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Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Senior University Lecturer salary - shocked!

453 replies

salary · 16/10/2024 11:17

I've just seen an advert for the above position, at a nearby Uni. The salary is anywhere between £39k and £64k, based on whether it is filled by a grade 7, 8 or 9 person.

I am genuinely shocked at how low this salary is, for such a high profile role. Do they get huge bonuses or something?

OP posts:
Thread gallery
5
MasterBeth · 16/10/2024 12:02

Precipice · 16/10/2024 11:45

University salaries are set on the same bands across departments. Your paper to gold specialist is likely to be making extra money consulting and may be able to progress faster and higher through getting lots of funding for their research.

This is such an academics' answer! Consulting! Promotion!

If you are looking to make extra money as the world expert in changing paper to gold, how about changing some paper into some gold?

SerenityNowSerenityNow · 16/10/2024 12:03

Journeyintomelody · 16/10/2024 11:53

This was 2 years ago. Yes he had other responsibilities, however this individual did not engage. He had to attend meetings (attended via teams with camera off), 1:1s with students with 10 students for 10 minutes once a term. A few other admin type flasks (only a couple of hours of work a week). He had been there so long he got away with blue murder, oh and ten years of sexually abusing young girls...

Perhaps he isn't the best person to use as an example. I know of lecturers who have fully engaged with additional responsibilities, from open days, to mentor schemes etc etc.

I do think the job comes with a great deal of flexibility.

Also especially when teaching undergrads, the level of expertise required really isn't that high. Their phD often is in a field completely unrelated. If they were working in a very niche area I would understand, but teaching a 101 economics course, introduction to philosophy, or French grammar isn't exactly 'niche'.

Has he still got a job? Becuase at my institution anyone like that left during the last two years as part of various redundancy packages.

People like him make me very angry. He has clearly abused his power in more ways than one.

Comefromaway · 16/10/2024 12:04

My husband has never even earnt that much. He isn't senior though.

YourLastNerve · 16/10/2024 12:04

Dh uncle is a prof. He seems to actually work very few hours. He lectures about 4 hours a week on stuff he's done for donkeys years, he doesnt prep a lot. He then does 3 smaller group things, supervises a couple of dissertations (these seem to take little time - couple of hours a term) and has 2 phd candidates. He tinkers around writing his own material in between and gets royalties from book sales. He takes very long vacations

Bushmillsbabe · 16/10/2024 12:05

Visiting lecturers get paid a decent hourly rate - my husband guest lectures and gets around £80 per hour for a few hours each month on top of his full time job.

The uni's do sometimes take the piss though and pay him got less hours than he does, keep him waiting around, take forever to pay him, so it's not really worth it.

booisbooming · 16/10/2024 12:05

eqpi4t2hbsnktd · 16/10/2024 11:58

I get £50 per hour to lecture in art.

I also got this (£48/hour) to lecture in Art at a post-92 last year. You had to work 2 unpaid hours for every paid one, so £16/hour really.

Bringbackspring · 16/10/2024 12:06

I have a PhD and have worked in Universities for 20 years. My family have always assumed I must be loaded despite me never saying that or suggesting I am well off. My salary is decent (£45k ish), plenty to live on while not being extravagant. I'm not a lecturer but I am in the academic/research job family. There are no bonuses. My current Uni has a reward scheme in which you might get a small amount as a voucher or bank transfer if someone nominates you for doing outstanding work.

The perks lie in the other benefits. The culture in my current workplace is good, flexible working is normal, annual leave allowance is great, it's quite inclusive of people from all walks of life, sick pay and maternity pay is excellent. Opportunities for blue sky thinking are vast. I feel like the work I do is genuinely worthwhile and I'm not just slaving away to make millionaires and billionaires even richer. Some things are worth more than money, so as long as I have enough to live comfortably on I can't see me leaving for more money.

KimberleyClark · 16/10/2024 12:06

BarbaraHoward · 16/10/2024 11:58

Ok, the lecturers in your world clearly dress differently to the lecturers in mine. Grin

(I'm a terribly dressed academic.)

My DH (retired academic) always used to joke that there was a negative dress code at his university!

ttcat37 · 16/10/2024 12:06

@BarbaraHoward @CastleTower Perhaps based on my own uni lecturers and a friend who, although isn’t super smart, always looks very clean and has great quality clothes and hand knits. I did go to an arts uni so maybe the proportion of lecturers floating around in Toast and corduroy was higher than some other unis.

Journeyintomelody · 16/10/2024 12:06

SerenityNowSerenityNow · 16/10/2024 12:03

Has he still got a job? Becuase at my institution anyone like that left during the last two years as part of various redundancy packages.

People like him make me very angry. He has clearly abused his power in more ways than one.

He has been under investigation for nearly a year, but still employed by the university. It is all coming out now, so we will wait and see what happens.

OnlyOneNotOnWeightLossDrugsInTheVillage · 16/10/2024 12:07

I think it's a labour of love.

