Kimberly D. Kendricks, Ph. D Central State University.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1 The Promotion and Tenure Process Managing the Academic Career for Faculty Women at Undergraduate Computer Science and Engineering Institutions CRA-W.
Advertisements

Tenure is awarded when the candidate successfully demonstrates meritorious performance in teaching, research/scholarly/creative accomplishment and service.
Carolyn M. Byerly, Ph.D., professor Department of Journalism and Graduate Program in Mass Comm & Media Studies TENURE: BASIC INFO AND ISSUES.
ULS FACULTY LIBRARIAN PEER REVIEW AND MENTORING Margarete Bower Chemistry Library.
Department of Computer Science Faculty of Science Research Methods Supervision.
Career Planning in Academic Medicine David Coleman, M.D. Faculty Development Seminar Tuesday, September 18, 2007.
NSF Alliances for Graduate Education and the Professoriate National Conference Ph.D. Employment Challenges and Opportunities.
Culminating Academic Review Adams State College Department of Teacher education graduate programs.
2015 Workshop Permanent Status and Promotion Policy and Procedures Overview.
U NIFORMED S ERVICES U NIVERSITY of the Health Sciences Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology Faculty Appointments, Tenure, and Promotions Clinical Education:
Dallas Baptist University College of Education Graduate Programs
What’s it Like to be a Professor? REU July 7, 2009 Michael J. Lewis, Director Department of Computer Science Binghamton University (SUNY)
Temple University Russell Conwell Learning Center Office of Senior Vice Provost for Undergraduate Studies GETTING INVOLVED IN RESEARCH AT TEMPLE UNIVERSITY.
Geoscience Careers in Academia Dr. Kate Bulinski Associate Professor of Geosciences Bellarmine University School of Environmental Studies Louisville, Kentucky.
Achieving Campus Diversity: The University of Central Florida Model
Joi Patterson, PhD VPAA/COO Tenure Track Process.
Professional Development for Junior Faculty Kenneth L. Roberts, Ph.D. Associate Professor Department of Mechanical & Chemical Engineering North Carolina.
A Practitioner’s Tips for Balancing Teaching, Service and Scholarship Kelly M. Smith, PharmD, FASHP Associate Professor, Pharmacy Practice and Science.
PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT PLAN WORKSHOP. What is the Professional Development Plan? The Professional Development Plan is a directed planning and evaluation.
Senior Honors Thesis Program Office of Undergraduate Research.
Graduate School Is it for you?. Reasons to attend Good Reasons –Graduate school is necessary to pursue your particular career. –Specialization in a particular.
Tips for Early Career Success in Research, Teaching, and Service Jim Martin, Jeff Smith, Thomas Vojta presentation to UMR Freshman Faculty Forum 7 November.
Tenure in the College of Arts & Sciences Thoughts and Tips for Women in the Sciences.
How to answer faculty who say, “Why should I apply for a grant when no one here cares?” Tuesday, May 13 9:00-10:15 Kimberly Gray Director, Grants Administration.
HERI FACULTY SURVEY Surveys mailed through campus mail to all Full-Time faculty during the Spring 2005 semester A follow-up second mailing for non- respondents.
Gaining Momentum Quickly: Working with Staff, Alumni, Donors, and other Critical Stakeholders Laura J. Steinberg, Dean, College of Engineering & Computer.
PROMOTION AND TENURE FOR CLINICAL SCIENTISTS – BOTH PATHWAYS Peter Emanuel, M.D. Laura Lamps, M.D.
Faculty Evaluation Committee Workshop. Overview Evaluation Timeline Portfolio as a Whole Portfolio Organization –Teaching –Service (Students, College,
Presented by the Faculty Affairs Office September 2013.
Funding your Dreams Cathy Manduca Director, Science Education Resource Center Iowa State University, 2005.
