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issue 74

24 March 2011

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'Truth: lies open to all'

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Every fortnight during term-time.

All editorial correspondence to: subtext-editors [at] lancaster.ac.uk.

Please delete as soon as possible after receipt. Back issues and subscription details can be found at http://www.lancs.ac.uk/subtext.

The editors welcome letters, comments, suggestions and opinions from readers. subtext reserves the right to edit submissions.

subtext does not publish material that is submitted anonymously, but is willing to consider without obligation requests for publication with the name withheld.

For tips to prevent subtext from getting swept up into your 'junk email folder', see http://www.lancs.ac.uk/subtext/dejunk/.

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CONTENTS: editorial, news in brief, international links, ethical standards in research, union-management relations III, LUVLE to Moodle, letters

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EDITORIAL

UCU, like its predecessor union the AUT, takes strike action rarely - the last occasion was five years ago - so it is reasonable to suppose that there seems to many people a good reason for doing so this week. It is true, however, that the meaning of strike action by academics and related staff is different than in most other professions. A minority of members take visible action in the form of picketing, hoping that not too many drivers will decide to accelerate at the sight of them (related reminiscences this week included one by a senior academic (ex-Lancaster, but a long time ago) who recalled the experience of seeing his foot disappear beneath the tyre of a car driven by an irate professor). The majority who take strike action probably stay at home - or perhaps, given the remarkably clement weather for this strike, go for country walks. In either case they will make a conscientious effort not to think anything that might be a relevant academic thought - and will in almost all cases fail. This is because contrary to what is the case in most other jobs, and contrary to what Lancaster's management evidently believes is the case for academic and related staff (see below), the part of the core 'business' of the university that consists of thinking, reading and writing is not a five-day a week activity. It involves a broader personal and professional commitment to the development of one's subject and of one's own understanding and capacity. And we say this not in a spirit of pompous self-aggrandizement, but as statement of fact.

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NEWS IN BRIEF

Mystery Yellow Sayings

All round campus there are small yellow pieces of card tied to railings and lamp posts with uplifting thoughts on them. We like them. But who put them there and why?

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University Twitter-Feed

One of the problems with LU-text is that often one only gets to hear about exciting opportunities when it's too late. A new University Twitter-feed promises to rectify this problem. There are 3400 followers already. You too can sign up at http://twitter.com/lancasteruni and hear the news as it happens. Recent highlights include 'Chinese Consul General visits Lancaster campus' (Tweeted at 2.44 am on 7th March) and 'The Management School is looking for companies to host placements and student consultancy projects - interested?' (Tweeted at 2.27 am on 24th Feb). Who is the dedicated 24/7 tweeter? We hope his or her sterling efforts are richly rewarded!

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The Work Foundation

Few jobs have been advertised at the University in recent years, but it looks like other parts of the Lancaster Empire are doing better. The Work Foundation has recently been advertising for new staff, including a Head of People Effectiveness and Head of Big Innovation Centre (each on £73,500) along with an unspecified number of researchers and assistant researchers.

Readers will remember that The Work Foundation was bought by Lancaster University in October 2010, having become insolvent. Mainly, the Work Foundation owed money to its pension fund. See http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/396bf3aa-ddcb-11df-8354-00144feabdc0,s01=1.html#axzz1GqnS45kR.

Few details about the deal between the Work Foundation and Lancaster University have been made public. In particular the sum paid for the think tank has not been disclosed. As a charity, the Work Foundation is legally obliged to file annual reports with the Charity Commission, and so subtext went to have a look at them. Unfortunately, the last report was filed in 2008, and the current report is listed as being 321 days late. For any charity to fail to file a report is bad, but for one whose 2008 report describes it as being dedicated to showing how 'world-beating organisational and individual performance derive from successfully blending both economic and productive efficiency with personal growth, voice and fairness' it suggests a lack of organisational and individual effectiveness that is almost funny. Maybe it's best to do as the Work Foundation says, not as it does. subtext hopes that all is not as it appears, and that the Charity Commission has for some reason exempted the Foundation from having to file reports - or maybe it's in the post.

