Year
2022Credit points
10Campus offering
No unit offerings are currently available for this unitIncompatible
HRMG213 Sustainable Staffing and Remuneration
Teaching organisation
150 hours over a twelve-week semester or equivalent study period
Unit rationale, description and aim
The development and implementation of sustainable staffing, remuneration and benefits strategies is fundamental to the competitiveness of organisations and a key role for human resource practitioners. This unit focuses on the challenges faced by organisations in terms of staffing, remuneration and benefits for retaining their workforce. The starting point of the unit examines the internal and external environment faced by today's organisations in terms of domestic and global competitiveness, technological change and industrial transition. Likewise, the unit examines the central elements of a strategic approach to contemporary staffing, remuneration and benefits that attempts to manage the workforce to effectively and efficiently deal with the complexities and strategic priorities of modern organisational environments.
The aim of this unit is to provide students with an analytical skills of how organisations design, implement, and review (update) staffing, remuneration and benefits practices and systems in a complex, dynamic world. The unit also reinforces the acquisition of practical skills in the key HR processes of job analysis and design, selection tools and practices, and remuneration systems that are necessary to support the achievement of organisational outcomes.
Learning outcomes
To successfully complete this unit you will be able to demonstrate you have achieved the learning outcomes (LO) detailed in the below table.
Each outcome is informed by a number of graduate capabilities (GC) to ensure your work in this, and every unit, is part of a larger goal of graduating from ACU with the attributes of insight, empathy, imagination and impact.
Explore the graduate capabilities.
On successful completion of this unit, students should be able to:
LO1 - Explain the key concepts and theories of staffing, remunerations and benefits, and how they aid businesses to meet their strategic objectives (GA5)
LO2 - Design effective and efficient staffing processes, remuneration and benefits strategies, incorporating job analysis and design, recruitment techniques, selection tools, remunerations and benefits systems while also ensuring the human dignity and the legal obligations for these processes (GA3, GA5)
LO3 - Examine the impact of a well designed and implemented staffing, remuneration and benefits strategies and practices that take into accounts workers’ rights, ethical perspectives and quality of work life to add value for organisations and society (GA1, GA5)
LO4 - Critically evaluate contemporary staffing, remuneration and benefits practices with sustainability characteristics for different positions and roles within organisations (GA4, GA5)
LO5 - Apply effective written and oral communication skills in the context of staffing and remuneration (GA5, GA9)
Graduate attributes
GA1 - Demonstrate respect for the dignity of each individual and for human diversity
GA3 - Apply ethical perspectives in informed decision making
GA4 - Think critically and reflectively
GA5 - Demonstrate values, knowledge, skills and attitudes appropriate to the discipline and/or profession
GA9 - Demonstrate effective communication in oral and written English language and visual media
Content
Topics in this unit build on the introductory coverage in the HRMG200 unit.
Topics will include:
- Introduction to Recruitment, approaches and sources
- Analysing and designing Jobs: Traditional and emerging, Job analysis, developing position and role descriptions
- Recruitment Techniques and practices: Legal, ethical and diversity issues, traditional recruitment methods, contemporary and innovative recruitment methods, developing recruitment ads, and employer branding
- Employee selection aligned to business strategy
- Employment offers, employment conditions, and onboarding/induction processes
- Introduction to employee remuneration and benefits
- Theories of remuneration and benefits
- Analysing and designing remuneration and benefits systems
- Contemporary practices and trends in staffing, remuneration and benefits systems with sustainability characteristics
Learning and teaching strategy and rationale
Blended mode
This unit takes an enquiry based learning approach to guide students in the development of knowledge associated with recruitment, remuneration and benefits. Students can explore the knowledge base underpinning the management of contemporary staffing remuneration and benefits strategies and practices in a series of on campus workshops. These workshops are designed to support students to actively participate in the development of this knowledge both individually and in groups. By participating in these workshops, students will systematically develop their understanding of the critical aspects of management of staffing, remuneration and benefits strategies and how to design solutions to challenges faced by HR practitioners.. This unit takes an experiential approach to support students in developing the skills required to effectively manage staffing, remuneration and benefits with sustainability characteristics by sharing stories and insights and reflecting on experiences. This approach is designed to interest students who prefer to learn within a social environment and builds in expert support for HR skills development.