Promotion in the Clinical Track Lois J. Geist, M.D. Associate Dean for Faculty Affairs and Development.
19/9/2005 Promotion and Tenure: Suggestions for Success Kimberly W. Anderson Professor Chemical and Materials Engineering.
College of Liberal Arts Tenure and Promotion workshop: PROCEDURES AND POLICIES 17 October 2014.
CCHE690 MEDIA REVIEW Having taught for Yavapai college in Prescott for many years after having taught at Universal Technical Institute in Phoenix. I am.
Promotion Process A how-to for DEOs. How is a promotion review initiated? Required in the final probationary year of a tenure track appointment (year.
How to develop an independent research plan – review literature with an eye for problem, approach, solution, new ideas – review objectives of funding programs.
Preparing for the renewal and tenure processes Bernard Robaire Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics MAUT Tenure Workshop April 24, 2015 – Faculty.
BUILDING A PRIOR LEARNING ASSESSMENT PROGRAM Office for Prior Learning Assessment Joyce Lapping, Director and Panel Presenter at NEASC 126 th Annual Meeting.
1 Faculty Motivation and Policies Steven R. Hall Professor of Aeronautics and Astronautics Chair of the MIT Faculty.
POST-TENURE REVIEW: Report and Recommendations. 2 OVERVIEW Tenure Field Test Findings Recommendations This is a progress report. Implementation, assessment,
GRADUATE PERSPECTIVES National Views of Best Practices for Enrollment Management of Graduate Programs Sherry F. Queener, Ph.D.
Research Opportunities at the Burnett Honors College Eric Drew Cooper Director of Undergraduate Research The Burnett Honors College.
Performing Engineering Research at Non-Ph.D. Granting Institutions Eric Larson Agnieszka Miguel Seattle University.
Promotions on the Clinician Educator Track Larry L. Swift, Ph.D. Vice Chair for Faculty Affairs Department of Pathology, Microbiology & Immunology.
Checking off your tenure “to do” list Maureen Gannon, PhD Vanderbilt University Medical Center Associate Professor of Medicine, Molecular Physiology and.
Graduate Student Academic Services (GSAS) would like to present An introduction to GradPath.
Tips for Early Career Success in Our Academic World Scott Grasman (Engineering Management and Systems Engineering) and Elvan Akin (Mathematics and Statistics)
Student Responsibilities. Advising  To consult their advisors on all matters pertaining to their academic careers, including changes in their programs.
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR ADVANCEMENT Spring 2016 Workshop.
THIS PANEL DOES NOT PRINT This PowerPoint template produces a 48”x72” poster. It will save you valuable time placing titles, subtitles, text, and graphics.
Designing a successful program of research and scholarship Beth Cudney Missouri S&T Engineering Management and Systems Engineering Presentation to Missouri.
What You Can Do Right Now! For Early Stage Faculty
Outstanding Professor Award Committee Presents:
Promotion: Policy and Procedures for COM Faculty in State College
Promotion to Full Professor: Regulations and Procedures
2017 Workshop Tenure and Promotion Policy and Procedures Overview
We’re going to follow the chronological order of the process.
Service Expectations Early Career Faculty Workshop 2014
New STEP PI Workshop.
Faculty mentoring in Department of Agronomy
June 5, 2017 General Track Meeting.
RTP For new faculty A brief introduction.
Considerations in Engineering
2016 Tenure and Promotion Workshop Policy and Procedures Overview
Heather Brod, Executive Director of Faculty Affairs and FAME
Promotion on the Clinician Educator and Clinical Practice Tracks
Promotion to Full Professor: Regulations and Procedures
Building Liaison Relationships: Some Practical Ideas
Tenure and CUNY Matt Brim and Shelly Eversley FFPP Academic Directors.
Presentation transcript:

