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Jared Johns' Case |
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Chair, Personnel Committee #1Teresa Thomas: Case#2 Resources CCCC Promotion and Tenure Guidelines for Work with Technology CCCC Statement of Professional Guidance CCCC Statement on Scholarship in Composition MLA Guidelines for Evaluating Work with Digital Media in the Modern Languages MLA Guidelines for the Institutional Support of and Access to IT for Faculty Members and Students
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Characterization of Institution Comprehensive State University, Science and Technology campusCharacterization of Department M.A. granted in English (Degree granted jointly with another
The department probably would have voted in favor of reappointment at our 3rd year review, with very clearly-expressed reservations about whether Johns would be granted tenure. The University-Wide 3rd year review committee (separate from T&P; I've been on a couple of these) would have agreed.What are the Department Chair's responsibilities toward Johns? Which did she/he fulfill? Fail? John's work with the student technical consultants should not be faculty work, and the chair should have warned him away from it right from the start. Administering the facility is one thing; trouble-shooting machines and installing software is something else. I'm not sure whether Johns should have realized this, the chair should have, or whatever--but something very much like this happened to a foreign language professor at our institution, and I blamed the chair for letting it happen. There is clearly some need for intervention with Johns to bring up his course evaluation scores and to get him on the right track with publication. As chair, I would be worried whether I had clearly enough laid out the issues with Johns--or whether he was just not listening well, which seems to often happen.
They at least should have figured out how to read his on-line material.
In our department, tenure and promotion is primarily a departmental issue. I'm concerned, though, that the "administration" of the computer facility that this faculty member undertook was actually more like "technical support," and budgeting for this might be in the dean's balliwick. (In my case, I just throw myself at the mercy of computer services and let them do the scut work.)
Johns needed to make allies and get help--from the chair or from other members of the department. He needed to figure out how to raise his teaching scores. And he needed to publish in venues that the department would recognize as scholarly.What went wrong? What went right? What went wrong is that this hard-working, intelligent faculty member has just a couple of years to pull together the publications and teaching evaluations he would need to be granted tenure at my institution--and at most others. He needed some canny mentoring from someone who could help him plot out pre and post tenure career strategies. He seems to have been much more successful at the work of his discipline than at meeting the institutional criteria for tenure and promotion. |