1 / 14

A Journey through the Seas of Tenure, Permanent Status, and Promotion at the University of Florida

A Journey through the Seas of Tenure, Permanent Status, and Promotion at the University of Florida. 2012: Angel Kwolek-Folland, Associate Provost for Academic Affairs. Agenda. Introduce Provost Office role in University oversight of tenure, permanent status, & promotion process

davina
Download Presentation

A Journey through the Seas of Tenure, Permanent Status, and Promotion at the University of Florida

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Journey through the Seas of Tenure, Permanent Status, and Promotion at the University of Florida 2012: Angel Kwolek-Folland, Associate Provost for Academic Affairs

  2. Agenda • Introduce Provost Office role in University oversight of tenure, permanent status, & promotion process • Outline the University of Florida’s tenure, permanent status & promotion process • Provide sources for information • List contacts for questions

  3. University Oversight • Provost is Vice President for Academic Affairs – whole university, including IFAS and Health Science Center • Provost’s Office interprets and implements regulations and agreements related to promotion and tenure for the campus • Provides workshops and issues “Guidelines” each year for the promotion and tenure cycle • Manages the University-level review process • Associate Provost for Academic Affairs acts under direction of Provost to manage T&P process

  4. Observations • Every university that offers tenure or promotion has its own, distinct process that is a mix of: • Professional and disciplinary standards and practices • Institutional regulations and culture • Applicable state law and relevant collective bargaining agreements • UF’s process includes: • A dossier created by the candidate • Independent review at department, college, and university levels • Decisions by President and Board of Trustees

  5. Areas for Distinction • 3 Broad Categories for evaluation: • Teaching • Research • Service • Extension and clinical activities normally folded into teaching, research or service • Require “distinction”: • Two areas • Normally teaching & research • University, Department & College guidelines clarify expectations and “distinction”

  6. Timing of Candidacy • Mid-career review for tenure-accruing • You must be nominated for tenure or permanent status by beginning of last year of probationary period, although you may elect earlier consideration. • You can go forward “when ready.” • Consult with chair, faculty mentor(s), and others about your “readiness.” • If you want to put your case forward, your chair should do so if you are eligible for tenure, permanent status, and/or promotion.

  7. The Dossier’s Journey • April—June prior to cycle year solicitation of letters (you and chair) • Your Hands  preparation summer prior to cycle year • Department Faculty for Review and Vote  • Chair for Letter fall of cycle year • College Committee for Assessment  • Dean for Letter fall of cycle year • Academic Personnel Board spring of cycle year • President May approves promotion, recommends tenure/perm status • Board of Trustees  June approves tenure

  8. Academic Personnel Board • Advisory to President; recommends via consensus • 3 elected by Faculty Senate, 3 appointed + Vice President for Research; Associate Provost as Secretary • All tenured Professors or Distinguished Professors • Disciplinary representation • Meets January – May, 2 hours/week • ~240 cases/year includes all faculty titles; average dossier 60 pages • May address inquiries to dean, chair or candidate

  9. Communication • If, for any reason, questions arise at any point in the review process, you need to be available to respond. • You will know when your dossier goes to the college and APB because you will see your chair’s and dean’s letters. • After that, you may hear nothing until the President communicates the decisions to you in June.

  10. Scholarly Impact • Demonstrating scholarly impact • Expectations for tenure and promotion to associate professor are different in degree than for promotion to professor • Evaluators address different contexts: impact on department, college, university, national and/or international profession, discipline; teaching, research, service • “Translating” your work • Evidence of scholarly impact varies somewhat from discipline to discipline

  11. Tips for success • Identify your program, niche, or specialty – focus, then strive to be a national/international leader • Identify what constitutes excellence in your field (journals, grants, performance venues, conferences, books, teaching) and aim to be there • Set goals and mileposts—keep a stream of work flowing into the pipeline • Review the promotion, permanent status and tenure guidelines • Use your resources--colleagues, workshops, in-service training, mentors, leaders in your unit and college • Assignments– talk to your chair: effort recorded should accurately reflect your assignment

  12. On-Line Pilot: 2012-13 • UF is moving the “paperwork” and tracking of the promotion, tenure and permanent status process online – OPT. • Uses the common environment of myUFL • Groups using the system 2012-13: colleges of Agriculture, Dentistry, Fine Arts, Health & Human Performance, Journalism, Nursing, Pharmacy, & Vet Med, and Museum of Natural History • Anticipate whole campus in OPT by 2013-14 cycle

  13. Sources of Information • http://www.aa.ufl.edu/tenure/ for “Guidelines and Information Regarding the Tenure, Permanent Status and Promotion Process for 2010-11” • http://regulations.ufl.edu/ for UF Regulations on tenure and promotion process, permanent status, P.K. Yonge, and County Extension Faculty • http://medinfo.ufl.edu/faculty/faculty_programs for UF College of Medicine information, Handbook, and guidelines • http://personnel.ifas.ufl.edu/tenure.shtml for IFAS

  14. T&P Contacts • Your Chair or College Associate Dean • Angel Kwolek-Folland, Associate Provost and Secretary to the APB akf@aa.ufl.edu • Janet Malphurs, Assistant Director, Human Resources, Academic Personnel, jmmalph@ufl.edu • Marjory Kovacevic, Coordinator, Faculty Academic Programs, College of Medicine, marjoryk@ufl.edu • Mary Anne Morgan, Director, Human Resources, IFAS, marym@ufl.edu

More Related