By Sharron Hannon
shannon@uga.edu
Last August, Arnett
Mace, senior vice president for academic affairs and provost, charged
an ad hoc faculty task force to review the university’s promotion
and tenure guidelines and make any changes that might improve the
process. Revised guidelines have now been sent to University Council
and a vote is anticipated at the final Council meeting of the year
on April 22, 2004.
Columns talked to Mike Wells, law
professor and chair of the Faculty Affairs Committee, and Bonnie
Yegidis, associate vice president for academic affairs and associate
provost, about the revised guidelines.
Columns: What was your particular charge
from Dr. Mace?
Yegidis: He asked our group to focus on making the promotion
and tenure process clearer and fairer and, in particular, to make
the third-year review substantive.
Columns: Who was involved in revising
the guidelines?
Yegidis: The task force included faculty who are broadly
representative of the university, as well as members of the Faculty
Affairs Committee.
Wells: Because I’ve served
on the Faculty Affairs Committee for several years, I’ve been
involved with previous efforts to revise the promotion and tenure
guidelines, so that background helped. This current effort is really
the culmination of a long-term project that began more than three
years ago. A number of people on the Faculty Affairs Committee,
as well as our current task force, spent a lot of time working on
this.
Columns: Can you summarize some of the
key points of the revised guidelines?
Yegidis: The guidelines are built on several foundational
principles, one of which is the principle of “flow”—which
assures that a candidate’s application receives the fullest
and fairest review possible. Under this principle, each dossier
moves forward to the next level of review regardless of whether
the lower-level review was positive or negative. Review committees
beyond the promotion and tenure unit may affirm the previous recommendation
or may identify substantive or procedural errors that require the
recommendation to be reversed or reconsidered.
Columns: What would it take to overturn
a decision made at a previous level of review?
Wells: The guidelines emphasize that faculty members within
a discipline are in the best position to judge their colleagues’
achievements. So the guidelines require a 60 percent majority to
overturn judgments of the promotion and tenure unit or school/college
committees.
Columns: What are some other important
points?
Yegidis: We recommended a change in structure of the University
Appeals Committee so that it is comprised solely of senior faculty
selected by the University Council. The committee is chaired by
the provost, who is a non-voting member.
What isn’t different is the university-level review, which
is conducted by the area review committees, organized according
to general discipline. The composition of those committees and their
role remains basically the same.
Columns: What are you doing to get feedback
on the revised guidelines?
Wells: We presented the revisions to the Faculty Affairs
Committee in February and they voted to move the document forward
for review by the University Council. The Executive Committee put
the new guidelines on the March council agenda as an information
item and they’ve also been posted online on the University
Council Web site (http://uc.reg.uga.edu/uc.nsf).
Also on the Web site is an outline of the major changes between
the current and proposed promotion and tenure guidelines, and my
e-mail address (mwells@uga.edu)
is listed for feedback.
Bonnie and I will be holding an open forum on April 7, 2004, from
2 to 3:30 p.m. in room 350 of the Student Learning Center. We hope
other members of the task force also will be there.
Columns: What happens next if the University
Council approves the revised guidelines?
Yegidis: The revised guidelines would go into effect in the
spring of 2005 for promotion and tenure considerations during the
2005–2006 academic year.
That’s to give promotion and tenure units several months to
write their own unit-specific promotion and tenure criteria in line
with the revised guidelines.
Columns: Are you optimistic that the
revised guidelines will be approved?
Wells: We’ve had the benefit of comments received on
earlier drafts. Our task force this year worked hard to address
previously expressed concerns. We think we’ve identified a
number of ways the current guidelines, which date back to 1995,
could be improved and have made those improvements.
We hope people will read the revised guidelines and, if they have
concerns or questions, raise them with us prior to the April 22,
2004, University Council meeting. |
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