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Institutional Transformation Workshop August 27, 2010

NSF ADVANCE. Institutional Transformation Workshop August 27, 2010. Alex Tan WSU Faculty Diversity Fellow. FACULTY DIVERSITY AT WASHINGTON STATE UNIVERSITY. HIRING DILEMMA (adapted from Hong & Page, 2004).

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Institutional Transformation Workshop August 27, 2010

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  1. NSF ADVANCE Institutional Transformation Workshop August 27, 2010 Alex Tan WSU Faculty Diversity Fellow

  2. FACULTY DIVERSITY AT WASHINGTON STATE UNIVERSITY

  3. HIRING DILEMMA (adapted from Hong & Page, 2004) • An organization wants to hire people to develop a high mileage gasoline engine. • It administers a test to 1,000 applicants that measures gasoline engine design abilities.

  4. HIRING DILEMMA continued… • The applicants score from 60% to 90%. • Should the organization hire: • 1) the person with the highest score • 2) 20 people with the next 20 highest scores • 3) 20 people randomly selected from the applicant pool

  5. HIRING DILEMMA continued… • Hong and Page (2004): • 2) is better than 1) • 3) is better than 2) under certain conditions WHY? Functional Diversity: “differences in how people encode problems and attempt to solve them.”

  6. I. Institutional Mission Central to WSU mission as a public land grant research institution

  7. II. Diversity Defined • Inclusiveness of thought, cultures, • life experiences and perspectives • Manifested, among other indicators, in a faculty, staff, and student body that represents all of the populations that the university serves including, but not limited to, the diversity in race, ethnicity and gender.

  8. (WSU Strategic Plan to Diversify the Faculty, 2008, 2010; also, Report of the University of California President’s Task Force on Faculty Diversity, 2006.)

  9. III. The Case for Faculty Diversity:American Association for the Advancement of Science with the American Association of American Universities, “Navigating a Complex Landscape to Foster Greater Faculty and Student Diversity in Higher Education”, 2010.

  10. III. The Case for Faculty Diversity continued… • “Students learn more and the workforce is more productive in a broadly diverse setting “ (p. 12). • “Students are better equipped to function and thrive in an increasingly multi-cultural world” (p. 12). • “Faculty are more productive and creative teachers and researchers when they work with diverse colleagues and students” (p.13).

  11. III. The Case for Faculty Diversity continued… • “Diversity ... seems to lead to the broadest spectrum of questions about any posed problem … would seem a prudent strategy for the development of innovation in thinking of students in addition to enhancing each student’s mastery of existing science (p. 14).

  12. IV. Faculty Diversity at WSU cont… • Racial minority faculty at WSU was 11 % • in2007 (Institutional Research), last among peer institutions which are also AAU members • Among peer institutions which are also members of AAU, average percent racial minority faculty in 2007 was 16.5% (Chronicle of Higher Education, Sept. 28, 2007.)

  13. IV. Faculty Diversity at WSU cont… • At WSU, 25% of faculty did not report • race/ethnicity in 2009, compared to 1.07 % in WSU legislative peer institutions • (Institutional Research) • At WSU, U.S. racial minorities were underutilized (percent on faculty minus percent national availability) in 53 % of schools and departments. Women were underutilized in 43% of schools and departments. These percentages include fulltime tenured, tenure track, clinical and instructor-rank faculty (Center for Human Rights, now Office for Equal Opportunity, 2007.)

  14. V. Best Practices for Diversifying the Faculty (American Association for the Advancement of Science, American Association of American Universities, 2010.) • WHAT MIGHT WORK AT WSU?

  15. Accountability: senior leadership • and accountability: • 1) The provost holds deans accountable for • demonstrable efforts at diversifying their • faculties. • 2) Deans hold their department chairs • accountable. • 3) Deans and the provost develop review • criteria which could include recruitment outreach and programs for and success at retaining faculty.

  16. Search Procedures: effective • outreach • 1) Deans establish diversity committees in • their colleges to identify target areas for • for outreach; develop recruitment • strategies; develop retention strategies. • 2) Department chairs appoint diversity • liaisons to search committees. Diversity liaisons are tenured faculty; will ensure that searches are fairly conducted and inclusive search practices are followed.

  17. Search Procedures: effective • outreach continued… • 3) Search committee chairs, members and • diversity liaisons complete search • training as a requirement for • commencement of a search. • 4) Search committees will develop a search • plan that includes substantial outreach aimed at traditional candidates as well as those from other groups that are not well represented in the institution.

  18. Search Procedures: effective • outreach continued… • 5) The department chair, dean and the • provost’s office approve the search plan before the search begins. • 6) The search committee documents its • compliance with the outreach methods in the approved search plan.

  19. Search Procedures: effective • outreach continued… • 7) Before closing an applicant pool • (i.e., those submitting applications), the department chair, dean and the provost’s office certify that the search committee’s outreach efforts have complied with the search plan.

  20. Search Procedures: effective outreach cont… • 8) If all reasonable possible outreach has • not been undertaken as identified in the • approved search plan, and/or if it is determined that reasonable targeted outreach should have been undertaken that was not identified in the approved search plan, and the pool of applicants is not broadly diverse, including persons from underrepresented groups then the department chair, dean and provost can require additional targeted outreach to broaden the applicant pool before the applicant pool is closed and the potential candidate pool is finalized and interviews commence.

  21. Search Procedures: effective • outreach continued… • 9) The Provost’s Office, the Office of Equal • Opportunity, Human Resource Services and Institutional Research will provide assistance as needed to department chairs, deans, search committees and diversity committees.

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