ACU Online
This unit uses an active learning approach to support students in the exploration of knowledge essential to the discipline. Students are provided with choice and variety in how they learn. Students are encouraged to contribute to asynchronous weekly discussions. Active learning opportunities provide students with opportunities to practice and apply their learning in situations similar to their future professions. Activities encourage students to bring their own examples to demonstrate understanding, application and engage constructively with their peers. Students receive regular and timely feedback on their learning, which includes information on their progress.
Assessment strategy and rationale
In order to pass this unit, students are required to complete and submit three graded assessment tasks and achieve an aggregate mark of at least 50%. Marking will be in accordance with a rubric specifically developed to measure your level of achievement of the learning outcomes for each item of assessment. You will also be awarded a final grade which signifies your overall achievement in the unit. The assessment strategy for this unit allows students to sequentially develop their knowledge and skills of staffing, remuneration and benefits of organisations to the point where students can develop a sustainable recruitment and selection strategy for a case organisation. To develop this level of capability, students will demonstrate their knowledge of sustainable staffing, remuneration and benefits in an analytical report, further develop their understanding by undertaking a remuneration related case study and then apply their knowledge and understanding by presenting recommendations in the final assessment task.
Overview of assessments
Blended mode;
Brief Description of Kind and Purpose of Assessment Tasks | Weighting | Learning Outcomes | Graduate Attributes |
---|---|---|---|
Assessment Task 1: e Recruitment Proposal This assessment task consists of a recruitment and selection 1200-word proposal to a company considering e recruitment. Utilising the knowledge gained in the first five weeks of this unit the proposal must include steps involved in the process of job analysis, advertising, recruitment and proposed solution considering possible unethical issues that can arise in e Recruitment. Submission Type: Individual Assessment Method: Proposal (Recruitment &Selection) Artefact: Written Proposal | 30% | LO1, LO2 | GA3, GA5 |
Assessment Task 2: Remuneration Presentation This assessment task consists of a remuneration presentation of 15 minutes. This task requires students collectively to analyse, examine, reflect, and respond to a real-world scenario and apply remuneration knowledge and skills developed in the unit. Furthermore, students need to consider ethical perspectives when evaluating relevant staffing and remuneration theories and their impact on organisations and society. Individual group members are required to complete Peer Evaluation Tool provided. Submission Type: Group Assessment Method: Presentation Artefact: Oral/Visual Media Presentation | 30% | LO3, LO4 | GA1, GA4, GA5 |
Assessment Task 3: Case Study Report This assessment consists of a comprehensive case study analysis, which will be completed individually. The aim of the assessment is for students to apply and integrate the frameworks, models, and concepts related to recruitment and remuneration by analysing a case study and provide a 1750-word report. Students will be asked to reflect on the learnings from this unit and determine the most ethical and professionally sound recruitment and remuneration application for the organisational sustainable outcome. Submission Type: Individual Assessment Method: Analytical Report Artefact: Written Report | 40% | LO4, LO5 | GA4, GA5, GA9 |
Online
Brief Description of Kind and Purpose of Assessment Tasks | Weighting | Learning Outcomes | Graduate Attributes |
---|---|---|---|
Assessment Task 1: e Recruitment Proposal This assessment task consists of a recruitment and selection 1200-word proposal to a company considering e recruitment. Utilising the knowledge gained in the first five weeks of this unit the proposal must include steps involved in the process of job analysis, advertising, recruitment, and proposed solution considering possible unethical issues that can arise in e Recruitment decisions. Submission Type: Individual Assessment Method: Proposal (Recruitment &Selection) Artefact: Written Proposal | 30% | LO1, LO2 | GA3, GA5 |
