= Premium Content
Log In
|
Create a Free Account
|
Subscribe Now
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
Subscribe Today
Home
News
Opinion & Ideas
Facts & Figures
Blogs
Jobs
Advice
Forums
Events
Store
Forum Home
Help
Search
Login
Register
Chronicle Forums
Careers
Department Chairs and Deans
what if I don't want to be chair?
May 29, 2012, 07:39:12 AM
Welcome,
Guest
. Please
login
or
register
.
Remember Me
Login with your Chronicle username and password
News
:
Talk online
about your experiences as an adjunct, visiting assistant professor, postdoc, or other contract faculty member.
Pages:
1
[
2
]
« previous
next »
Print
Author
Topic: what if I don't want to be chair? (Read 9120 times)
couldbe
New member
Posts: 43
Re: what if I don't want to be chair?
«
Reply #15 on:
January 17, 2009, 11:05:06 PM »
Verbena's right, that I am kind of coming around to the idea. It's hard to separate the worry about the stress levels from what might be the reality. Were my previous stress-induced health problems exacerbated by other things going on in my life? Sure. Might I be ready to take on something big and, to me, scary? Sure. Am I better prepared to do so now than I was as a new assistant prof? Sure.
Might I end up with ulcers and a bunch of colleagues who hate me? Yeah.
Logged
nottooinlovewacademe
Department Chair
New member
Posts: 30
Re: what if I don't want to be chair?
«
Reply #16 on:
January 25, 2009, 09:38:00 PM »
Being chair is a learning experience, a hard one but also a rewarding one. What I have found out is that faculty who really want to be chairs are not the best chairs. Chairs who are aware that they are faculty temporarily in leadership positions do well as chairs, as a collaborative facilitator (or as herding cats). Go for it! Others deserve the break and you will find that besides being hard there are a lot of pluses about chairing a department. If you cannot stand it, your first job will be to get a line or recruit someone else to do it. Some folks will not like you as chair and others will praise you but you will also discover another dimension of the department and the university as a whole.
Yes, even if you negotiate time to do your own work, you will be interrupted and there will be emergencies. You will also get to know things that you really do not want to know about others. But, I guess this is all part of academia.
Logged
deliajones
New member
Posts: 12
Re: what if I don't want to be chair?
«
Reply #17 on:
January 30, 2009, 02:59:48 PM »
I was chair for three years in a department where the chairmanship rotates every two-three years. It IS a hard job, but it was rewarding; I got some changes implemented that I had wanted to see for fifteen years and they're still working out well. If chairmanships revolve fairly frequently, you end up with a lot of former chairs who understand how thankless the job is and don't give you a lot of Sh**.
BTW, to EVERY oral request, say ,"Please email it to me." Then only take care of those requests that you get via email. Unless your department has three or four members, you can't remember those things people say to you on the way to class anyway.
Logged
losemygrip
Not Very
Distinguished Senior Member
Posts: 1,589
Re: what if I don't want to be chair?
«
Reply #18 on:
February 13, 2009, 03:52:38 PM »
It can only stress you out as much as you let it. Remember, their worst fear is that you'll resign as chair and one of THEM will have to do it. So you always have the upper hand with the faculty. The same club works to a lesser extent with the administration (except the administrators with personality disorders). Your colleagues probably chose you because you're probably going to be good at it. Don't let it freak you out; you'll be fine.
I was made chair after just three years while still untenured, basically because I was organized and knew what I wanted (mostly the first). It all worked out, and I've basically become a professional chair since then. (You couldn't do that in all departments--mine was small and unusually congenial.)
Logged
Pages:
1
[
2
]
Print
« previous
next »
Jump to:
Please select a destination:
-----------------------------
News & Opinion
-----------------------------
=> Discuss
Chronicle
Articles
-----------------------------
Cafe
-----------------------------
=> Meet and Greet
=> Tech Talk for Befuddled Academics
=> Conferences and Academic Travel
=> We Speak Volumes
=> Questions, Comments?
===> Frequently Asked Questions
=> Asked and Answered
===> Great Debates
-----------------------------
Careers
-----------------------------
=> Job-Seeking Experiences
===> The Two-Body Problem
=> The Interview Process
=> Balancing Work and Life
===> Health Issues on the Job
=> On the Money
=> In the Classroom
===> Online Teaching
=> Research Questions
=> Working as a Postdoc
=> The Nontenure Track
=> The Tenure Track
=> Mid-Career
=> Retiring From Academe
=> Grad-School Life
=> Diversity in the Workplace
=> Leaving Academe
=> Department Chairs and Deans
=> The Administrative Track
=> Working Abroad
===> Academics in the UK
===> Academics in the Middle East
-----------------------------
Special Topics
-----------------------------
=> Katrina, Rita, Wilma & Irene
=> Academic Libraries
=> School & College
Loading...
Copyright 2012. All Rights reserved
The Chronicle of Higher Education
1255 Twenty-Third St, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20037