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Best Practices in Evaluating Faculty and Staff

Best Practices in Evaluating Faculty and Staff. New Administrators Orientation, August 2, 2019. Fatma Mili , Dean, CCI Lori McMahon, AP, AABP. Definitions. Diagnostic: offers a baseline Formative: developmental Summative: measuring against criteria established in advance.

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Best Practices in Evaluating Faculty and Staff

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  1. Best Practices in Evaluating Faculty and Staff New Administrators Orientation, August 2, 2019 Fatma Mili, Dean, CCI Lori McMahon, AP, AABP

  2. Definitions • Diagnostic: offers a baseline • Formative: developmental • Summative: measuring against criteria established in advance

  3. Faculty Development(works for staff as well) • A faculty member’s career is an arc: different kinds of professional development are needed at different points in an academic career. • Not all faculty are the same. Each will have different interests, needs, and cultural backgrounds -- even those who are of similar generations and in the same discipline. • The different generations of faculty hires, as groups, differ from each other. • Cultural diversity and inclusion is an essential consideration. • Chairs should review Annual Review expectations and template for the review with new hires within the first month of the fall semester. • Chairs should meet at least annually with assistant professors to communicate promotion expectations.

  4. Best Practices • Evaluation is a shared responsibility with mutual accountability between employee and supervisor • Follow university policies, procedures and timelines • Clearly communicate to every employee in advance • Evaluate according to established criteria • Focus on observable, measurable behaviors • Make judgments, don’t just summarize • Employees--all categories--should provide a self-assessment, linked to previously-determined goals • Professional development: align individual, unit goals • Submit evaluations on-time, plan ahead for each phase

  5. Face-to-face FeedbackShare where you are on the Continuum • Sometimes part of the formal documented evaluation process, sometimes not • May be more frequent than written evaluations • Encourages productive two-way conversations • Mix positive reinforcement with discussion of areas to approve/by when – give actionable feedback • Be careful what message is being delivered and what message is being heard • Body language and tone matters Informal Formal

  6. Written, Annual Evaluations • Staff and faculty should be provided an opportunity for a self assessment • Evaluation should be tied to goals • Is a formal record, often summative • Mix of quantitative and qualitative • Should be constructive (tone, balance) • Less-nuanced than face-to-face feedback

  7. Faculty development, tenure, promotion • It starts with search and hiring. We hire for potential • We are partners in professional development • Mentoring team • Goal setting • Acculturation, Inclusion • Support • Accountability

  8. Tenure Track Faculty • High stakes --Clear expectations • Frequent and multiple formal and informal feedback • RPT criteria • They are all similar • They are all different • Frequent feedback, annual review– disambiguate, give actionable expectations

  9. Faculty Annual Evaluations • Should be a departmental responsibility: chair and tenured faculty can be an effective team • Evaluate according to departmental RPT criteria and timeline • Usually retrospective • Sometimes formative-summative: document what the purpose is (how does this relate to promotion and tenure?) • Note responsiveness to previous evaluations • Offer praise and recognition • List concrete examples for improvement/by when • Set new goals (observable, measurable; PD)

  10. Reappointment,Promotion and Tenure,Promotion • Review is summative • Usually prospective • Process must be transparent • Peer review

  11. Faculty Evaluations--RPT • Decisions should be consistent • What are the various outcomes? • How do you handle a negative review? • What is the role of faculty leaders? • What is the role of the chair?

  12. Promotion to Full Professor:Further Considerations • How is this promotion different from the promotion to associate professor? • How do you take account of the different pathways? • How do the different pathways affect the external reviewers chosen?

  13. Lecturers / Teaching Professors(really, All Non-Tenure Track) • What are the requirements of the position? • What are career progression opportunities in your college? • What is the difference between reappointment at the same rank or promotion to the next? • What does peer review mean for this rank? • How can you guarantee adequate governance rights?

  14. Staff Evaluations: EHRA NF and SHRA Late STAFF Evaluation submissions have consequences -- Staff evaluations not fully submitted by the deadline may disqualify the employee from being eligible for any Annual Raise Process (ARP), or a Legislative Increase (salary and/or bonus leave).

  15. EHRA Staff Evaluations: Due July 31st • Annual evaluation, always retrospective and summative • Now required to use “Niner Stakes” model • May be written letter or use HR Template • Scale of 1-7 ratings; auto scores a final “overall” rating: Not Meeting Expectations Meeting Expectations Exceeding Expectations • Should acknowledge self-assessment elements • Employee/Supervisor discussion is preferred • Employee must acknowledge in system; then goes to Supervisor to submit to “next level approver”; then it goes to HR as “final/complete”

  16. Annual Evaluations (SHRA Staff)“Niner Stakes”– Due May 30th • Formative feedback anytime, enter in system as needed citing “where it resides on continuum” • Annual evaluation, always retrospective and summative • Institutional (50%) and Individual Goals (50%) • April: Self evaluations submitted • Discuss, Set new goals (SMART model) as year-to-year link • 2nd-3rd Week May: Supervisor submits to Next-level Reviewer • Note responsiveness to previous evaluations • Offer praise and recognition for growth • List concrete, actionable improvements needed, if any • 2-3 Individual Goals (% of each totals 50%) • 3rd-4th week of May: Employee “Acknowledges”; Supervisor Submits for Next-Level Review, then finally submitted to HR

  17. SHRA Institutional Goals (50%) • Pre-set, Clear Definitions in System • Institutional goals establish shared baseline, continuity between all SHRA staff roles • Supervisor determines % (weight) between: • Expertise • Accountability • Customer Oriented • Team Oriented • Compliance & Integrity • Supervision (2 or more direct reports)

  18. 3 Rating Levels, per Goal: • Not Meeting Expectations • Meeting Expectations • Exceeding Expectations • Supervisors not required to provide comments as feedback if employee is meeting or exceeding expectations; however, it is best to do so in ”not meeting’ or ‘exceeding’

  19. SHRA Staff: Sample Individual Goal

  20. PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT Alignment: Self, team/unit, college, division, institution, profession • EXPIERENTIAL LEARNING • 52% • Job Rotations • New Program Role / Lead • Special Project Assignment • Functional Exposure • Task Force Assignment • SMART GOAL(S) • OUTCOMES –Long term impact • TRAINING • & EDUCATION • 21% • Degree or Mastery Courses (certificates, etc.) • Managerial Leadership • Development Program • Business Unit/Function-specific Training • Technology Proficiency • RELATIONSHIPS • & FEEDBACK • 27% • 360-degree Assessment • Coaching • Career or Contribution Discussions • Development Planning • One-on-One Leadership/Management Networking

  21. QUESTIONS?

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