Title: Faculty Mentoring
1Faculty Mentoring
- David Notkin, Eve RiskinUtah State University
Department Heads Workshop - May 9, 2005
2In 30 minutes, please cover
- Mentoring new faculty
- Mentoring mid-level faculty
3The whole story on new faculty
- Hire absolutely first-rate people
- Measure your units (and your own) success on
their success - Treat them honestly and clearly
- Its not just the Heads job but it falls on you
4First-rate Hires
- If somebody isnt smart, creative, and dedicated,
its tough for them to succeed - Simple mantra Excel in research and education
(and later, in service)
5Be HonestIn informal situations, in annual
reviews, and in direct and indirect dealings
- I can make an offer to Sally Jones this year at
a higher salary than yours. I think this is a
good thing for the department in many ways. I
promise to fix this inversion as soon as I can. - This year were nominating Jane and Michael for
Sloan Fellowships, but not you. We think youre
a strong candidate but would benefit from waiting
for a year. Barring major changes, we expect to
nominate you next year. - Weve decided to pass on moving your promotion
forward this year. Were thrilled with your
research, but you havent been showing sufficient
effectiveness at teaching. Well work with you
in a couple of dimensions, including (a) sitting
down for an extensive discussion of what we
perceive isnt going right, (b) helping you get
help, and (c) working with you to hand-pick
teaching assignments for next year that will let
you focus on showing improvement.
6Some Challenges
- Faculty orientation is too much, too fast needs
later reinforcement - You need to stay in close touch, especially the
first year - Drop by their offices every 2-3 months just to
say, Hey, whats up? - Have an open door/email policy
7Quick Faculty Starters (Boice, Felder, and Brent)
- Reduced time spent on course prep (average of
1-1.5 hours per lecture hour after their first
semester) - Spent more time on scholarly writing (3 or more
hours per week) - Integrated their research into undergrad classes
- Discussed teaching with colleagues
- Sought advice from colleagues (average of 4
hours/week) - Allowed active student participation in lecture
8Specific Ways to Mentor
- Be able to give their elevator pitch
- Promote them to funding agencies
- Read and comment on their proposals, e.g. NSF
CAREER proposals - Give them copies of successful proposals from the
same program
9Specific Ways to Mentor (2)
- Awards
- What awards are they eligible for?
- Are they legitimate candidates?
- Who is on the selection committee?
- If you see another department in your field
having great success, call their chair and ask
how they do it. - Help them plan pre-tenure tours 1-2 years in
advance - Prepare their promotion dossier with deep thought
10Specific Ways to Mentor (3)
- Give teaching relief at the outset
- Allow them to repeat courses
- Involve them in strategic planning
- Take them to lunch to show them the ropes
- Help them establish key research collaborations
(group proposals)
11Bottom line
- Mentoring is an essential part of the future of
your department - Your department will be limited in where it can
go if you dont mentor your people
12In 30 minutes, please cover
- Mentoring new faculty
- Mentoring mid-level faculty
13Expectations for Promotion to Professor
- Achieve promise that was strongly indicated when
tenured - Demonstrate leadership in some key dimension(s)
- Have a record that is twice that of a tenure
case
14Signs that Someone is Stuck
- The field changes, but the person cant
transition to new areas - The person becomes discouraged and gives up
- Can almost never say Its me instead places
blame externally (on the field, on the
department, etc.)
15Some Possible Red Flags
- Little or no research/publications
- Few or zero graduated Ph.D.s
- Lousy funding and/or teaching
- No current students or funding and no plans to
change - Negative slope
16Some observations
- Was this a hiring problem?
- Did you hire for the person or the field?
- Its a career development issue, not a promotion
issue - Its hard to distinguish problems with the
persons ideas from problems with the persons
presentation of those ideas
17Some ideas (1)
- Seed money to encourage risk, allowing people to
transform their research - Help them compete with new agencies, e.g. NIH
workshops for engineers - Workshop on promotion-to-full
18Some ideas (2)
- Match stalled people with people who went from
cold to hot - Match stalled people with co-PIs in and out of
the department - Work on presentation of their ideas
- Encourage temporary focus on education, e.g.
publish in education journals - Internal sabbaticals
19One Pitfall
- Sometimes these stalled faculty are not pleasant
to deal with - They often become increasingly marginalized
- Its definitely tougher mentoring people you
dont like - But theres real value in helping them
- Their improvement is of significant value to the
department - A 10 improvement lasting 20 years is huge
20Important high-level advice
- The absolutely best time to discuss this topic is
immediately upon tenure - They are open to constructive suggestions
- But its easy to forget people at this stage
- They are doing great anyway.
- I can take it easy on at least one faculty
review and evaluation this year. - Doing this can be a big mistake, so keep
mentoring early Associate Professors!
21Mentoring Full Professors
- Help them remain engaged in their research and
teaching - Dont over-use them for service
- Reward them for contributions to the dept.
- Help them develop their leadership skills by
putting them in positions of leadership - Treat them well someday they could become YOUR
DEPARTMENT HEAD!