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What is tenure?. Keystone for academic freedomEssential for safeguarding the right of free expression and for encouraging risk-taking inquiry at the frontiers of knowledgeFaculty are free to teach, conduct research, and provide service without fear of reprisal Preamble Faculty Tenure, March 200
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1. Demystifying the Promotion & Tenure Process Arlene Carney
Vice Provost for Faculty and Academic Affairs
2. What is tenure? Keystone for academic freedom
Essential for safeguarding the right of free expression and for encouraging risk-taking inquiry at the frontiers of knowledge
Faculty are free to teach, conduct research, and provide service without fear of reprisal Preamble Faculty Tenure, March 2001
3. What is tenure? Tenure carries responsibility.
Tenured faculty are accountable to the university for their responsibility for teaching, research, and service. Preamble Faculty Tenure, March 2001
4. What is tenure? Indefinite employment at the University
Job security
Key personnel decision with long-term financial consequences
Merit award
Protection of academic freedom
5. Regents Policy on Faculty Tenure Initially adopted in 1945
Last change was in 2007
Previous version approved in 2001
Accompanying document – Procedures for Reviewing the Performance of Tenure-Track Faculty
New document – Procedures for Reviewing Candidates for Tenure and/or Promotion: Tenure-Track and Tenured Faculty
6. Criteria for Tenure Section 7.11 of the Tenure Code- general statement of criteria for the entire university
Section 7.12 of the Tenure Code- refers to the department criteria for tenure and promotion in a unit
7. Section 7.11 of the Tenure Code(2001) Basis for awarding indefinite tenure:- “achievements of an individual have demonstrated the individual’s potential to continue to contribute significantly to the mission of the University and to its programs of teaching, research, and service”
8. Section 7.11 of the Tenure Code(2007) Basis for awarding indefinite tenure:the determination that each has established and is likely to continue to develop a distinguished record of academic achievement that is the foundation for a national or international reputation or both.
9. Section 7.11 of the Tenure Code(2007) Qualitative evaluation of scholarly research or other creative work, teaching, or service
Primary emphasis on demonstrated scholarly or creative achievement and teaching effectiveness
Service alone not sufficient
10. Section 7.11 of the Tenure Code(2007) Take into account when applicable- interdisciplinary work- public engagement- international activities & initiatives- attention to questions of diversity- technology transfer- other special kinds of professional activity
11. Section 7.11 of the Tenure Code(2007) Strong promise of achieving rank of professor
Only modest service expected
12. Section 9.2 of the Tenure Code New section
Promotion to professor
Added substantially to already distinguished record
Established national or international reputation
Substantially more service expected
13. Section 7.12 of the Tenure Code Department statement of criteria for promotion and tenure
Must be shown to new faculty according to the tenure policy
Should reflect the values of the faculty for promotions and conferral of indefinite tenure
14. 7.12 Statement Indices & standards used to evaluate whether a candidate has met or exceeded criteria of section 7.11
Developed by the faculty of a unit
Approved by the Dean and the Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost (SVPP)
15. 7.12 Statement All 7.12 Statements are being revised across the University.
Approved by Provost’s office
16. Changes and You Tenure Code Interpretation 6- probationary and tenured faculty can choose the 7.12 statement by which they will be evaluated (old or new)- have one year from time the new 7.12 is approved- each faculty member will sign an agreement about the form to be used
17. Changes and You Probationary faculty can also choose 7.11 by which they will be evaluated depending upon their date of hire.
If hired after June 8, 2007, they are bound by the new Regents Policy on Faculty Tenure.
