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University Senate
TOWSON UNIVERSITY POLICY ON FACULTY
EVALUATION FOR PROMOTION, TENURE/ REAPPOINTMENT, AND MERIT
Approved by the University Senate
May 1, 2000
I. EXPECTATIONS FOR FACULTY
A. Board of Regents
Minimum requirements for appointment, tenure,
and promotion are established by the University System of Maryland (USM)
Board of Regents and are stated in the "University System of Maryland Policy
on Appointment, Rank, and Tenure of Faculty." Minimum workload and
responsibilities for faculty as established by the Board of Regents are
stated in the "University System of Maryland Policy on Faculty Workload
and Responsibilities." The policies unique to Towson University are
consistent with the USM policies. Clear and previously-stated standards
and expectations needed for reappointment, promotion, tenure, and merit
fulfill the University responsibility outlined in the 1971 AAUP statement
on "Procedural standards in the Renewal or Non-renewal of Faculty Appointments."
B.
University
The "Towson University Policy on Appointment,
Rank, and Tenure of Faculty" and the "Towson University Policy on Faculty
Workload and Responsibilities" provide the basis for standards and expectations
common to all full or part-time tenure track faculty. The tenure
and/or promotion decision is based both on the needs of the University
(programs, enrollments, strategic direction) and the competence and quality
of the individual. Common standards and expectations for all faculty include
the following basic activities:
-
A faculty member is committed to collegiality
and academic citizenship, demonstrating high standards of humane, ethical
and professional behavior.
-
A faculty member is primarily concerned with
excellence in teaching.
-
A faculty member meets classes as scheduled
and is available for advising and consultation through office hours.
-
A faculty member supports the mission, strategic
plan, and programs of the department, college and university.
-
A faculty member is committed to a discipline
or interdisciplinary specialty and is committed to continuing professional
development and scholarly growth.
-
A faculty member shares the responsibility
of university governance and participates each year in the faculty evaluation
process.
Each college may create its own standards
and expectations, with clear criteria for evaluation. However, no
college may contradict or conflict with the University or Board of Regents
standards.
Each department and/or interdisciplinary program
may create its own standards and expectations, with clear criteria for
evaluation. However, no department may contradict or conflict with
College, University, or Board of Regents expectations. Departments
must submit clear and specific standards and expectations to the University
Promotion, Tenure/Reappointment and Merit Committee for approval. A resource
template, "Towson University Guidelines for the Development of Departmental
Standards and Expectations for Teaching, Scholarship, and Service "
is included as Addendum A. Departments may adopt these
standards in whole or in part, or departments may create their own, with
written approval or disapproval indicated by each faculty member's signature.
These department documents remain in effect until changed by the department
faculty and approved by the University Promotion, Tenure/Reappointment,
and Merit Committee.
II. MATERIALS FOR
FACULTY EVALUATION
A. The responsibility for presenting
the annual review materials, the five-year comprehensive review, and/or
the case for reappointment, promotion, or tenure rests with the faculty
member. Each faculty member, with the help of the department chairperson
or designee(s), is expected to prepare a dossier that addresses the professorial
role expectations of faculty in the university and the candidate's college
and department.
B. Type of Review determines dossier
material and process
1. Annual
review of all faculty: Annual review materials must include the
following documents:
-
AR (Annual Report) or CAR (Chairpersons' Annual
Report) Form
-
Curriculum vitae
-
Syllabi of current courses
-
Evaluation, as appropriate, of teaching
and advising
2. Annual review of non-tenured faculty:
Tenure track faculty shall add the following items to items listed above
in II. B.1.
-
Peer evaluations
-
Departmental recommendation letter, which
must include a written report on the candidate's progress toward tenure
3. Full Review for Candidates for
tenure and/or promotion: A critical part of the dossier shall be a
narrative statement in which the candidate describes how he or she has
met and integrated the teaching, research, and service expectations of
all faculty. All materials listed above in II.B. 1. and II. B. 2.
from the candidate's date of hire or last promotion must also be included.
4. Comprehensive Five-Year Review
of Tenured Faculty: Once every five years, the annual review shall
be replaced by a comprehensive five-year review. See "Comprehensive
Review Policies and Procedures, Towson University" for details.
5. Merit Review:
Merit review shall be concurrent with annual review.
The review shall follow policies, standards,
and procedures outlined in the department's merit policy as approved by
the University Promotion, Tenure/Reappointment, and Merit Committee.
