedures - maternity - notice - suspension |
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ii) |
To consider further the matters raised
in the lecturers' paper "Proportions and Types of Post", and in
particular to consider a) the possibility of a model part-time
contract, b) whether any joint national advice can be agreed on the use
of various categories of employee, c) whether any machinery can be
established at local level to review and/or monitor such use, and
staffing levels generally. |
|
iii) |
To consider whether either the existing
recognition agreement (dated 17 April 1989) can be amended or joint
national guidance can be agreed, so as to standardise arrangements for
recognition and/or involvement of the unions at the local level. |
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iv) |
To monitor the introduction and
operation of the staff development and appraisal system, contained in
Appendix I (this scheme being considered by both parties to the Working
Party to be central to the successful introduction of professional
contracts). |
|
v) |
To monitor the introduction and
operation of the new professional contracts generally, to deal with any
perceived general problems of interpretation or implementation and to
provide a specialised mechanism for the resolution of disputes over
these matters that cannot be resolved at the local level. |
|
The Committee should not have an
independent person in the chair, and should determine its own
procedure, with details for its running being organised at officer
level. However, in the event of outside assistance being thought
desirable at any point, it would be open to the parties by mutual
agreement to request ACAS to provide a mutually acceptable person to
act as chairman of the Committee for defined purposes. At its
first meeting, the Committee should agree a procedure for dealing with
head (i) of para (2) above as a matter of urgency, so that an entire
model professional contract can be in existence by the autumn.
Procedure for the remaining terms of reference can be determined
subsequently; in the event of any dispute about procedure, the parties
may decide to seek conciliation services of ACAS. The Committee
should treat each of the terms of reference as separate and distinct,
so that any problems under one head would not prevent the continued
consideration of matters under any other head(s)'. |
4. |
Redundancy If, in
accordance with the existing contract of employment as a result of the
transfer to the Institution on 1 April 1989, an individual is entitled
to one year's notice in the eventuality of redundancy under the Terms
of Appendix II of the "Conditions of Service for Lecturers in Further
Education" then that entitlement shall remain in force notwithstanding
the fact that the individual has transferred to the agreed Contract of
Employment under the provision of Phase Two of this Agreement. |
APPENDIX 1
STAFF DEVELOPMENT AND APPRAISAL IN THE PCFC SECTOR |
1. |
Introduction This document
has been agreed in a Sub Group of the Joint Working Party of the PCNNC
Lecturers' Common Interest Group, under the auspices of ACAS, between
representatives of the PCEF and NATFHE and APT. It provides a framework
for a scheme of staff development and appraisal for academic staff in
institutions in the PCFC sector. Institutions are recommended to
develop a staff development and appraisal scheme following the
principle set out in this agreed framework; any significant departure
from these principles should only be made after consultation by the
institution with the staff and the recognised lecturers' associations. |
2. |
The Context and Purpose of Appraisal Staff
Appraisal in the PCFC sector should enhance the quality of educational
provision within the context of an institution's mission statement and
strategic plan and the development plans of the faculties and
departments. The appraisal of individual lecturers is intended to
support the professional development of academic staff in order to
sustain and enhance the quality of teaching and learning processes for
students. Departmental and course team review should also contribute to
the identification of professional development needs and objectives.