Once promoted to associate professor, bound by new section 9.2 for promotion to professor
18. Specific Criteria for Tenure Teaching
Research
Service
19. Teaching Effectiveness Evaluated in a variety of ways- student ratings- peer observation and evaluation- letters from students- teaching awards- curricular development- syllabi
20. Professional Distinction in Research, Scholarship, & Creative Work Peer-reviewed publications
Books
Scholarly presentations
Evidence of impact (citation index)
External funding from grants
National and international venues for artistic work
21. Service Professional association/offices and committees
Editorial boards of journals
University committees
Departmental committees
External community service
Faculty advisor
22. Your Tenure Case Probationary period – usually six years
Stop and start the tenure clock (Section 5.5) for childcare and for caregiver responsibilities
23. Section 5.5 of Faculty Tenure Extension of probationary service is allowed for one year at the request of the probationary faculty:- on the occasion of the birth of that faculty member’s child or adoptive/foster placement of a child with that faculty member
24. Section 5.5 of Faculty Tenure Extension of probationary service is allowed for one year at the request of the probationary faculty:- when the faculty member is a major caregiver for a family member who has an extended serious illness, injury, or debilitating condition (can use this no more than 2 times)
25. Section 5.5 of Faculty Tenure Extension of probationary service is allowed for one year at the request of the probationary faculty:- when the faculty member has an extended serious illness, injury, or debilitating condition
26. Section 5.5 of Faculty Tenure Extended the time window to make the request from 3 months to 12 months of the events giving rise to the claim
27. Stopping the Tenure Clock Form provided and available on line
Goes from the department chair to the senior vice chancellor
Available for both female and male faculty for all areas
28. Your Tenure Case Annual review of probationary faculty
Tenured faculty review your curriculum vitae and activity report
Annual conference with chair or head
Completion of Form 12
Sent to Dean and SVPP
29. Your Tenure Case Tenure decision may be made at any time.
A decision to terminate the appointment can be made at anytime.
30. Department Level: Dossier Preparation of CV- should be absolutely clear- should be accurate & complete- should be easy to follow
31. Department Level: Dossier Preparation of the dossier should begin with the completion of the terminal degree and the beginning of the probationary period.
Keep a record of all teaching, research, and service activities.
32. Dossier: Teaching Courses taught each semester and enrollment
Grade distributions/course evaluations/peer evaluation
Independent study courses
Undergraduate research experiences
33. Dossier: Research Maintain and update lists of articles, books, artistic projects, & other scholarly contributions
Keep reprints
List of articles or projects submitted and their progress
List of scholarly presentations
List of grants & outcomes
34. Dossier: Service Departmental
College or all-university
External committees
Professional associations
35. Components of the Dossier Curriculum Vitae
Teaching narrative
Research narrative
Service summary
Sometimes all three together in a personal statement
External letters
Teaching evaluations
36. Components of the Dossier Copies of all Form 12’s (Annual Reviews) for probationary faculty
Departmental evaluation
Chair’s/Head’s evaluation
College P & T Committee report
Letter from dean
37. Department Level: Dossier Research & teaching narratives- provide clear picture of yourself to any reader- think broadly- write clearly- avoid jargon
38. Department Level: Dossier Selection of external reviewers- number varies by department & campus- new Procedures document specifies how many reviewers are needed and their backgrounds- selection by both candidate & the department
39. Department Level: Dossier Selection of external reviewers- distinguished scholars in the field- peer institutions- individuals who will write evaluative letters- given enough time- have sufficient materials to evaluate
40. Department Level: Dossier Best practices:- dossier “caseworker”- mentoring or synopsis committee
41. Department Level: Dossier Provide information to the “caseworker” of the dossier- journals & publishers- scholarly & creative venues- conferences
42. Department Level: Dossier Provide information to the “caseworker” of the dossier - accurate list of scheduled & unscheduled teaching- teaching evaluations- teaching materials
43. Department Level: Dossier Finished dossier should be:- clear to the campus readers- complete according to instructions- provide an accurate picture of who you are
44. College level Each dean makes a recommendation to the provost about promotion and tenure.
Colleges differ in their processes.
45. Campus Level P & T committee- made up of senior faculty- across disciplines in the campus- make a recommendation to the senior vice chancellor and chancellor
46. Provost’s Office Review Each dossier is reviewed by several vice provosts.
SVPP reviews array of cases with particular emphasis on cases with negative votes or variance in voting.
47. Contact for Questions: Arlene CarneyVice Provost for Faculty and AcademicAffairs160C Morrill Hall626-9545carne005@umn.edu