The merit appeal process shall follow the same protocol as the promotion
and tenure process. See Section IV. for a description of levels of merit.
III. PROCESS AND PROCEDURES
FOR CANDIDATES FOR TENURE AND/OR PROMOTION
A. All deliberations pertaining
to promotion, tenure/reappointment, and merit at all levels shall be confidential.
B. The faculty candidate shall apply for
consideration according to approved departmental procedures. (This is often
required a year before candidacy.)
C. The faculty candidate shall submit a
summative dossier inclusive of the AR form and a current curriculum vita.
A lengthier, supportive document that lends specificity to the candidate's
credentials should also be submitted with the above.
D. The Department Promotion, Tenure/Reappointment
(and Merit)Committee shall make a recommendation concerning promotion and/or
tenure of a faculty candidate to the Dean of the appropriate College Promotion
and Tenure Committee.
1. Eligible members of the
Department Rank/Tenure Committee shall be determined by the standards specified
in the Department's document as approved by the University Promotion, Tenure/Reappointment,
and Merit Committee.
2. The appropriate Department Committee
shall prepare a concisely written statement supportive of the recommended
decision consistent with the department documentation.
3. The Department Chairperson may
submit a substantive statement that either agrees or disagrees with
the committee's recommendation. The Department Chairperson shall
serve as a voting member in all Department Rank Committees, Department
Tenure/Reappointment Committee(s), and Merit Committee(s).
4. The recommended decision
shall be conveyed to the faculty candidate, inclusive of any Department
chair's statement and a record of the vote count, and shall be forwarded
with the candidate's dossier. Negative decisions should be delivered
in person by the Department Chairperson (or designee) or sent by certified
mail to the candidate's home.
5. The faculty candidate's
lengthier, supportive file shall be retained by the Department and shall
be made available to the Dean and/or the College Promotion, Tenure/Reappointment,
and Merit Committee upon request for purposes of either an appeal and/or
clarification of issues that arise as the process moves forward.
6. The faculty member may
submit a written appeal of the Department Rank/Tenure and Merit Committee's
decision to the Dean’s office for the College Committee. The appeal
should be delivered by certified mail or in person, within fifteen (15)
business days of having been notified of the decision. The appeal should
be accompanied by supportive materials.
D. The Chair of The College Promotion
and Tenure Committee and the Dean of the College shall each submit a written
recommendation to the Provost. The Dean and the College Committee shall
also receive appeals from faculty candidates.
1. The College Promotion, Tenure/Reappointment
and Merit Committee shall consist of one representative from each department
elected at large by the College by the tenured and tenure-track members
of the department for a period of three years. These three-year terms
will be staggered to insure some continuity from year to year. Eligible
members include tenured faculty, at the rank of associate and full professor.
Faculty who are candidates for promotion and Department Chairpersons are
not eligible. The Dean of the College will serve as non-voting member of
this committee.
2. The College Promotion Tenure/Reappointment,
and Merit Committee shall prepare a concisely written statement explaining
the recommended decision.
3. The Dean may submit a substantive statement
that either agrees or disagrees with the committee’s recommendation.
4. The recommended decision
shall be conveyed to the faculty candidate, inclusive of any Dean's statement
and a record of the vote count, and shall be forwarded with the candidate's
dossier. Negative decisions shall be delivered in person by the Dean
or sent by certified mail to the candidate's home.
5. The faculty member may submit
a written appeal of the College and/or Dean's decision to the Provost by
certified mail or in person, within fifteen (15) business days of having
been notified of the decision. The appeal shall be accompanied by supportive
materials.
E. The Dean of the College
shall submit the faculty candidate's file to the Provost. The Provost
shall also receive appeals from faculty candidates. Following a review
of the composite record, the Provost shall prepare a substantive letter
of recommendation conveyed to the faculty candidate, Department Rank/Tenure
Committee chairperson, Department Chairperson and Dean of the College,
and filed with the record.
F. The faculty candidate
may submit a written appeal of the Provost's decision to the University
President within two weeks of having been notified of the decision.
G. The final decision for promotion
and tenure shall be made by the University President; the final decision
for merit rests with the Provost.
