Does Your School Really Know What You Do?: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Does Your School Really Know What You Do?:

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instructional designers. instructional media specialists. courseware ... Become familiar with efforts of national organizations such as EDUCAUSE and ARL ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Does Your School Really Know What You Do?:


1

Does Your School Really Know What You Do?
  • Classification and Compensation of Campus NMC
    Staff
  • David Herrington, Princeton UniversityAndrew
    Bonamici, University of Oregon

2
Outline
  • Overview of job categories and classification
    systems
  • Multimedia positions in the campus context
  • Tips for working with your Human Resources office
  • Using administrative processes to educate campus
    leaders and market multimedia services

3
Overview of job categories and classification
systems
  • Classification system
  • Used to organize and define different types of
    work when organizations have large numbers of
    diverse jobs.
  • A "matrix of relative value" used as a basis for
    establishing and maintaining pay rates
  • Classification specification
  • generic document that describes the level of work
    to be performed and not the specific content of
    any given job.
  • Position
  • a single job defined by a written position
    description in which the unique assigned duties
    are clearly delineated.

4
Overview of job categories and classification
systems (continued)
  • Analysis of a position for allocation to a class
  • based on the preponderance of assigned duties
  • Incumbent neutral e.g. based on the role and
    function of the position within the department
    rather than the knowledge, skills, and abilities
    of the current incumbent
  • Relies on "benchmark" jobs, comparable positions,
    and precedent, in addition to classification
    specifications
  • Source http//hr.uoregon.edu/classification-compe
    nsation/class-facts.html

5
Example Oregon University System
  • Broad categories
  • Officers of Instruction (Teaching/Research
    Faculty
  • Tenured tenure-track faculty with academic rank
  • Officers of Administration (Administrative
    Faculty)
  • with academic rank includes librarians and some
    media professionals with positions requiring
    graduate degrees
  • without rank includes supervisors, managers, and
    some media professionals with positions that do
    not require graduate degrees
  • Union-represented support staff
  • Union-represented Graduate Teaching Fellows
  • Student assistants

6
Example Oregon University System (continued)
  • Formal classification system for
    union-represented support staff includes over 300
    classes. Examples relevant to media multimedia
    field include
  • Information Technology Consultant 1 - 3
  • Graphic Artist 1 3
  • Videographer 1-2

7
Multimedia positions in the campus context
  • Range of positions will vary by broad category as
    well as formal classification. Examples (UO)
  • Senior leaders faculty or administrative
    employees with appointments comparable to
    department heads or program directors.
  • First NMC director at the UO also served as a
    Tenured Professor of Fine Arts
  • Current Director is a major department head in
    the Library.
  • Project Managers reporting to the Director
    recruited as managerial staff due to supervisory
    responsibilities
  • Non-supervisory production staff,
    administrative assistants are recruited as
    classified staff represented by bargaining unit

8
Tips for working with your campus Human Resources
office
  • Educate the HR staff
  • NMC programs are relatively new, and the
    technologies and activities changing rapidly
  • Campus HR professionals have broad knowledge of
    many fields and are quick studies in learning
    about new ones
  • HR staff do not have a practitioners deep
    understanding of specific technologies and
    processes involved in multimedia development
  • Provide adequate detail in draft position
    descriptions
  • Provide a tour and demonstration!
  • A Story

9
Tips for working with your campus Human Resources
office (continued)
  • Help identify relevant comparator positions.
  • What other campus units employ staff with campus
    with multimedia duties? Examples
  • graphic artists
  • webmasters
  • instructional designers
  • instructional media specialists
  • courseware support staff

10
Tips for working with your campus Human Resources
office (continued)
  • Places to look for comparators
  • schools, colleges, academic departments
  • instructional media centers
  • computing centers
  • libraries
  • teaching effectiveness instructional
    development programs
  • administrative units such as campus publications
    or PR/Marketing

11
Tips for working with your campus Human Resources
office (continued)
  • Understand the HR Officers perspective regarding
    the external job market.
  • In order to maintain a consistent and equitable
    campuswide employment system, HR needs to base
    classification decisions on internal comparators
  • Due to entrenched low salaries in the educational
    sector, this can create challenging recruitment
    problems
  • This problem is not unique to multimedia groups
    but is shared by libraries, IT units, and a
    number of academic disciplines
  • If low salaries are creating severe recruitment
    problems, document them
  • Comparative data from higher education is crucial
    (for example, Davids NMC salary survey)

12
Tips for working with your campus Human Resources
office (continued)
  • Raise staffing issues as an agenda item in
    campuswide educational technology committees and
    other relevant interest groups. Invite HR staff
    to these sessions.
  • Stay in touch with HR staff regarding collective
    bargaining schedules, re-writes of classification
    series, etc. Offer to review class specs.

13
Using administrative processes to educate campus
leaders and market multimedia services
  • Use campus listservs to raise questions and
    solicit involvement of other media, technology,
    and information professionals on campus
  • Administrative processes provide opportunities to
    describe current projects and activities to
    campus leaders and administrators - this can
    allow for some subtle marketing.
  • Become familiar with efforts of national
    organizations such as EDUCAUSE and ARL to raise
    awareness of salary issues and recruitment/retenti
    on challenges in higher education

14
Wrap-Up
  • Ask campus HR staff for an overview of your
    institutions classification system
  • Learn as much as possible about the job
    categories and classifications most relevant to
    NMC services and related activities
  • Be sensitive to campus context when designing
    positions and establishing salaries.
  • Administrative processes can create opportunities
    to inform campus leaders about NMC services --
    take advantage of them.
  • Collaborate with other media, technology, and
    information professionals to identify and resolve
    shared concerns about classification,
    compensation, recruitment, and retention

15
Contact Information
  • Andrew R. Bonamici
  • Associate University Librarian for Administrative
    Services
  • 115D Knight Library, University of Oregon
  • Eugene, Oregon 97403-1299 USA
  • bonamici_at_oregon.uoregon.edu
  • voice (541) 346-2682
  • fax (541) 346-3485
  • http//libweb.uoregon.edu
  • http//nmc.uoregon.edu/
  • Slideshow URL
  • http//darkwing.uoregon.edu/bonamici/NMC/NMC2001.
    html
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