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DOCUMENTS OF THE GENERAL FACULTY
MID-PROBATIONARY REVIEW POLICY (AMENDED)
Below is a proposal for a mid-probationary review policy
as amended and then approved by the Faculty Council on March 20, 2000.
the proposal as originally submitted by the Committee of Counsel on Academic
Freedom and Responsibility appears on D
328-329.
<signed>
John R. Durbin, Secretary
The Faculty Council
MID-PROBATIONARY REVIEW POLICY
(AMENDED)
Mid-Probationary Period Review of Assistant Professors
During the tenure track probationary period, assistant
professors shall receive a formal review. The purpose shall be developmental
and advisory and is to provide feedback to the faculty member and the
department regarding the faculty member's progress toward meeting the
standards for promotion with tenure. The review should begin no later
than the beginning of the [sixth semester of employment] fourth
year of the probationary period and should be concluded [by the
end of that semester] in the semester in which it was begun.
A favorable review should not be read by candidates as an implied assurance
that tenure will be granted.
For the review, the faculty member's teaching,
research,
and service records will be evaluated. Evidence reviewed should parallel
the categories and materials typically included in promotion and tenure
files (see HOP 3.17).
The review shall be conducted by the department's Budget
Council or an appropriate faculty committee which shall produce a written
draft of its recommendations. The report should include appropriate
recommendations
to address problem areas.
The department chair will communicate the
draft results of the Budget Council/committee's evaluations to the
faculty member in
a meeting with the faculty member and one other member of the Budget
Council/committee chosen by the faculty member under review. The
faculty member under review
will have an opportunity to respond to the draft. After the meeting,
the department chair and faculty member from the Budget Council/committee
will inform the Budget Council/committee of the responses of the
faculty
member under review. The Budget Council/committee and the department
chair will produce a final written version of their recommendations.
The faculty
member under review may provide a written response to the final written
evaluation if he/she chooses. The department chair will communicate
to
the dean that the review has occurred.
The department must have a written
document explaining the guidelines and procedures to be followed in
the conduct of the review.
The faculty member should be given this at the time of his/her initial
appointment to a tenure-track position as well as updates as they occur.
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Rationale for Mid-Probationary Review
Proposal
Reasons for formal mid-probationary reviews
generally stress providing clear, productive, and informative guidance
to a candidate during the probationary period toward tenure and promotion.
Annual reviews are not usually adequate for giving candidates an overall
assessment of their progress toward tenure. Additionally, cursory or
uncritical
mid-probationary reviews may not give candidates signals they need in
time to make improvements. It was for these reasons
that the primary recommendations of the UT System Committee on the Advancement
of Women, fall 1996, included a recommendation that "each institution
shall adopt a policy establishing a mandatory formal mid-probationary
period review." Chancellor William H. Cunningham endorsed this recommendation
in March 1997. Guidelines for such a policy were suggested, and this
proposal
from the ACCFR follows those guidelines.
This report was posted on the Faculty
Council web site ( http://www.utexas.edu/faculty/council/)
on March 22, 2000. Paper copies are available on request from the Office
of the General Faculty, FAC 22, F9500. |