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Faculty and Staff Handbook
All faculty are expected to be active in
their fields. Teaching effectiveness, research/scholarly activity, service
and professional activities which enhance the instructional experience
can be demonstrated by the following:
- Teaching
Within the context of the provisions of Article V,
Academic Freedom, teaching/learning excellence can be achieved through
a variety of stylistic approaches and out of a wide range of pedagogical
bases. However, within this diversity, it is commonly accepted that
excellence in teaching may be characterized by, for example:
- Command of one’s subject.
- Knowledge of current developments in one’s field.
- Ability to relate one’s subject to other areas of
knowledge and endeavor.
- Ability to provoke and broaden student interest in
one’s subject matter.
- Ability to use effective and varied teaching methods
and strategies.
- Contributions to curriculum through course/curricula
development or redesign.
- Contribution to the development and refinement of
materials, teaching/learning techniques and the implementation of new
courses and curricula.
- Possession of discipline, integrity, industry, open-mindedness,
and objectivity in teaching.
- Recognition and knowledge of the general and individual
academic and extracurricular needs of one’s students.
- Participation in special courses, seminars, or workshops
which develop teaching skills.
- The ability to speak and write efficiently and effectively.
B. Research and scholarly activity
- Scholarly writing. This typically takes the
form of publication based on peer review or other scholarly critical
evaluation although some more popular publications can fulfill this
standard. Although the development and refinement of courses is not
per se a scholarly activity the development and refinement of courses
which results in a new approach to a traditional field or helps give
shape to an emerging field could also be considered a scholarly activity.
Manuscripts of unpublished work may be submitted. In the case of not-yet-published
work, evaluation by qualified independent reviewers is useful.
- Scholarly talks. Normally these take the form
of presentations at scholarly meetings in one’s discipline but can also
include public lectures.
- Creative work. This includes creation and
interpretation of works of art in painting, sculpture, music, dance,
theatre, film, video, radio, or other art forms, computer programs and
other inventions and development of teaching aids such as photographs,
slides and video tapes are typical examples of creative work. Where
available, reviews serve as measures of the quality of the creative
work. Another measure is the level of selectivity for an exhibit or
performance in a certain venue, analogous to the refereeing of scholarly
papers.
- Applied Scholarship. Application of scholarly
expertise to community and social problems.
C. Service
- This includes service on University committees or
task forces, the Faculty Senate, departmental committees, college-wide
committees/task forces such as those for convocation, graduation, accreditation
committees, the mentor/mentee program, or a study abroad student selection
panel.
- Service to community and the profession, illustrated
by:
- Holding office in professional organizations.
- Working on educational committees of the State.
- Acting as institutional liaison to agencies/organizations.
- Offering workshops and symposia without honoraria.
- Giving speeches/papers to community groups.
- Presentations in classic taught by other faculty
members.
- Contributing to professional organizations/institutional
position documents on public policy or legislative issues.
- Critiquing scholarly publications and/or grant
proposals.
- Serving on Boards including editorial boards
or engaging in professional services.
- Consultantships with or without honoraria with/for
professional organizations and societies, educational institutions,
industry, government (state and federal), or inter-intra departmental.
- Faculty mentor of student activities such as honor
societies, departmental clubs, professional clubs, Greek Letter Student
Organizations, the University literary magazine or newspaper.
- Academic advisement of major or in the Advisement
Center.
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