Kimberly D. Kendricks, Ph. D Central State University

 Promotion- To advance or move up in rank/position  Tenure- The position of having a formal secure appointment until retirement, especially at an educational institution after working on a temporary or provisional basis. 2

Assessment Measures  Research  Teaching  Service 3

Developing a Master Plan  Acquire the requirements for promotion and tenure at your university  Work with the librarian, department chair, or chair of your search committee  Find internal and external mentors (not advisors)  Develop a master plan in alignment with the requirements for promotion and tenure. This plan must include separate agendas for research, teaching, and service, and each agenda must have time-lined objectives.  Ask your mentors to serve as accountability partners 4

Research Agenda  Develop a research agenda (not a research project)  In one sentence, you should write down your long term research agenda.  Each piece of research you do builds upon prior work to get to this long term goal. (i.e., short-term goals lead to long term goal)  Short term goals should be measurable with a detailed timeline (first three goals/projects should last you about five years)  From your research, develop an idea or question and determine what you already know, what resources are available, and what your goals are when the project is done  Parallel projects are good, but don’t spread yourself too thin! 5

Research Agenda  Publications  Develop an external network to whom you send preprints, reprints, and invite to campus  At least 2 pubs a year in your field  Write at least 30 minutes a day. (Don’t save your writing for winter or spring breaks, or even the summer!)  Presentations  At least 2 a year in your field  Locally and nationally  Use your relationship with external mentors  Make a name for yourself outside of the university 6

Research Agenda  Other related activities  Invite research leaders to campus (improves local credibility, national visibility)  Attend talks, workshops, conferences internally and externally  Recruit and mentor undergraduate or graduate research assistants  Grantsmanship  Apply early, apply often  Collaborate with your mentors  Learn from yours and others’ submissions (whether funded or not)  Attend grant writing workshops, particularly those with NIH and NSF that place an emphasis on supporting minorities and underrepresented groups  Serve as an external reviewer for NSF or NIH 7

Teaching Agenda  Pedagogy  Demonstrate diversity in teaching strategies in the classroom (technology, interdisciplinary approaches, project-based approaches, collaborating with other faculty on campus, etc.)  Document student improvement due to these strategies (grades, evaluations completed by students, s from students, etc.)  Teaching Assignments  Teach a variety of courses (lower level and upper level) in your discipline (i.e., don’t get stuck teaching lower level courses semester after semester) 8

Teaching Agenda  The Student  Treat all students with respect  Always begin your classes on time  Always hold your office hours on time  Be careful of what is communicated to students through ; it may be best to discuss matters such as grades in person instead of through .  Know your role as the instructor. For student needs beyond this role, please send the student to the appropriate offices-counseling services, financial aid, bursar’s office, housing office, etc. 9

Service Agenda  Serve on committees at various levels (internal or external to the university)  Department  College  University/ Senate  Local initiatives (boards, K-12, religious groups, etc.)  Given your research and teaching agendas, choose your service on committees carefully so not to derail the pursuit of your master plan.  Avoid serving on committees that are purely advisory (i.e., committees that have no budget or will not influence campus policies or programmatic decisions)  Avoid serving on a committee where you are the “technical” expert  The only person of color on the Diversity Committee  The only woman on the Gender Rights Committee 10

Service Agenda  Never serve as a Department Chair or Chair of a committee unless you are a tenured full professor, otherwise, you jeopardize delaying your master plan.  Never choose sides in departmental politics. Find a way to be absent.  Do not hold a joint appointment. Seek tenure in one department, otherwise you’ll be working on your own to accomplish your master plan. 11

Academic Golden Rule: Put Yourself First!  Keep a record  Start preparing your dossier for promotion on day one  Track and file evidence of research, teaching, and service ( evidence of publications, presentations, grantsmanship, pedagogy, undergraduate and/or graduate mentoring, s or letters from students and peers internal and external to the university, etc.)  Public Image  “There are six degrees of separation” -Work your master plan to become known at the university, and work the plan even harder to become better known outside of the university  Collegiality  If you can’t say it publicly, then don’t say it!  Always keep a positive attitude  Treat administrative assistants, teaching assistants, research assistants, janitors and facilities managers with respect. Share your appreciation with them often because in difficult times, they can be the ones to help you get things done. 12

Put Yourself First!  Outside Income  Know the rules for receiving additional income outside the university  Serve as a consultant, if time permits  To determine your rate, for a nine month appointment, divide your salary by 165 days to get your daily rate.  Check the federal rate for non-profit organizations  Minimize Stress  Stay healthy (mentally, physically, and emotionally)  Develop a bullet proof ego 13

References  Former Program Director at the National Science Foundation  Jerry Bramwell, Ph. D., University of Kentucky  NSF/QEM-Program Workshop Presentation: “Practical Promotion and Tenure”  Consultant to the National Science Foundation  Karen King, Ph. D., New York University  NSF /QEM-Program Workshop Presentation: “Developing a Long Term Research Agenda”  Books  “What They Didn’t Teach You in Graduate School, 199 Helpful Hints for Success in Your Academic Career” by Paul Gray and David Drew 14