ISR COVID-19 Blog

Page 25

edgehill.ac.uk/ISR

New Realities? New Culture? What next for HR post Covid-19? 7th May 2020 Sonya Clarkson is no doubt that changes inflicted T here on the workforce, practically overnight, are unprecedented. Whilst this shows what can be achieved when there is a collective purpose, as ‘people experts’ we know the toll this takes on some individuals, those who struggle to adapt, especially when it is brought in at such a significant pace as we have seen to date. Technology has never played such an important part in all our lives and I observe how a real sense of urgency has jolted us all to get up to speed with online capabilities. This stands us in good stead to embrace the possibilities technology can bring to improving student experience, realising efficiencies and releasing capacity to enhance teaching and learning going forward. The prospect of online lectures seems more realistic than one would have thought even just two months ago! The transfer of the office/lecture theatre to the home has prompted more flexible and agile mindsets as well as raising important questions around the need for a 9-5pm Monday to Friday presence in a defined work place. This provides potential for downsizing estate, improving career progression through the availability of true work/life balance opportunities and flexibility having a positive impact on engagement and productivity levels as staff take ownership of their time (and wellbeing). However, the personal sacrifices that staff are having to make over a prolonged period of time, such as turning their homes into workplaces, long working hours, and in some cases not being able to take annual leave, cannot be underestimated. In the longer term, the relationship with the employer is bound to feel strained as a result, with resilience low and potential feelings of resentment, loss and exhaustion.

So, as we start to consider the slow easing of lockdown, it is less a return to normal and more likely an adjustment to a new reality. The increasing trend nationally of mental health issues will be exacerbated, with a workforce that is exhausted, suffered personal loss of family and colleagues, and experienced traumatic and distressing events. I am proud to have seen the value of HR highlighted during this crisis, but HR is more than an emergency service. It can make a difference in helping organisations to pick up the pieces of Covid-19 and emerge from this even stronger. As a result, there are number of elements to plan. HR needs to start asking some key initial questions to help us practically prepare for life post-Covid 19, recognising all aspects of our working practices will be affected – particularly our health and wellbeing provision, our approach to staff engagement and re-alignment of HR policies to the new working practices. It will also be important for staff to see organisations appropriately honouring those staff that have lost their lives and celebrating local heroes to rebuild morale across the workforce. We will need to consciously rebuild the culture – likely a different one – post Covid 19. Sonya Clarkson is HR Director at Edge Hill University.

25


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Returning to ‘normal’: Better or Worse for those with special need and/or disabilities?

2min
page 51

To the Moon and Back: Summing up the ISR/EHU Covid-19 Blog

10min
pages 53-56

Staging Apocalypse: Endgame, by Samuel Beckett

2min
page 52

Covid-19: Liberation from the Clock (for some

2min
page 50

Listen up! Schools have always been much more than places for Education

2min
page 49

Experts at Bereavement?

2min
page 48

Covid-19, Higher Education and the rise of video-based learning

2min
page 47

Streaming and CGI? The future of TV and Film after COVID-19?

2min
page 44

Can the new Labour Leadership Rise to the Challenge?

2min
page 46

Creative Resilience and going OFFLine during Lockdown

2min
page 45

Covid-19: Hollywood’s Next 9/11?

2min
page 43

Towards a ‘Next Normal’: HE and Reflection at Speed

2min
page 42

Epidemics: A View from Italy

2min
page 41

Covid-19: An Opportunity for Nature and Outdoor Education

2min
page 40

Emerging from Lockdown: Shared Experience as we (re)commune together

2min
page 39

How to Stay ‘Engaged’ at a Distance: Youth Work and COVID-19

2min
page 35

Everyday Creativity: Why the Arts need to Rethink What Matters

2min
page 38

Coming Out” and Covid-19

2min
page 36

Flattening the Acceptance Curve: Transitioning a more Inclusive World after COVID-19

2min
page 34

Pandemics, Prohibition and the Past: COVID-19 in Historical Perspective

2min
page 33

We Make the Road by Walking: A ‘Kinder’ Society after COVID-19?

2min
page 37

Constructing a ‘New Normal’: What Changes when it’s all over?

2min
page 32

The Road to Nowhere? Tourism after Covid-19

3min
page 31

COVID-19 and Child Abuse in Institutions

2min
page 30

Citizen Science to tackle Poor Air Quality post COVID-19

3min
page 29

Images in the Head; the Pervasiveness of Dreaming in Isolation

3min
page 28

Dig where you stand: Histories of where you live in a Global Pandemic

2min
page 27

Blitzed by Myths: The ‘Spirit’ of the Blitz and COVID-19

3min
page 26

New Realities? New Culture? What next for HR post Covid-19?

2min
page 25

Temporary or Fixed? Changing Business Models in a Global Pandemic

2min
page 24

An Outcome of the Coronavirus Outbreak

2min
page 23

Re-imagining a ‘Good Society’ in the wake of COVID-19

2min
page 22

Lockdown and Educational Inequality: Some Reflections

2min
page 21

Coronavirus and Calais refugees: How can you stay safe without soap?

2min
page 20

Wither Fake News: COVID-19 and its Impact on Journalism

2min
page 19

COVID-19: Lockdown when you are Locked Up

2min
page 17

Ministry without the Ministered: Reflections from a Vicar in Lockdown

2min
page 16

In Troubled Times, Philosophy CAN Help

2min
page 18

COVID-19 & the (dis)proportionate case for lockdown

3min
page 14

Who Needs Society? Authoritarianism and COVID-19

2min
page 15

What future for the politician’s ‘Direct Address’?

4min
page 12

COVID-19 lockdown: What are the implications for individual freedom?

2min
page 13

Fingerprints, DNA and Policing Powers during COVID-19

3min
page 9

What is the new ‘normal’? Autism, Routine and Covid-19

3min
page 11

Lockdown 2020 – The Impact on Social Care

1min
page 8

Hannah Arendt: A Theorist for Troubled Times

2min
page 10

Back in the USSR: C-19 and the Normalising of a Surveillance State

2min
page 3

The Arts and COVID-19: A Time of Danger and Opportunity?

2min
page 7

Where is the Balance – Democracy in the Lockdown

4min
page 6

Is it kindness that matters?

7min
pages 4-5
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.