Title: Faculty%20Development%20in%20the%20US:%20Selection%20
1Faculty Development in the USSelection
Retention and the Faculty Life Cycle
US-China Computer Science Leadership Summit
Debra Richardson University of California,
Irvine Valerie Taylor Texas AM University
2Faculty Recruitment
- The top US universities are competing for the
best and brightest new PhDs and also the
distinguished scholars in the discipline - Faculty selected based on the expectation that
they will succeed in being promoted through the
ranks - Faculty Statistics in research universities
(PhD-granting) (according to CRA Taulbee Survey) - Total faculty sizes continue to grow at a rate of
3 during 2004-05 - 85 of faculty hires for 2004-05 were new PhDs
3Faculty Losses
- Of 5,962 faculty at research universities , 213
faculty left in 2004-05, a loss of only 3.7 - Faculty Losses
- Died 8
- Retired 56
- Took Nonacademic Position 39
- Took Academic Position Elsewhere 61
- Changed to Part-Time 16
- Other 25
- Unknown 8
- Less than .04 transfer among universities
4Faculty Diversity and Equity
- Most universities in the U.S. focus on increasing
diversity of the faculty ranks - Current blend of faculty in research universities
(also according to CRA Taulbee Survey) - 13 women
- 20 Asian
- 6 non-resident alien
- 0.03 URM African-American, Native American,
Hispanic - Equitable hiring and advancement of gender and
ethnic minorities - Requires institutional transformation and a
change in culture
5Challenges in Transforming Culture
- Eliminating sub rosa hiring (behind the scenes)
and promoting practices of the old guard - (in the U.S. we call this the old boys network)
- Overcoming perceived issue of availability
(lack thereof) in narrow disciplines - Training Deans and Chairs to utilize best
practices to achieve diversity and equity - Encourage departments to search more broadly
- Compensate for gender differences in negotiation
styles and self-promotion
Maintaining an institutional force that notices
points of weakness and takes action
6How to transform what matters?
- Climate Change requires leadership
- Chair and Dean must encourage effective practices
in recruitment, advancement and retention - For women and minorities, critical mass is
important and difficult initially - Workshop series for chairs and emerging leaders
- Equity advisors as faculty assistants to dean to
seek out and ensure best practices are followed - participate in recruitment process, approve
search committees, advertising plan final
recruitment - implement faculty development programs
- investigate inequities that leadership might miss
- tailored to Computer Science is important
7Recruitment Best Practices
- Devote significant investment in the hiring of
new faculty who will succeed! - Best way to hire the best faculty is to conduct a
broadly targeted/defined search - Career partner program
- Partners of women faculty (in US) are more likely
to be faculty members - Requests for new faculty provisions must address
show commitment to diversity and equity
8Faculty Retention
- Critical to the success of a department
- Its much more expensive to bring in a new
faculty member than retain a good one - Activities important for faculty retention
- Faculty mentoring - especially junior faculty but
everyone - Providing a top research environment, and
rewarding research activities - Providing an environment in which good teaching
and service can be accomplished without
negatively impacting research - Promoting faculty via awards, professorships,
chairs
9Faculty Mentoring
- From assistant professor through full professor
- Programs especially for junior faculty
- New faculty orientation
- One-on-one mentoring for all junior faculty
- Acclimate new faculty to department and
university culture - Provide feedback on papers and proposals
- Help them get involved with professional service
- Sometimes useful to have one person in the
department as well as a faculty member outside
the department - Strategic planning review panels by senior
faculty - New faculty research symposium to introduce new
faculty to established faculty
10Environment
- Good research and teaching requires recruitment
of excellent students - Both graduate and undergraduate students
- Equipment space needs are critical for both,
especially research - Encourage and facilitate multi-disciplinary
discussions - Collaborations lead to some of the best research
- Provide seed funding for initiating new
collaborations
11Promote Faculty
- Value and appreciate faculty
- Announce awards to colleagues and students
- Nominate faculty for internal and external
(international) awards and recognitions - National Academies, ACM Fellow, IEEE Fellow, AAAI
Fellow, SIG awards, - Engage in development activities for endowments
for professorships chairs
12The Academic Ladder
- President/Chancellor
- Provost/EVC
- Dean
- Associate Dean
- Department Head/Chair
- Chaired Professor
- Distinguished Professor
Professor Associate Professor Assistant
Professor Postdoctoral Researcher Doctor of
Philosophy
tenure
13Reward Structure
- Strategies for SuccessComponents of the Job
for which faculty are rewarded
Research Scholarship Teaching Service
14Tenure
- a status granted after a trial period to a
teacher protecting him her from summary
dismissal - Websters Dictionary - Tenure is a long term commitment by the
institution and is not taken lightly - A club with lifetime membership
- 70 of CS/CS regular ranks faculty at PhD
granting institutions are tenured - 60 of women, 72 of men are tenured
15Tenure Time Line
- Usually a six-seven year clock
-
- 7 year probationary period
- Yearly oral evaluations by Dept. Head/Chair
- Intermediate mid-career review during year 3
- Tenure review usually during year 6
- Based upon work from first 5 years
- Tenure effective in year 7
- Typical evaluation (for tenure and beyond)
- Regular written evaluations by Dept. Merit
Promotion (MP) Committee, Dept. Head/Chair, Dean
and Campus/School MP Committee - Promotion and tenure review with letters from
external evaluators
16Primary Criteria what matters?
- Evidence of scholarly distinction, accomplishment
and impact in your field - coherent body of important work
- significant theme showing growth as a scholar
- sufficient productivity to show promise for
sustained productivity - respect by acknowledged experts
- good teaching portfolio good evaluations in a
blend of courses (size, undergrad/grad) - high quality, reliable service so that colleagues
respect your contributions to the department,
university, research community - Different fields and different universities have
different cultures - such as, - how publication patterns affect expectations
- how collaboration is assessed
- how impact is measured
17No substitute for Quality
- Basic factors
- excellence in research
- excellence in teaching
- excellence in service
- Research
- How many and what kind of papers are expected?
- How much grant support is expected?
- How is support from industry viewed?
- How is interdisciplinary collaboration viewed?
- Is your research area viewed favorably?
- Teaching
- What do faculty expect of students?
- What do students expect from faculty?
- What do colleagues expect from your course?
- Service
- How much service is really required?
- How much can be gained from service by getting to
know others on campus?
18Research
- Evidence of research impact is most important
- Research independence is critical
- especially independence from PhD advisor
- clear individual contributions in collaborative
work - Publications
- Quality before quantity in publications
- Journal publications
- Not all journals are equal journal reputations
are best measure - Conference and workshop publications are valued
just as highly - Bring visibility and more rapid recognition of
your work - All conferences/workshops are not created equal
leading conferences, reputation and acceptance
rates are measures of quality - Research Funding and Graduate Advising
- Appropriate level of research funding from top
agencies - Excellent graduate students are important to
advancing
19Tenure Dossier
- Impact must be documented in the tenure dossier
- Detailed CV
- Statement of contributions in research, teaching,
and service - External letters
- Leaders in the field evaluating the work, stating
- established in your field
- significant contributions with impact
- Publications
- Internal letters
20Advancement to Full Professor
- Based on international recognition as an
established researcher and leader in the field - Generally about 4-6 years beyond the Associate
Professor level - Recognized in your particular research area via
- Editorial boards, program chairs, committees,
etc. - About 1 of the faculty achieve the status of
Distinguished Professor or Chaired Professor - Based upon extremely distinguished research
contributions - Chaired professors carry with them an endowment
generally from a philanthropist