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Forecasting fees

At the time of writing there is still no definite news of what level of fee Lancaster intends to set. Rumour has it that an announcement is imminent, but in the meantime there is a convincing and straightforward prediction, at http://exquisitelife.researchresearch.com/exquisite_life/2011/03/forecasting-university-tuition-fees.html, that what will be announced is the full £9,000. The author's argument is that Lancaster, ranked in this table as 14th in England for research, would be out of line with what are usually regarded as similarly prestigious universities if it did not charge the full whack, and thus risk becoming less prestigious. Since Exeter (26th in this table) and Surrey (32nd) have already declared their intention to charge £9,000, it would indeed be strange if Lancaster were to do anything else. Only two universities, London Met and Liverpool Hope, have so far said that they will charge less.

The implication is of course that price is to be the criterion by which the quality of a university is to be judged. As we argued in subtext 72, however, there is no obvious linkage between a university's research ranking and the level of fees imposed on undergraduates, who can very reasonably argue that their fees should go to finance the teaching of their degree courses, not to support research. Equally, it would not be right to use fees to pay teaching assistants so that academic staff can avoid teaching undergraduates - in which case, what price 'research-led teaching' (a too handily available mantra, but one which universities like Lancaster have traditionally aspired to)?

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INTERNATIONAL LINKS

As reported in subtext 73, Senate recently voted to support in principle the development of a new campus in China in collaboration with Guangdong Foreign Studies University (GDUFS), though for the first time Senators raised some doubts about the wisdom of collaborating with institutions in States that might not respect academic freedom. The list of key officials at GDFSU suggests that there may indeed be some cultural differences - for example, Secretary Jin Yaoguan is listed as being 'responsible for propaganda, political education of the teaching staff and the development of campus culture' (see http://english.gwnews.net/article_show_notime.asp?ArticleID=2121).

Lancaster has collaborated with GDUFS for some years, and the two institutions already offer a number of jointly taught undergraduate degrees. Lancaster is far from alone in developing international collaborations with China. A 2006 QAA report found that 82 UK Higher Education institutions have established partnership links with Chinese institutions.

However, though they have become commonplace, international links with China, and other states that do not support liberal academic values, can give fair grounds for concern. The LSE has been forced to distance itself from its Libyan links, and this should be seen as a warning rather than as the opening up of a market opportunity.

The university committee responsible for overseeing international partnerships appears to be the Collaborative Provision Oversight Committee, which is a standing committee of the Senate charged to 'take an overview of the university's development of collaborative provision ensuring that this is in line with appropriate aspects of the university's strategic plan, and, where necessary to make recommendations to the Senate'. Given that international collaborations have regularly been announced over the last few years, the committee must have been busy, though minutes have not been posted on the University website since the meeting on 6 May 2010.

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MAINTAINING ETHICAL STANDARDS IN RESEARCH

The Ethics Self-Assessment checklists that must be filled in prior to applying for externally funded projects help ensure that research at Lancaster is ethically sound. The current checklist goes some way to maintain ethical standards, for example, by prompting researchers to think twice before subjecting 'cephalopods or decapods' to 'intrusive interventions' or 'deception or trickery'. The checklists have proved of particular use to researchers in the arts and humanities, where the traditional belief that research in such subjects raised no ethical issues meant that the welfare of cephalopods was previously sometimes overlooked. However, despite the successes of the current ethics checklist, it has recently been noticed that there remain some possible bad acts that the checklist doesn't cover. Thus, from next year, researchers will also be asked to declare that their research does not involve i. inventing weapons of mass destruction, ii. cavorting naked with Satan (or minions), or iii. collecting sensitive information concerning decapod sexuality or religious beliefs. Researchers whose research may involve any of i.-iii. will be asked to complete an additional and in-depth ethics review form and will be advised on the correct procedures to follow by the relevant ethics committees. 