Assessment Task 2: Remuneration Presentation This assessment task consists of remuneration presentation of 10 minutes Video with 5PPs. This task requires students independently to analyse, examine, reflect, and respond to a real-world scenario and apply remuneration knowledge and skills developed in the unit. Furthermore, students need to consider ethical perspectives, workers’ wright, and human dignity when evaluating relevant staffing and remuneration theories and their impact on organisations and common good. Submission Type: Individual Assessment Method: Presentation Artefact: Video Presentation/PPs | 30% | LO3, LO4 | GA1, GA4, GA5 |
Assessment Task 3: Case Study Report This assessment consists of a comprehensive case study analysis, which will be completed individually. The aim of the assessment is for students to apply and integrate the frameworks, models, and concepts related to recruitment and remuneration by analysing a case study and provide a 1750-word report. Students will be asked to reflect on the learnings from this unit and determine the most ethical and professionally sound recruitment and remuneration application for the organisational sustainable outcome. Submission Type: Individual Assessment Method: Analytical Report Artefact: Written Report. | 40% | LO4, LO5 | GA4, GA5, GA9 |
Representative texts and references
Brymer, R. A., Chadwick, C., Hill, A. D., & Molloy, J. C., 2019. Pipelines and their portfolios: A more holistic view of human capital heterogeneity via firm-wide employee sourcing. Academy of Management Perspectives, 33(2), 207-233.
dos Santos, J. R., & Pedro, L., 2020. Reinventing Human Resource Management to Increase Organizational Efficacy. In Entrepreneurship and Organizational Innovation (pp. 23-36). Springer, Cham.
Goldstein, H.W., Pulakos, E.D., Passmore, J. and Semedo, C., 2017. The Psychology of Employee Recruitment, Selection and Retention. The Wiley Blackwell Handbook of the Psychology of Recruitment, Selection and Employee Retention, John Wiley and Sons Chichester.
Jewell, D. O., Jewell, S. F., & Kaufman, B. E., 2020. Designing and implementing high-performance work systems: Insights from consulting practice for academic researchers. Human Resource Management Review, 100749.
Kanapathippillai, S., Mihret, D., & Johl, S., 2019. Remuneration Committees and Attribution Disclosures on Remuneration Decisions: Australian Evidence. Journal of Business Ethics, 158(4), 1063-1082.
Kaufman, B. E., Barry, M., Wilkinson, A., & Gomez, R., 2020. Alternative balanced scorecards built from paradigm models in strategic HRM and employment/industrial relations and used to measure the state of employment relations and HR system performance across US workplaces. Human Resource Management Journal.
Mariappanadar, S., 2020. Characteristics of Sustainable HRM System and Practices for Implementing Corporate Sustainability. In Sita Vanka, Madasu Bhaskara Rao, Swati Singh,
Martocchio, J., 2017 Strategic Compensation: A Human Resource Management Approach, 9th Edition Pearson.
Nankervis, AR Baird, M Coffey, J& Shields, J., 2017, Human resource management: strategy and practice, 9th Asia-Pacific edition, South Melbourne, Vic. Cengage Learning
Park, T. Y., & Shaw, J. D., 2017. Compensation Systems and Pay Practices in Asia. In Routledge Handbook of Human Resource Management in Asia (pp. 201-221). Routledge.
Rahman, S., & Singh, T., 2019. Dimensions of employee satisfaction with compensation: scale development and validation. International Journal of Business Excellence, 19(2), 223-242.
Roberson, L., Buonocore, F. and Yearwood, S.M., 2017. Hiring for Diversity: The Challenges Faced by American and European Companies in Employee Selection. In Corporate Social Responsibility and Diversity Management (pp. 151-171). Springer International Publishing.
Academic Journals
The list of academic journals below, although not exhaustive, may be of assistance in preparing assignments:
- Academy of Management Journal
- Asia Pacific Journal of Human Resources
- Harvard Business Review
- HR Monthly
- Human Resource Management (US)
- Human Resource Management Journal (UK)
- Human Resource Planning (US)
- International Journal of Human Resource Management
- Journal of Industrial Relations
- Personnel Journal (US)
- Personnel Management
- Work, Employment and Society