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crjuprofsteve
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« on: October 30, 2007, 08:09:56 PM » |
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I'm a tenured associate professor at a master's comprehensive university. This year, I'm chairing my department's promotion committee. It hasn't been too long since I was up for tenure and promotion, myself.
At my institution, the Faculty Handbook gives scant guidance on tenure and promotion criteria, beyond indicating that a terminal degree is required, as is satisfactory performance in teaching, research, and service. Departments then set more specific internal criteria pertinent to their disciplines and departmental expectations.
The Faculty Handbook is likewise vague about preparation of the tenure and promotion application. The Handbook indicates that the application should a statement justifying tenure/promotion, copies of yearly evaluations from the chair, a summary of student evaluatins, a CV, and whatever other supporting material the candidate chooses to include. Department guidelines provide no further guidance.
Needless to say, tenure and promotion applications here are quite hefty, containing a lot of materials. But, there is no uniform standard for what to be included, what order to put it in, how long it should be, etc. This results in packages that can differ dramatically from one another.
Having said that...here's my question. Does your university, college, or department have a set format for tenure and promotion applications? Either way, do you think it's better to allow the candidate to develop their own package, or to have more firm guidelines? I'm thinking I'm going to raise this same discussion in my personnel committee.
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