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UNION-MANAGEMENT RELATIONS III:  THE STRIKE

In recent issues of subtext, we have been commenting on the recent marked deterioration in the relationship between management and campus unions, and have been suggesting that this has to a large extent been caused by an increasingly aggressive and confrontational approach on the part of management.

Further evidence of this was provided in the official management statement on the strike issued in LU-Text a couple of weeks in advance. This message signalled a new management response to strikes on campus that is in marked contrast to the stance it has taken previously.

First, it declared that pay would be deducted from the wages of those on strike at the rate of 1/260 per day. This is the first time this has happened. At all previous strikes, pay has been deducted at the rate of 1/365. As the new line is evidently based on the assumption that people work only from Monday to Friday, it has prompted many to ask whether they should apply for overtime pay whenever they are required to work on Saturdays for Open Days, Visit Days, new student college Arrival Days, etc., not to mention when they undertake research at weekends.  Perhaps the union will take up the issue of overtime pay in light of this?

Second, it declared that a full day's pay would be withheld for each day that someone participates in action short of a strike.  Again, this is the first time that this has happened.  Furthermore, given that action short of a strike has yet to be declared, it is difficult to know what purpose this statement serves other than to intimidate.  Although there has previously been talk of deducting pay for action short of a strike, this has never before actually happened.  As the proposal is to deduct 100% of pay for the day in question, this has prompted many to insist that they will do no work at all on days when 100% of pay is being deducted.  After all, staff can hardly be expected to work for free (there are echoes here of 1930s coal mines).  In other words, this measure is likely to turn action short of a strike into a full strike.

Third, it declared that the university would withhold USS pension contributions for staff on each day they are on strike.  Yet again, this is the first time that this has happened.  Numerous colleagues have pointed out that according to the 1/260th calculation, neither we nor the university are contributing at weekends either, as we're not being paid - but presumably we're covered if we die on a Saturday or Sunday?  This is a clear inconsistency here, and, as with the proposed USS pension reforms themselves, the inconsistency arises from the tipping of the balance of favour away from employees and towards employers at every conceivable stage.

Reactions to these measures have been fierce.  Academics are not easily cowed, and it soon became abundantly clear that people's attitudes had been stiffened by this announcement.  Some who were unsure whether to strike were persuaded to do so when they read the LU-Text announcement.  Those who were planning to strike anyway were moved to volunteer to join the picket line.  It is evidently the case that there will be more people on strike and more people on the picket line as a direct result of the LU-Text announcement.

It is not easy to see why this strike is so qualitatively different from previous ones that it requires these increasingly punitive measures.  If it is not qualitatively different, one can only conclude that university managers are being deliberately confrontational, which only confirms what subtext has been saying recently.  Given that the Vice-Chancellor meets very few academics other than Pro-Vice-Chancellors and Deans, one wonders if he is aware at the depth of feelings on this issue.  The chasm that exists between academics - from lectures to professors - and managers has never been wider.

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LUVLE TO MOODLE?

Lancaster University's Virtual Learning Environment (LUVLE) is set to undergo significant changes over the next eighteen months. The Next Generation LUVLE project will see the service move from the current Lotus Notes software to Moodle 2.0.  Responsibility for the project will lie with a board including Gavin Brown, Dean of Undergraduate Studies (Project Executive), Rich Ranker of LTG (Project Manager), Ellie Hamilton, Associate Dean at LUMS, and Robin Hughes, LUSU Vice President for Academic Affairs (both Senior Users).  The technical work of developing and supporting the new LUVLE will be contracted to the spin-out company Lancaster University Network Systems (LUNS). 