IV. METHODS FOR FACULTY EVALUATION
The University should have faculty
evaluation methods that are consistent with and reflective of the roles
and responsibilities of faculty members. Departments may use Addendum
A: "Towson University Guidelines for the Development of Departmental
Standards and Expectations for Teaching, Scholarship, and Service,"
or develop their own. Methods for evaluation developed by departments
shall specify the criteria and procedures that shall be applied to the
faculty roles of teaching, scholarship and service. This shall include
the role of the “Agreement on Faculty Workload and Expectations “ or “AFWE
“section of the Annual Review (AR form). The evaluation materials must
be understandable and easy to follow, reflecting a commitment to collegial
responsibility. Faculty who do not meet the basic standards and expectations
for teaching, scholarship and/or service may be subject to a denial of
merit.
A. Teaching and Advising
1. The scholarship of teaching
takes a variety of forms, including the use of technology or classroom-based
research to improve teaching, faculty exchanges and teaching abroad,
involvement in distributive learning or the development of new courses
and programs, especially those involving collaborative or interdisciplinary
work or K-16 partnerships.
2. The primary purpose of the faculty academic
advisor is to assist students in the development of meaningful educational
plans that arecompatible with their life goals. Through private,
individual conferences with students, the faculty academic advisor should
provide assistance inrefining goals and objectives, understanding available
choices, and assessing the consequences of alternative courses of action.
3. Evaluation of teaching and advising
shall include information from the following sources:
a.) Evaluation of Teaching by
Students
Student evaluations of instruction
are a required part of the evaluation of faculty. Such an evaluation must
be recognized for what it is: one kind of evaluation, of a generalized
nature, and to be considered only in concert with all other measures of
teaching effectiveness. Each department shall develop a form or forms
which shall be used by all members of the department.
Student evaluations shall be conducted
in such a manner to assure confidentiality of the student. Student
evaluation forms, with a description of the method and timing of administration,
shall be approved annually and included in the department Promotion and
Tenure document submitted to the University Promotion, Tenure/Reappointment,
and Merit Committee for approval.
Tenured faculty shall be evaluated by students
at least once each academic year; probationary faculty shall be evaluated
every semester.
b) Evaluation of Teaching by Peers
Classroom visits are encouraged
for purposes of professional growth and are required when the person is
being considered for promotion or for reappointment or tenure. Peer
reviews of teaching are also required for the comprehensive five-year review.
Departments must develop discipline-specific
criteria or guidelines forobserving and reporting classroom observations.
These should be included in the documents submitted to the University Promotion,Tenure/Reappointment,
and Merit Committee for approval.
Further standards and expectations
for teaching shall be evaluated by specific criteria developed within individual
departments and approved by the University Promotion, Tenure/Reappointment,
and Merit Committee.
c) Evaluation of Advising
For those faculty members who
advise students as part of their workload, student evaluations of advising
are required.
d) Self-Evaluation
Self-evaluation of teaching and/or
advising effectiveness shall include a narrative statement about
individual teaching and/or advising philosophy and an interpretation of
student and/or peer/chairperson evaluations.
B. Scholarship
Scholarship and research take
many forms. Faculty may conduct research that generates new knowledge
or synthesizes and integrates knowledge. These research agendas may
be represented by publications, presentations, or grants. Faculty
also conduct their scholarship in the development of creative products,
such as original works or integrating creative knowledge in performances,
exhibits or other expressive presentations. Other faculty engage
in research that is applied, finding new ways to use knowledge for practical
purposes, including the scholarship of teaching or of solving problems
within academia or the larger community, such as involvement in K-16 partnerships,
professional development schools, and other innovative partnerships.
Faculty also engage in developing and publishing software and in finding
new classroom uses for existing technology. Interdisciplinary efforts
where faculty work to expand their knowledge and apply it in new ways constitute
yet another form of applied research and scholarship. Often collaboration
requires additional efforts on the part of the faculty members involved,
but the many tangible and intangible benefits make such efforts desirable;
thus, such effort should be recognized in the evaluation of scholarship.
1. Faculty should be guided
by the definitions of scholarship/research that have been defined by their
college and department as well as by the general standards in Addendum
A, "Towson University Guidelines for the Development of Departmental Standards
and Expectations for Teaching, Scholarship and Service," appended to this
document. Evaluation must be in accordance with specific criteria.
Departments are to develop specific and objective criteria for evaluating
faculty scholarship and research.
2. Moreover, departments
are to encourage collaboration and the mentoring of junior faculty when
such criteria are difficult to articulate. It is through such collegial
exchange, respect and consensus that the larger missions of both the university
and the discipline(s) are served.
3. Departmental criteria should be
approved by the University Promotion, Tenure/Reappointment, and Merit Committee
and provided each member at the time of initial employment and/or revision
of criteria.
