‘Students were not being used as pawns’: The key take-aways from the UCU open meeting

The fight back against casual, insecure working conditions continues


The UCU hosted an open meeting on the evening of Thursday 12th October, arranged with the purpose of facilitating communication and building solidarity between Union members and Cambridge students after the end of the Marking and Assessment Boycott (MAB). The open meeting extended this conversation to the recent decision to end the proposed supervision boycott by the Justice for College Supervisors campaign (J4CS).

Hosted by Anne Alexander (CUCU Communications Officer) and Matthew Lloyd Roberts (UCU Postgrad Rep), the meeting gave an overview of the motivation behind the latest industrial action.

Here are the key take-aways from the meeting.

How did the Marking and Assessment Boycott constitute action short of a strike?

While for all intents and purposes, the boycott might have felt like a strike to students, Alexander clarified that “boycotting” members continued with certain duties, such as research and marking dissertations, and so it fell short of strike action.

Why were members boycotting in the first place?

Alexander said that UCU members were boycotting due to the intensity of pressure placed on them by the university, especially in the current cost of living crisis. Lloyd Roberts believed that those working for the university are “not paid at all well”, and are working under casual and insecure conditions. The recent Justice for College Supervisors campaign has been part of an attempt to fight back against the casualisation of higher education-sector jobs.

Does the UCU consider that the effects of the MAB, especially on finalists and international students, were proportionate to the motivation behind the strike?

This was a question which both Alexander and Lloyd Roberts were keen to answer. Alexander said that the blame for the MAB “dragging on” for so long lies solely with the employer, and emphasised that for a long time, the UCEA “absolutely stonewalled” the UCU and refused to make “any meaningful progress”. Alexander claimed that the UCEA consistently made decisions to maximise the damage that the MAB would have on students, and that UCU members were “enormously grateful” and “very humbled” for all the support they have received from students.

They both recognised the damaging effects of the MAB on students (finalists and international students in particular) but returned to the conclusion that there was a very simple solution in that the employer had the power to stop the dispute. They clarified that few UCU members believed back when the MAB began in April that it would have gone on for so long, and Lloyd Roberts drew a comparison to the recently-called-off J4CS campaign: Management agreed to meet some demands, the boycott was called off, and this Michaelmas supervisions are going ahead as normal.

What’s next for the J4CS campaign?

Lloyd Roberts explained that with the supervision boycott now called off, the UCU is in a phase of negotiation for a new supervision system beginning in 2024. In real terms, pay for college supervisors today is around 25 per cent lower than 2007 and the UCU are also trying to find a position on fairly compensating supervisors for the preparation time spent on supervisions.

What can students who want to support the UCU do to help?

Alexander explained that the marking deadline of the 16th October (as imposed by the university following the decision to end the MAB) is a completely arbitrary date, which the UCU was not consulted on. Alexander also claimed that she has heard of UCU members working until 1am in order to meet this “very artificial” deadline, with admin staff who are processing results placed under similar pressure.

Alexander suggested that students can raise this at a faculty level by writing a letter and asking others on your course to sign in support.

Feature Image Credits: Felix Armstrong

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