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PROMOTION AND TENURE FOR BASIC SCIENTISTS – BOTH PATHWAYS Dana Gaddy, Ph.D. Patricia Wight, Ph.D.
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P&T for Basic Scientists Read the 2011 Guidelines on P&T Check out the Companion Guide to the P&T Document (http://www.uams.edu/facultyaffairs/Promotionandtenuredefault.asp)http://www.uams.edu/facultyaffairs/Promotionandtenuredefault.asp Study the criteria table for your specific academic pathway Basic Scientist-Tenure Pathway Basic Scientist-Non-tenure Pathway Similar criteria - but differ in the extent to which teaching/mentoring and leadership/administrative service are expected
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Basic Scientist-TP & Basic Scientist-NTP Basic Scientists- TP are expected to participate in the full range of academic activities of the College, with emphasis on research and teaching. Basic Scientists- NTP are expected to develop one major area of focus: either research or teaching.
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Basic Scientist – Tenure Pathway “Full range of activities” means: Teaching/Mentoring Research/Scholarly Work Leadership/Administrative Service Majority of Basic Scientist-TP faculty will focus strongly on research, and will teach Minority of Basic Scientist-TP faculty will focus strongly on teaching, and will participate in some research, which could include educational research
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Assistant to Associate Professor Basic Scientist-TP
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Basic Scientist-TP: Time Allotment DO THE MATH: If your focus is research, you must teach. However, you CANNOT max out teaching and service without going below the research minimum: THIS IS A RESEARCH-INTENSIVE TRACK!!
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Research/Scholarly Work Funding PI on a major extramural research grant and/or leader of a major project program grant, or alternatively Substantial and clearly documented contributions as Co-I on multiple extramurally funded research grants NIH is best, but others (e.g. American Heart Association; VA Merit) do count Institutional General Research Support grants for pilot studies will NOT be counted
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Research/Scholarly Work Publications = scholarly evidence of research productivity Peer-reviewed scientific articles Quality more important than absolute number The P&T Guidelines speak of 1 – 3 first author or senior author peer reviewed publications per year in rank Books/book chapters Participation in national/international meetings Important opportunities to present your work Important opportunities to meet and get to know the experts in your field
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Research/Scholarly Work Publications in your P&T packet: Copies of your 5 most meritorious publications are required Must be published or ‘in press’ Middle-author papers count, but must be 1 st or senior author on a significant number of publications Publication alone does not insure promotion But then, neither does funding if you aren’t being productive
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Teaching/Mentoring Must include Contact hours in graduate/medical school List of those you mentor Estimate of contact hours with mentees Evidence of your contributions to their learning and success Documented evaluation of teaching performance: Your mean scores compared to the department scores, NOT copies of evaluations
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Teaching/Mentoring Can include Directing graduate seminars/journal clubs Serving as a major advisor on thesis and dissertation committees Serving as committee member on thesis and dissertation committees Evidence of community, local, regional and national education programs Letters from mentees attesting to time commitment and level of mentoring
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Teaching/Mentoring Can also include: Service as a graduate or medical school course leader (for those whose major focus is teaching) Teaching outside one’s own area of interest in other departments within the College in other UAMS Colleges
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Teaching/Mentoring If your major focus is research, while very important, teaching CANNOT compensate for a lack of research productivity. Strike the proper balance. Form a mentoring committee or, at the very least, consult your chair if you feel like accepting a significant teaching responsibility at this stage of your career will compromise your research Directing a medical school course at this stage of your career will compromise you research
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Leadership/Administrative Service Expect to have share in “service load” for departmental and university programs – less as an Assistant Prof, more as an Associate Prof and still more as a Professor Assessed by review of type and complexity of committee and/or administrative work Document participation and valuable contributions Document leadership roles and/or other active involvement in administration
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Professional Recognition Should have established a reputation in the national or international medical or scientific community Participation in appropriate professional organizations and presentations before national and/or international meetings Note invited presentations NIH/VA study sections are valued but not required
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Professional Recognition Letters of Recommendation Three letters are required Authors Should be recognized national authorities Should be in your field of interest Should NOT have employed you or trained you (e.g., not someone who has been your “boss” or a direct teacher/mentor) Should clearly have reviewed your CV or portfolio and have detailed comments
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Obtaining Letters Provide your Department Chair with a list of names and contact information Department Chair formally solicits these letters, and sends to those letter-writers: Letter of request for recommendation Your CV COM P&T Guidelines Solicit more letters than you need to ensure you get three great letters back in time Additional letters may be a good idea if they add significant information or an importantly different perspective on your contributions.