C. Service
Service is broadly defined to
include participation in the governing and administrative activities of
the department, college, or university. It also may include service
to one's professional discipline or the larger community outside the university
if such service draws upon the faculty member's discipline or interdisciplinary
specialty or furthers the university mission.
Service may be evaluated by the university
standards in this document or by specific criteria developed within individual
departments and approved by the University Promotion, Tenure/Reappointment,
and Merit Committee.
V. UNIVERSITY COMMITTEE STRUCTURE
AND PROCESS
A. The University Promotion,
Tenure/Reappointment, and Merit Committee shall be composed of seven faculty
members: one member elected from each college and one appointed by the
senate. Members serve three-year terms beginning June 1 and ending
May 31 of their third year. Meetings shall be scheduled at least
monthly during the academic year.
B. Within two weeks of the beginning
of its committee year, the Committee shall hold a meeting for the purpose
of electing by simple majority vote a chairperson, who shall notify the
Member-at-Large of the Executive Committee of the University Senate of
the names of the Committee members and the chairperson.
C. The Provost or designee shall
serve in an ex officio capacity but may not vote.
D. A quorum shall be a majority of
the voting members.
E. Duties
1. To administer the system
of faculty evaluation by establishing the calendar, standards, and guidelines
and approving department documents.
2. To define standards for merit
consideration.
3. To review the petition of a faculty
member who has alleged inadequate consideration in terms of compliance
with fair and regular procedures has been given in cases of non-reappointment,
promotion, or merit.
F. Procedures
1. Distribute documents
to department chairpersons .
2. Receive for review all department
promotion, tenure/reappointment, and merit documents by the date in the
University Promotion and Tenure calendar (if documents have been changed)
and notify both the department and the Dean of the College of approval
status.
3. Recommend policy changes to the
Senate.
4. Submit a year end report to the
Senate by June of each year.
VI. MERIT
In conjunction with cost-of-living adjustments
in faculty salaries, which should be mandated annually, Board of Regents
regulations require that merit salary increases be awarded using a merit
system that results in differential increments. The “Statement of
Standards and Expectations for New Faculty” or the “Agreement on Faculty
Workload Expectations” (AFWE) section of the Annual Report (AR form) or
the Chairperson’s Annual Report (CAR form) shall
serve as the basis for merit evaluation. To qualify for merit, faculty
members shall demonstrate achievement in teaching, scholarship, and service
consistent with their Agreement on Faculty Workload Expectations.
All faculty will be evaluated each year at the department level for merit.
There will be two levels of merit increase
to salary within the three categories of merit as follows:
-
Not Meritorious: Faculty whose performance
fails to adequately meet explicit standards.
-
Satisfactory (Base Merit): Faculty whose work
is deemed competent and thus contributes to fulfilling the mission of the
University, college, and department.
-
Excellent (Base Merit plus one Performance
Merit): Faculty who are not only deemed satisfactory but who also excel
in at least one of the dimensions of teaching, scholarship, and service.
Each department will explicitly and
clearly define the above categories for use in their merit deliberations.
Notification and appeals of merit decisions
follow the same procedures as those for promotion and tenure/reappointment.
Faculty who wish to appeal their department’s decision concerning merit
should direct their appeal to the college Promotion, Tenure/Reappointment,
and Merit Committee.
Procedural appeals are directed to the
University Promotion, Tenure/Reappointment, and Merit Committee.
VII. CALENDAR AND FORMS
A. All departments and programs
shall abide by the calendar appended to this document as Addendum B.
B. All faculty must complete the
Annual Report (AR) form appended to this document (Addendum C). This
form replaces the FAR, SSE, AFWE, AFWE Correlation Statement (Annual Summary
Statement).
C. First year tenure-track faculty,
in cooperation with their Department Chairperson, shall complete the statement
on “Standards and Expectations for New Tenure-Track Faculty” (SENTF form).
Addendum D is the SENTF form.
D. Department Chairpersons and Program
Directors shall complete the Chairperson's Annual Report (CAR) form appended
to this document (Addendum E). This form replaces the CAR, SSE, AFWE,
AFWE Correlation Statement.
E. The Department Summary Recommendation
(DSR) form appended to this document (Addendum F.) shall be completed each
fall for all faculty holding a full-time contract. This form replaces
the DRTMR form.
Approved by the University
Senate 5/ 1/2000
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