The process of staff appraisal will help to reconcile the professional
aspirations and development needs of individuals with the requirements
of the institution. |
3. |
Objectives The objectives of a staff appraisal scheme include: |
|
a) |
helping individual members of staff to develop their career within the institution. |
|
b) |
improving staff performance. |
|
c) |
identifying changes in the organisation
or operation of the institution which would enable individuals to
improve their performance. |
|
d) |
identifying potential for development. |
|
e) |
improving the efficiency with which the institution is managed. |
4. |
Procedure To be effective staff appraisal should: |
|
a) |
apply, with suitable modifications, to all academic staff within the institution. |
|
b) |
operate on an annual or biennial cycle. |
|
c) |
encourage staff to reflect on their own
performance as individuals in the context of the academic groups with
which they are associated, and consider measures to secure improvements
as necessary. |
|
d) |
be regarded as a joint professional task, shared between appraiser and appraisee. |
|
e) |
support the development of equal opportunities policies. |
5. |
The Appraisal Process The appraisal process should include the following components: |
|
a) |
self appraisal as a first step, using a
common format, to provide information and material which clarifies,
inter alia, the individual's current professional role. This
information will help to focus the appraisal interview. |
|
b) |
preparation by the appraiser who will
need to reflect on the information provided by the appraisee and any
additional relevant information particularly in those areas of work for
which the appraiser has no direct responsibility. |
|
c) |
an appraisal interview at which the
lecturer will have an opportunity to identify positive achievements and
for these to be mutually considered in the context of the individual's
professional responsibilities and development. The interview should
focus on the present and future performance in the job not on personal
characteristics. |
|
d) |
a recorded summary of the discussion
prepared by the appraiser, in a common format and jointly agreed with
the opportunity to record dissent should agreement not prove possible. |
|
e) |
an agreed set of outcomes in written form, including realistic objectives for the next appraisal cycle. |
|
f) |
agreed procedures to enable the outcomes to be processed for any necessary action. |
6. |
Appraisal and Other Institutional Procedures The
developmental approach to appraisal outlined here can be clearly
distinguished from appraisal schemes which have an explicit link with
remuneration. The scheme should be differentiated from disciplinary and
other procedures for dealing with questions of competence and clearly
separate from procedures covering probation or promotion. |
7. |
Implementation at local level Negotiations
to produce a local scheme of staff appraisal will need to encompass the
items set out below as well as those identified in paragraphs 4 and 5
of this document. |
|
i) |
Who should conduct appraisals The
Director/Principal will have responsibility for ensuring that an
effective appraisal scheme is implemented according to the principles
outlined in this document.A degree of trust and mutual confidence
is required between appraiser and appraisee. Appraisers will need to be
experienced and responsible members of staff with a sufficient
knowledge of the work of the appraisee, the Department and other
relevant area(s) to facilitate the process of reflection and target
setting in an appraisal interview. The frequency of the
appraisal cycle and the number of appraisals which an individual shall
conduct in any one year will influence the number and choice of
appraisers at institutional level. |
|
ii) |
Local Arrangements for Monitoring and Evaluation There
should be arrangements for monitoring the introduction and
implementation of appraisal as well as evaluating the procedures
periodically. |
|
iii) |
The Custody of Appraisal Records The
summary of the discussion and the outcomes should be placed on the
confidential personal file of the individual. Other than the appraiser
and appraisee access should only be available to designated and locally
agreed individuals. Additional material used in the appraisal
interview, other than that which is publicly available, shall remain
confidential to the appraiser and appraisee. The period for which
appraisal records should be retained will need to be determined. |
|
iv) |
Arrangements for Staff Development Local
negotiations will include arrangements for an effective system of staff
development in order to underpin the staff appraisal scheme. The range
of activities and opportunities encompassed within any scheme of staff
development is varied and for local determination. However such
activities should normally include the following: |
|
a) |
opportunities to develop individual teaching programmes and to explore new teaching and learning strategies. |
|
b) |
professional development, training and opportunities for secondment. |
|
c) |
opportunities and facilities to engage in research and other appropriate scholarly activities. |
|
|
Within the framework of this agreement,
taking into account institutional needs and the availability of
resources, arrangements for periods of sabbatical leave may also be
considered. |
8. |
Training for Appraisal Training
is essential to the success of appraisal. The objectives and procedures
of any locally agreed scheme need to be fully understood and both
appraisers and appraisees also need to acquire the skills to ensure
appraisal is effective and mutually beneficial. Considerable resources
in terms of staff time and energy will be required. |