Strawberrysherbets · 16/10/2024 12:07

There’s fuck all to be made in academia. I have a doctorate and have managed to engineer myself into a corporate role with excellent remuneration. But it was hard. And I had to leave a lot of my own personal ideals and ethics at the door.

SerafinasGoose · 16/10/2024 12:08

I'm only surprised there are any posts in HE being advertised at all. The whole system is in free fall and I'm aware compulsory redundancy is coming down the track in many universities.

Pay rises have been derisory and given inflation have amounted to real-term pay cuts for around the past fifteen years.

Lecturers are the lowest-paid in Europe and earn a pittance compared with colleagues in the US. They're also treated extremely poorly.

booisbooming · 16/10/2024 12:08

Er, out of interest OP, what do you do?

Sincerely,
Works in the arts and has never earned over £45k despite two top degrees and 15 years experience

YellowAsteroid · 16/10/2024 12:08

Ha ha ha ha Bonuses!!!!!!

I'm a fairly senior professor and it's taken me around 35 years of 60 hour weeks, and several big (ie over half a million) research grants to get to a salary almost within the magic "6 figures" And I remember when I was promoted to Senior Lecturer, my salary was the same as the salary my friend's PA received (City law firm).

It used to be that the Senior Lecturer mid-range salary tracked against a backbench MP's salary, as a rough guide. Now it's about a half to two-thirds.

We pay risible salaries to some of the best researchers and teachers in the world.

Have a look at entry-level Lecturer posts: they are a bit more than the salary a newly qualified school teacher gets, but a new university Lecturer will have several more degrees, publications, expertise & teaching experience than a school teacher.

This is why academics have been participating in a long drawn out attempt to get their salaries somewhere equivalent to other highly qualified expert professionals.

XelaM · 16/10/2024 12:09

SweetSakura · 16/10/2024 11:20

I don't understand this question. I didn't think anyone was under the impression academia was well paid?

It is in the US

GCAcademic · 16/10/2024 12:09

SerenityNowSerenityNow · 16/10/2024 11:26

This is the salary! And definitely no bonuses!!

Most lecturing staff will be grade 7 or 8 as grade 9 tends to be for staff who have either been promoted to Reader or who have some leadership responsibility.

Readers are at Grade 8 where I work, only Professors are Grade 9. And once you're a Professor it's almost impossible to get any salary increments; only 1 out of 10 of them in my university are given an annual increment, they're all pitted against each other in the annual review process.

NoBinturongsHereMate · 16/10/2024 12:10

🤣Bonuses?!?🤣

No. Nor are there overtime payments.

As for workload? My DP teaches undergrads and MA students and supervises PhDs - lectures, seminars, marking exams and essays, endless meetings about marking and plagiarism questions (a lot of the marking is at weekends, marking and exam boards take up a big chunk of the summer 'break') and course conent; he is the academic advisor for 700 students; and he's also expected to meet research and funding targets, go to conferences, write books and papers, take part in public engagement activities, go to open days (usually Saturdays) ...

Incidentally, those books - which if they are academic texbooks can easily sell for £50+ each - he gets paid about £100 for. Or he can take twice the value of books instead of the cash.

Lottemarine · 16/10/2024 12:11

No, for the amount of study involved, university lecturers are truely one of the lowest paid and yet they are one of the hardest jobs to get.

YellowAsteroid · 16/10/2024 12:12

Autumnweddingguest · 16/10/2024 11:27

Any idea how to dissuade our kids from academia. DS1 just can't resist it. He knows (from me!) the pay is shit, the hours are endless, the expertise is disgracefully undervalued and taken for granted by the non academic admin bosses. But he doesn't want to do anything else.

Well, depending on his field & discipline, he'll be dissuaded by it taking 5-7 years for him to land even a fixed-term contract. We're losing a generation of excellent smart scholars & researchers.

KimberleyClark · 16/10/2024 12:12

XelaM · 16/10/2024 12:09

It is in the US

And you get called Professor regardless of whether you actually have a Chair!

Swainery · 16/10/2024 12:12

Autumnweddingguest · 16/10/2024 11:25

Oh I have noticed students and their parents assume we are very well paid. My job looks so glamorous - loads of students tell me they want to do what I do. I start by brightly telling them my pay. They change their minds in about 10 seconds.

My perception is that academics traditionally gave off an old money vibe and perhaps that’s where the assumption has come from.

DoctorDoctor76 · 16/10/2024 12:12

salary · 16/10/2024 11:34

I assumed they earned a fortune. I left school with 5 crap o'levels, obviously didn't go to Uni, but I work for myself and I earn more than this, even at the grade 9 level. I'm floored!

Academic salaries are dire in the UK. I’m in Australia and they are much better.

GinForBreakfast · 16/10/2024 12:14

Bonuses? Hard lol! I'm not saying that being a senior lecturer is the equivalent of working down a mine but it's akin to working in any other low-paid public sector org. No bonuses, workload increasing year-on-year, do more with less and don't expect any praise or recognition.

mitogoshigg · 16/10/2024 12:16

Better than it used to be. To be honest it was fine outside of London bringing up a family, but we didn't take the offer of a position in London because the uplift was only £6k