Increasing Faculty Diversity TTUHSC Stephanie Leeper, MD Associate Regional Dean for Faculty Development Professor, Internal Medicine/Family and Community Medicine Marjorie Jenkins, MD Co-Director Women’s Health Research Institute Associate Professor, Internal Medicine and Obstetrics/Gynecology TTUHSC, Amarillo
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE 2004 Women in Health Sciences Task Force (WiHSTF) created
CHARGE Develop strategies to increase the number of women faculty especially in the senior academic ranks
Tenure and Gender A Snapshot of TTUHSC
SOM FACULTY by Tenure and Gender (all departments)
FEMALE TENURE VS. NONTENURE TRACK AMA 1999 PedIMFPOb Gyn SurgTotal Ten Non Ama 2005 PedIMFPOb Gyn SurgTotal Ten Non Lub 1999 PedIMFPOb Gyn SurgTotal Ten Non Lub 2005 PedIMFPOb Gyn SurgTotal Ten Non
SOM FACULTY CHAIRS
SOM FACULTY ASSOCIATE/ASSISTANT DEANS
RANK BY GENDER LUBBOCK & AMARILLO (FM,Peds, IM,OB/Gyn, Surg)
ADVANCE Increasing the Participation and Advancement of Women in Academic Science and Engineering Careers
ADVANCE PROGRAMS Virginia Tech Birmingham Irvine Case Western Boulder Columbia Georgia IT Kansas State Univ Univ Baltimore Co Univ Ann Arbor Univ of Montana New Mexico State Univ Hunter College, NY Univ of Puerto Rico Univ of Rhode Island Univ of El Paso Univ of Washington Univ of Wisconsin Utah State Univ Virginia Polytechnic
PAID: Partnerships for Adaptation, Implementation, and Dissemination Award ADVANCE: Increasing the Participation and Advancement of Women in Academic Science and Engineering Careers
Texas Tech University PoWERS Participation of Women in Engineering Research and Science NSF PAID Proposal
PoWERS Faculty Stephanie Leeper, MD –Professor, Internal Medicine –Associate Regional Dean of Faculty Development Cynthia Raehl, PharmD –Professor, School of Pharmacy –Chair, Pharmacy Practice Marjorie Jenkins, MD –Associate Professor, Internal Medicine –Co-Director Women’s Health Research Institute Karlene Hoo, PhD –Associate Dean of Research College of Engineering Caryl Heintz, PhD –Associate Academic Dean, College of Arts and Sciences Charlotte Dunham, PhD –Associate Professor, Sociology –Director Office of Women’s Studies
TTUHSC PoWERS
NSF TTUHSC PoWERS Departments TTUHSC SOM Amarillo/Lubbock –Family Medicine –Internal Medicine –Pediatrics –Obstetrics/Gynecology TTUHSC SOP –Pharmaceutical Sciences –Pharmacy Practice
TTU PoWERS Adaptations 1. Faculty recruitment 1. Michigan’s STRIDE 2. Faculty development/retention: 1. UTEP’s group mentoring with review 2. NMSU’s modified UW’s mentor/mentee expectation worksheets 3. NMSU’s exit interview 4. Michigan’s third-year pre-tenure and annual review 3. Climate Assessment 1. UTEP’s external review board
PoWERS Initiatives Faculty Recruitment Faculty Development and Retention Climate Assessment
Faculty Recruitment
Faculty Recruitment STRIDE Promote gender equitable hiring Providing advice on search committee –Composition –Practices Conduct workshops on gender equity Interact with search committees throughout the process Provided documents proven to be useful for successful searches
Faculty Recruitment STRIDE Program (Adapted Univ of MI) –Educate Department Faculty on Promoting Gender Equity Faculty Recruitment Workshops –Explain STRIDE –Provide resources where to recruit –Checklist for recruitment –STRIDE Representatives TTUHSC (8) TTU (8) Senior level faculty Travel funds to attend 1 meeting per year 5-7% release time –Responsibility of STRIDE members Adaptation and Dissemination Materials –Faculty Recruitment Handbook –Candidate Evaluation Form –Dual Career Couple Procedures
STRIDE Benefits Development of new TTUHSC procedures for recruitment Increase awareness of recruiting and gender issues Increase in the number of women in the candidate pool Increase in the number of women faculty hired
Faculty Development and Retention 1.Mentoring Formal mentoring program –Peer-mentoring sessions –Listserv 2.Tenure and Promotion Institution-wide 3 rd year review policy for tenure and promotion 3.Exit Interviews
Mentoring Program Implementation Adaptation of worksheets Enrollment of mentee/mentors Mentor training Kick-off luncheon for prospective mentors/mentees Expectations –Individual meetings 1 per quarter –Peer group meetings 2 per year –Group luncheon meeting 1 per year
Mentoring - Listserv Goals –Promote interaction among the mentor/mentee groups –Overcome geographical separation –Provide a safe environment for dialogue Benefits –Identification of hidden climate issues –Collaboration between TTU and TTUHSC faculty Outcomes –Topics discussed –Number of postings –Number of participants –Participant satisfaction with listserv
Faculty Development Third Year Review Mandatory third year review Forgo requirement of external letters Participation of the Deans of each college/school –meet with the Department Chairs and faculty –review dossiers –endorse the written review summaries
Exit Interviews Conduct exit interviews for all faculty who agree to participate Interview questionnaire Hybrid of NMSU, CAS and Women’s Studies Compile and analyze results
PoWERS Institutional Integration
Enable the integration of initiatives across the system through the WiHSC (Women in Health Sciences Committee) and TTU GEC (Gender Equity Center) and the Office of Diversity at TTU
PoWERS Organization
Climate Internal Advisory Board Deans –College of Engineering –College of Arts and Sciences –School of Medicine –School of Pharmacy Representatives –WiHSC (2) –GEC (2) –Vice President for Academic Affairs Office –Provost’s Office PAID Team Multicultural Affairs and Diversity Offices External Advisory Board External Reviewers (2) TTU Liaisons –German Nunez TTUHSC –Juan Munoz TTU
Success and Sustainability Dependant upon Institutional Support –Participation and Support of Administrative and Faculty leaders –Funding –Policy Reform
Institutional Support Deans –Funding for STRIDE –Participation on Internal Advisory Board –Identification of potential mentors/mentees –Participation in 3rd year review –Support of PoWERS objectives Chairs –Support and Participation in STRIDE –Identification of potential mentors/mentees –Participation in 3 rd year review process –Touting PoWERS program to potential and current faculty –Support of PoWERS objectives
TTUHSC Management Structure Lead PIs Leeper - Recruitment - STRIDE Jenkins Faculty Development and Retention –Mentoring Program – Group/Individual Leeper –Mentoring Program – Listserv Jenkins –Third Year Review Leeper –Exit Interview Raehl Advisory Board Leeper
TTUHSC PoWERS How can we best adapt these programs to TTUHSC Amarillo and TTUHSC Lubbock? 1.Recruitment processes (STRIDE) 2.Formal mentoring program 3.3 rd year review 4.Exit interview of faculty 5.Ensure participation on Internal Advisory Board 6.Faculty participation
WISE INVESTMENT Indirect costs can be reinvested into faculty development, recruitment, and retention Public recognition by dissemination of information regarding our program to AAMC and other professional organizations via publications, forum, workshops, and other presentations