Title: External evaluation of the administration
1External evaluation of the administration
- University of Helsinki
- 2004 - 2005
Marika Tammeaid / November 2005
2Contents
- Evaluation process
- Results and
- recommendations
- Management system
- and organisation
- of administrative work
3Evaluationprocess
- Appointment of the panel by rector
- Systematic evaluation of research and teaching
- Considerable administrative reforms already
accoplished - Idea-group, Steering group and Follow-up group
- Broad engagement
- External evaluation panel
- Almost national
- Knowledge and experience from administrative
organisations, private sector and public
administration evaluation - From Summer 2004 until Summer 2005
4Members of the evaluation panel
- Jorma Sipilä, Chancellor, University of Tampere,
chair - Tarmo Haavisto, Head of Division, Lund University
- Timo Jauhiainen, Quality Manager, Finland Post
Group - Pekka Pajakkala, Research Manager, Technical
Research Centre - Eila Rekilä, Emerita Director of Administration,
University of Vaasa - Pirjo Ståhle, Professor of Knowledge Management,
Lappeenranta University of Technology - Eero Suominen, Managing Director, Consultant
- Matti Vartiainen, Professor of Work Psychology,
Helsinki University of Technology - Ilkka Virtanen, Professor of Operations Research
and Management Science, Dean, University of
Vaasa - Marika Tammeaid, Liaison Manager, Department for
Strategic Planning, secretary
5Objectives of the evaluation
- The appropriate size, organisation and function
of the administration - The improvement of the conditions of leadership
- The streamlining of service processes and the
improvement of the quality of services - The development and maintenance of the
professional skills and know-how of the
administrative staff - The appropriate division of labour between the
teaching staff and the administrative staff - Increasing transparency and cooperation
6Suggestions for improvement in the following
areas of administration
- Preparation and implementation of strategies,
-
- operations management processes,
- budgeting,
- human resources management,
- research administration and
- facilities management.
7ORGANISATIONAL STRUCTURE
17.10.2005 eh/mt
8FACULTY STRUCTURE 17.10.2005
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9Sources of information
- Administrative documents
- Written self-assesment reports of 16 units
- November 2004
- Site visits and inteviews
- January 2005
- Interviews of university top management
- Januari March 2005
10Process inside the university
- Report wrinting, January May 2005
- 27 recommendations
- Report was submitted to Rector Ilkka Niiniluoto
on 19 May 2005 - Internal and external publicity
- Submitted to consistorium in june
- Public debate in the Assembly Hall in August
- Realisation group began its work in June 2005
11Results
- The nature of the administrative tasks requires a
well-defined organisation. - However, at the University of Helsinki the
organisation of administration does not function
this way. - Many tasks are decentralised to a level where the
administrative staff of departments and
institutes cannot cope with all their demanding
responsibilities. Staff members also often lack
proper administration-oriented education and
support from their superiors.
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13The administration of the University must be
examined as a single entity
- The central, faculty and departmental
administration must comply with practices. - The responsibility for overall administrative
development and the improvement of the competence
of all staff groups must be clearly defined at
the organisational level and in individual units. - Administrative duties must be performed in units
that have the adequate expertise. The
administration must have its own internal
management system that guarantees the
availability of expertise, further training, and
back-up personnel.
14Difficult leadership
- Leadership comes about case-specifically,
- the University as an institution does not support
structures of durable management. - The recruitment of academic directors has proven
to be difficult. - short terms of management,
- personal sacrifice?
- scarcity of benefits of becoming an academic
director - no systematic training
- However, academic leadership is imperative
15Can one person handle it all?
- As an organisation, the University must
acknowledge the fact - that it cannot manage research, teaching and
administration with the present system of
academic leadership. - The processes of managing academic activities,
research projects and administration all differ
from each other and require various different
kinds of expertise.
16Up-dating administrative ICT-systems
- Administrative ICT-systems must produce essential
information for the management of core processes,
so that the units will not need, for example,
unit-specific bookkeeping in order to obtain
information on their finances or personnel.
- The parameters must be accessible,
- up-to-date and easily available and comparable,
and - everyone must be aware of them.
17Research management
- Until now, external funding has not enjoyed the
status it deserves in the administration or
management of the University - no knowledge of the number of external projects
or - the basic resources (administrative services,
facilities and equipment) used. - Projects funded externally are not usually
included in the budget, and the departments do
not calculate the total overheads of the projects
when examining departmental income and
expenditure. - The existence of these projects is noted and
their progress is monitored, but they are not
managed or given objectives.
18Professional research management needed
- Too few staff members capable of launching or
managing a major research project (across
departmental and faculty boundaries) and of
supervising the research staff. - Competence in managing research projects must be
purposefully improved.
- Administrative work must be balanced among the
basic tasks of the University. - More flexible procedures in financial
administration of the external money - Stronger over-head policy, transparent and
consistent monitoring of the actual costs
19The successful management of human resources is
vital for the University
- The University must monitor the well-being of its
staff - react to the findings and
- determine clear leadership responsibilities,
- improve the permanent crisis management resources
of its faculties and departments - Administration must acknowledge the international
aspects be able to provide services to its
multilingual and multicultural community. - Effective administration must not be undermined
by hiring staff on the basis of criteria
unrelated to the duties of vacant positions.
20The volume, expenses and timing of the
development work must be under control
- The University must guarantee adequate time for
research and teaching - A special duty of the Administration Office is to
act as a filter protecting and supporting the
implementation of the Universitys core duties in
the units (the government should do the same) - Action programmes must always clearly specify who
bears responsibility for the implementation of
the relevant actions and for the reporting of
results. - The development measures must support the core
functions, namely research, teaching and societal
interaction. - The expenses should be calculated.
21Is it possible that a high-quality research
university is badly organised?
- A broad understanding of problems exists
- Administration is moderately resourced
- Very good units exist
- The departments and institutes of the University
that are the most dependent on external resources
are also the most self-aware units regarding the
effects of the arrangements of their
administration. - Good administrative practices are in use, but
they are not spread.
22The improvement of the internal performance of an
organisation must be included in the strategy.
Goal-oriented steering of the internal
performance of administration supports the
implementation and cost-effectiveness of the
Universitys basic duties.
23Streamlined administration and good leadership?
- Requires that all actors are willing to see
administration not only as a necessity but also
as a resource. -
- Good governance can be maintained and enjoyed
only if the University is able to seriously
inspect and rethink the preconditions of its
activities. - Administration forms a collective whole,
requiring joint rules and appreciating the work
of others.