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Maricela Guzman's Case |
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Introduction Chair, Personnel Committee #1Sherry Richer: Case #4 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 Research Intensive, headed toward Research Extensive
M.A. granted in English (concentrations in Children's Literature There are 20 tenured/tenure-track faculty and 12 non-tenure track lecturers, mostly with MA degrees. About a third of the tenured faculty have had some contact with writing centers in their past and most of the lecturers have worked in our writing center. The department is down about 8-10 tenure-line positions since the early 90's, through retirements and job transfers.
I think this case at my university would have proceeded pretty much as it did in the case study. Our department has been open (perhaps too open) to faculty changing directions in scholarly interests even before tenure. Guzman was hired to develop a program in technology and tenure, which she did. She has developed a reputation in technology, which she was expected to do when she was hired. I don't think the science emphasis would be a problem here because the project was developed within the technology paradigm for which she was hired.
I think much of the problem began at hiring. The hiring committee and the department overlooked a critical part of he job that they wanted Guzman to perform. Because of this, she mayWhat are the Personnel Committee's responsibilities toward Guzman? Which did they fulfill? Fail? Responsibilities of the Chair of Review. In this case study, the review/personnel committee and its chair failed in its responsibility to give feedback to the chair and through him/her to Guzman about her performance in the writing center. The chair of the committee also failed to elicit from committee members their "true" feelings about Guzman, that they were unhappy about her scientific leanings. The chair also failed to remind the committee of the conditions under which Guzman was hired and the department's stated policy to accept on-line and technological research. However, in my department's review committee, it is often the case that committee members will not discuss negative issues for fear of losing a position or for fear of not being "collegial" (in our department's case.) It is often difficult to be critical and if you are, you might be seen as "negative" or "uncollegial" even where a negative judgment is warranted.
Having never been a Dean, I am less certain of his/her responsibilities. Since hiring is contractual, I would guess that the Dean must be certain of the match between the candidate's qualifications and the needs advertised. A mismatch might even raise legal questions, especially if other candidates may have been overlooked or bypassed in the search if the requirements change. It would be the Dean's responsibility to question the chair at every point in the tenure process, again for mostly legal reasons.
At the third year, Guzman needs to be reminded of her responsibilities by the chair of the department. She needs to know from the chair the unofficial position of the department and the possible negative ( mostly interpersonal it seems) fallout if she continues to lean even more toward scientific enactments of her technology scholarship. She needs to know that her performance in the writing center is not seen as fulfilling her contract--if this is the case. It is not clear in the case study that she was told any of this stuff by the chair, dean or whomever, and she should have been.
In many universities (and this is the case here also) the third year review seems to be pro forma. It seems that few places have the stomach to be tough, to outline clearly what expectations are and are not being met. In this case, as I said, it is not clear if Guzman ever found out the "unofficial" version of the third-year decision. If she never found out, that would have been a mistake. Probably the pressure to raise the teaching load instead of working with Guzman to define the position is a mistake. The department chair's promise of support seems hollow if it is only support for tenure; the support should include ways to help Guzman identify herself within the social context of her department so she will not be ostrasized. |