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Associate to Full Professor Basic Scientist-TP
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Professorship Reserved for those members of the faculty who have demonstrated outstanding ability Not based on length of service alone Should also have: Considerable time and experience in rank Additional publications Other evidence of scholarly activity and professional recognition
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Basic Scientist – TP Associate Professor to Professor Same “full range of activities” “Outstanding record in at least two of the following three mission areas”: Research/Scholarly Activities Teaching/Mentoring Leadership/Academic Service Most will have excelled in the first two areas Study the criteria table carefully
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Assistant to Associate Professor Basic Scientist-NTP
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Basic Scientists- NTP are expected to develop one major area of focus: either research or teaching. Majority of Basic Scientist-NTP faculty will focus strongly on research Minority of Basic Scientist-NTP faculty will focus strongly on teaching, and will participate in some research, which could include educational research
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Basic Scientist-NTP: Time Allotment
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Research/Scholarly Work If your focus is research: Funding PI on a major extramural research grant and/or leader of a major project program grant, or alternatively Substantial and clearly documented contributions as Co-I on multiple extramurally funded research grants NIH is best, but others (e.g. American Heart Association; VA Merit) do count Institutional General Research Support grants for pilot studies will NOT be counted
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Research/Scholarly Work If your focus is research: Publications = scholarly evidence of research productivity Peer-reviewed scientific articles Quality more important than absolute number The P&T Guidelines speak of 1 – 3 first author or senior author peer reviewed publications per year in rank Books/book chapters Participation in national/international meetings Important opportunities to present your work Important opportunities to meet and get to know the experts in your field
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Teaching/Mentoring If your focus is teaching: Must include Contact hours in graduate/medical school List of those you mentor Estimate of contact hours with mentees Evidence of your contributions to their learning and success Documented evaluation of teaching performance: Your mean scores compared to the department scores, NOT copies of evaluations
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Teaching/Mentoring If your focus is on teaching: Can include Directing graduate seminars/journal clubs Serving as a major advisor on thesis and dissertation committees Serving as committee member on thesis and dissertation committees Evidence of community, local, regional and national education programs Letters from mentees attesting to time commitment and level of mentoring
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Teaching/Mentoring If your focus is on teaching: Can also include : Service as a graduate or medical school course leader (for those whose major focus is teaching) Teaching outside one’s own area of interest in other departments within the College in other UAMS Colleges
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Leadership/Administrative Service Leadership/Administrative Service is largely the responsibility of the Basic Science-TP faculty. Assistant Professors on the Basic Science-NTP may have small leadership/administrative service roles. Associate Professors on the Basic Science-NTP may have larger leadership/administrative service roles, and Professors on the Basic Science-NTP may devote as much as 10% of their time allotment to leadership/ administrative service. Typically, the most successful candidates align their committee work with their research and/or teaching interests.
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Professional Recognition Should have established a reputation in the national or international medical or scientific community Participation in appropriate professional organizations and presentations before national and/or international meetings Note invited presentations NIH/VA study sections are valued but not required
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Professional Recognition Letters of Recommendation Three letters are required Authors Should be recognized national authorities Should be in your field of interest Should NOT have employed you or trained you Should clearly have reviewed your portfolio and have detailed comments
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Obtaining Letters Provide your Department Chair with a list of names and contact information Department Chair formally solicits the letters, and sends to those letter-writers: Letter of request for recommendation Your CV COM P&T guidelines Solicit more letters than you need to ensure you get three great letters back in time
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Associate to Full Professor Basic Scientist-NTP
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Professorship Reserved for those members of the faculty who have demonstrated outstanding ability Not based on length of service alone Should also have: Considerable time and experience in rank Additional publications Other evidence of scholarly activity and professional recognition
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Basic Scientist – NTP Associate Professor to Professor Having made the decision to focus on either Research or Teaching, candidates for promotion to Professor will have made outstanding contributions in Research or Teaching. Study the criteria table carefully
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Both Tracks If your department has a Promotion and Tenure committee, the results of their vote should be included in your binder. When possible, have your packet reviewed by someone in your department who has been on the P&T Committee.
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How can you help to assure your own success? Know the rules! Study the companion guide (http://www.uams.edu/facultyaffairs/Promotionandtenuredefault.asp)http://www.uams.edu/facultyaffairs/Promotionandtenuredefault.asp Talk to P&T committee chair in department or faculty affairs representative before finalizing your initial appointment or if you have unresolved concerns. Get a mentor. Attend P&T workshops. Prepare a concise, neat, well-organized packet that makes it easy for the reviewer to find support that you have met criteria.
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COM Deadline Two paper packets are still required and are due to the Office of Faculty Affairs, Central Building (old hospital) 4D40, by 4:30pm on Monday, October 1, 2012. Deadline for submission of your electronic packet and 2 paper copies of your packet is Monday October 1, 2012. The electronic system is available at: http://PromotionTenure.UAMS.edu
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