posted on 2024-05-28, 21:00authored byAnita Olds, Susan Hopkins, Jo Lisciandro, Angela Jones, Juliette Subramaniam, Marguerite Westacott, Ana LarsenAna Larsen, Rebecca Sturniolo-Baker, Helen Scobie
The COVID-19 pandemic introduced new tensions and pressures for universities. While students and staff already experienced time pressures in competitive neoliberalised economies, these strains accelerated during the pandemic. The aim of this autoethnography study was to capture the lived experience of eight practitioners working in teaching, leadership and professional practice within the field of enabling education, across sixAustralian institutions between 2020–2021. The problem of ‘time’ emerged as a dominant theme. Without adequate time to balance work and life, sustaining personal and collective wellbeing became precarious. This paper engages with ‘precarity’ (Butler 2004, 2012) as manifested in workplace anxiety, stress and insecurity experienced by enabling education practitioners. It endeavours totethertheselivedexperiencestothetemporalitiesofthedigitalneoliberaluniversity(Bennett&Burke,2018),particularlythroughAdam’s(1995)conceptoftheinequitabletimeeconomyanditsdiscipliningworkplace‘machinetime’whichisalways‘runningonandout’(Adam1995,p.52)attheexpenseofmarginalisedworkers. Despite such challenges, the researcher/participants emergedpassionate about making a difference to the lives of their students, many of whom are from non-traditional and equity backgrounds. The autoethnographic process itself fostered a new sense of solidarity, resilience and agency.