The current LUVLE has been evolving since 1996, and uses IBM's Lotus Notes client programme and the associated Domino server programme.  LUVLE was created in-house by a small team known as the Learning Technology Group, which was initially based in Information Systems Services (ISS).  In 2002 LTG became part of the new Centre for the Enhancement of Learning and Teaching (CELT), which enabled them to work more closely with staff involved in teaching quality assessment and effective learning.  However, during the controversial break-up of CELT in 2009 LTG was reorganised back into ISS. 

The tipping point against the current Notes-based LUVLE seems to have been the serious technical problems experienced by staff and student users during the Michaelmas term: upgrades to the Domino server software provided by IBM turned out to be 'buggy', resulting in a stream of interruptions to service whenever demand got high.  Though University staff were not to blame for this, ISS received a string of complaints, especially from LUMS, which seem to have triggered a decision to move quickly to different software.

It will be good to see the University investing properly in this area at last.  Using in-house technical expertise to construct our own VLE using Lotus Notes was a cost-effective option that made sense when e-learning was the preserve of only a handful of academics.  But when VLEs became part of the bread and butter of university teaching, the lack of resources and personnel put into this area started to become a false economy.  Not least, it created a risky dependence on the technical skills of a tiny number of in-house technical experts who actually understood how it all worked (rumours that they were not allowed to catch the same bus home or choose the same baguette filling at Spar have not been confirmed). 

Some readers may recall that funding for e-learning at Lancaster was significantly enhanced in 2005 when the University received its share of the funds redistributed to universities after the collapse of the UK Electronic University (UKeU) in 2004.  This was used to fund Lancaster's E-Learning Project, which gave a boost to online learning capabilities and take-up.  But the money was only ring-fenced for that initial year; in subsequent years, the money was simply rolled into the general teaching grant, so e-learning funding on campus returned to its usual desultory levels.

It's also sensible to consider moving to another platform, but has this been decided in the right way?  At February's meeting of the Learning Technology Advisory Group (LTAG), concern was expressed about the way that Moodle - as opposed to Blackboard, Sharepoint or Sakai, or even staying with Lotus Notes - had simply been announced as the platform of choice, with no prior consultation. 

Could this unfortunate start to the project be anything to do with the fact that, whereas the last review of Lancaster's e-learning strategy came under the auspices of the Learning, Teaching and Assessment Committee, the new project will just be part of the University's general ICT strategy?  Might the current organisational arrangements for the project mean that learning and teaching requirements will not always receive the attention that they deserve?  We hope not.  It's certainly more encouraging that a period of consultation has now been agreed - although the Moodle decision is apparently non-negotiable.

The decision to use Moodle 2.0 seems to have been made in October or November at a meeting of the Business Process and Applications Group (BPAG - see https://gap.lancs.ac.uk/Committees/BPAG/Pages/), and it seems likely that one factor in making the decision was the existing commitment to Moodle of LUNS, who will be contracted to deliver the new LUVLE, and has as its directors two members of BPAG and a number of other University officers.  A key part of LUNS' business has been providing low-cost broadband and Moodle VLEs to schools in rural areas - until very recently it had a large rolling contract with Cumbria and Lancashire Education Online.  Designing a new VLE for the University would go some way to fill the gap left by the loss of the CLEO contract, and also enable LUNS to create a shop-window product that might help its ambitions to get into the lucrative business of selling VLE services to other universities.

Moodle does have its supporters: it is an open source platform, which means 100s of developers are working on improving it, fixing bugs and developing 'modules', 'blocks' and 'filters' with different functionalities.  It is thus also far more configurable than LUVLE.  However, there are concerns about the smoothness of future upgrades.  Proprietary platforms such as Blackboard and Notes have clear 'upgrade paths' which ensure that local modifications of the software will still work even when centrally provided upgrades are installed.  However, because Moodle is open-source, this cannot always be guaranteed.

Another big challenge will be to build a new reliable infrastructure around the Moodle 'instances' (the equivalent of individual LUVLEs).  Over the last 10 years LTG staff have used Notes to develop a complex architecture of tools that link into LUVLE - MyPGR, MyPlace, but above all MyModules, which integrates with the LUSI student records database in order to ensure that lists of modules, permissions and so on are automatically refreshed daily. As far as we know, so far no decision has yet been made about who will be responsible for developing and maintaining whatever will replace this, and what software it will use.

Some have expressed unease about contracting the technical side to an outside company, in case circumstances outside the University's control left it high and dry without VLEs.  The original language used when the decision was announced was that the service was going to be 'outsourced'; when the wisdom of this was challenged, the language was changed, emphasising that LUNS is a 'wholly owned University subsidiary company'.  Whatever the legal niceties, subtext hopes that we don't find ourselves relying on a VLE software platform in which we do not have significant in-house technical expertise.

The timetabling of the project has also attracted criticism.  The initial plan was very compressed, allowing little time to develop the VLE, test it, and train people in using it.  The latest plan still leaves little room for overcoming any unforeseen problems, but is at least a little less frenetic: to spend a few months gathering information from staff and students about what they want from the user interface; to have a working example soon after that; to run pilot instances with a few departments during the academic year 2011-12; and to have full delivery from October 2012.  It will be important that the piloting academics are chosen well, to include not just Moodle early-adopters but also the reluctant majority.  But more widely it is really important that a broad cross-section of the university engage with the process, to increase the chances of the new VLE being just as LUVLE as we would want it to be.  So we urge readers to take advantage of any opportunity to participate in the consultation process.  In the interim, the number of technical staff supporting the existing LUVLE will drop even more in 2011-12, so expect a noticeable degradation of service. Some say that this is in order to make the new LUVLE look better by comparison, but that is surely too cynical a thought, even for us.

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LETTERS

Dear subtext,

Professor Emeritus Michael Dillon, whose inaugural lecture at Lancaster I attended a dozen or so years ago, is reported by subtext to have made the following claim in his recent talk on "The University in Crisis":

He called into question the idea that truth-telling can ever be wholly autonomous; while truth is a remainder that cannot be collapsed into power, neither is it ever wholly separate from power, since every politics invokes truth, and every form of truth is a form of politics.

To begin with, the relationship between knowledge and power was not the discovery of Foucault, who is apparently Dillon's hero. The Sophists claimed the same in fifth-century BC, and were refuted by Plato and others.

It is one thing to argue that knowledge can be used politically. Who would demur? It is another thing to argue, as Dillon does, that knowledge is inseparable from power. Perhaps he will tell us in a future public foray what the political ramifications are for those who, like me, studied dead languages or those whose specialty is medieval philosophy or particle physics or proctology.

No one denies that, to take the most conspicuous examples, the Nazis appropriated even the most abstruse disciplines for their political ends.   There was, for example, the use of Indo-European linguistics to espouse Aryan racial policy. There was the notion of a non-Jewish, Aryan Christ.   There was, to cite the title of a wonderful book, NAZI SCIENCE. But to give EXAMPLES of the political use of even the most seemingly apolitical specialties is not to establish what Dillon claims:  that "EVERY form of truth is a form of politics."  I'd be curious - though no more - to learn what his justification for this claim is.

Presumably, this one truth of his is immune from his otherwise universal claim. Otherwise we'd surely be entitled to dismiss it as just one more politically infested truth.

Finally, if, as we are told, truth is inherently political, then it has always been so. Why, then, is Prof. Dillon so disconcerted by the contemporary mixing of capitalism and truth? If Dillon is right, then nothing is new.

By the way, Marx himself exempted science from ideological contamination, including contamination from capitalism. Therefore not even he deemed every truth political. But I suppose he was just insufficiently forward thinking.

Robert Segal

Prof. of Religious Studies

University of Aberdeen

(at Lancaster from 1994 to 2006)

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The editorial collective of subtext currently consists (in alphabetical order) of: Rachel Cooper (PPR), George Green, Gavin Hyman, David Smith, Bronislaw Szerszynski and Martin Widden.

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