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College
of Education Policies
Load
Policy
FACULTY LOAD
"Faculty
load" refers to a faculty member's combined responsibilities
in the areas of Teaching, Research, and Service. Given the
Strategic Goals of the College of Education, all tenure track
faculty members are expected to assume some responsibility
in all three areas. The expectations of work for the attainment
of tenure and promotion are described in the University's
manual of operations and in a separate College policy. This
load policy is consistent with those expectations, but does
not specifically address the typical evaluative criteria and
judgments of excellence associated with tenure and promotion
decisions.
The load policy is meant to be flexible. It does not prescribe
an exact pattern of work for each faculty member, nor does
it prescribe exact remedies for perceived load inequities.
NORMATIVE EXPECTATIONS
The normative expectation for each tenure track faculty member
in the College of Education is that work effort will be distributed
so that approximately forty percent of their time is devoted
to teaching, forty percent of their time is devoted to research
and scholarship, and twenty percent of their time is devoted
to service. (DEOs may assume automatic leeway of 10 percent
from any of these point norms in specifying or using norms
in their own departments.) We will subsequently refer to this
distribution of effort as the 40-40-20 rule or norm, listed,
for easy reference, below:
| Teaching: |
40 percent of effort |
| Research and Scholarship: |
40 percent of effort |
| Service: |
20 percent of effort |
THE USE OF NORMS
This normative scheme formalizes a set of expectations already
in place in the College of Education, whereby work assignments
are developed among faculty and their DEOs, yearly merit evaluations
are made for faculty salary raises, and other periodic reviews
of faculty performance are completed. It is recognized that
work effort cannot be measured precisely, since no one clocks
the hours spent by faculty in particular activities. However,
these guidelines are useful for establishing general targets
and ranges of work effort which faculty can use to gauge their
own priorities and the College can use to monitor its own
work and account for the contributions of its faculty. These
normative and minimum expectations are no guarantee of merit
pay increases or promotion. Ultimately the College is responsible
for faculty teaching assignments, but in practice delegates
much of that responsibility for arranging assignments to DEOs.
DEOs, in consultation with program coordinators and faculty,
are expected to implement the following principles in coordinating
faculty members' teaching assignments:

- Teaching
- The normative teaching load of a faculty
member includes regular classroom instruction, student advising
and thesis direction. For some faculty it also includes
supervision of field experiences and clinical supervision.
- The baseline expectancy is that a faculty
member will teach two formal courses per semester totaling
5-7 semester hours. Ordinarily these will be two different
courses which require separate preparations.
- In addition to formal courses, a regular
teaching load will also include some combination of the
following: supervising student teachers, directing courses
having sections taught by TAs, organizing and supervising
practica, directing independent study courses, and directing
students in thesis writing. Seminars which involve considerable
direct instruction (planning, lectures, paper reading, etc.)
by the instructor are considered equivalent to a regular
class.
Tenured faculty appointed in programs with Masters and Ph.D.
thesis requirements are expected to advise graduate students
and supervise theses on a regular basis. Over a three year
period, faculty are expected to supervise to completion
a reasonable number of satisfactory theses with an absolute
minimum of at least one in each three year period.
- Each faculty member on the College payroll
is expected to teach at least one formal course each academic
year, regardless of their other responsibilities. Administrative
appointments, grant buyouts of teaching assignments, and
other agreements (see, for example, portfolio contracts)
may exempt an individual from this requirement for no more
than one year.
- Required courses and critical electives
with demonstrated viable enrollments will be staffed first
with faculty (best) qualified to teach them. It is expected
that such courses will be taught by faculty across all ranks.
- Faculty are expected to teach courses
with viable enrollments. Low enrollment courses necessary
for students' programs of study will be scheduled infrequently
enough to ensure viable enrollments without causing undue
hardship on students' degree progress. At the discretion
of the DEO, faculty may on occasion and on a trial basis
develop and offer new courses which initially have low enrollments.
Such courses must eventually demonstrate their viability
(value to students as well as adequate enrollments) to be
considered as a contribution to the faculty member's regular
teaching load.
- Courses which rely heavily on guest speakers
with few contributions by the faculty member may be considered
as less than a full course for calculations of load. Two
faculty members who team teach courses will normally receive
a one-half course credit for their teaching.
- If a DEO believes that a tenured faculty
member has an excessive load of teaching activities, s/he
may recommend to the faculty member to consider a portfolio
contract, so that the additional teaching responsibilities
are formally recognized.

- Research, Scholarship, and Creative
Work
- Faculty are expected to be active
in conducting research, engaging in scholarship, and/or
producing creative work which extends the knowledge base
of the faculty member's discipline, contributes to the improvement
of professional practice, or produces a professionally worthwhile
product or tool.
- It is also expected that a faculty
member will complete and publish at least one major scholarly
article per year (or its equivalent). In addition (but not
in lieu of), faculty will be expected to regularly present
scholarly presentations at major professional conventions
and meetings.
- A third expectation is that a faculty
member will seek to support their own research and that
of graduate students in their program by regularly applying
for and securing extramural grants and contracts or other
sources of support beyond the instructional budget of the
College.
- Faculty wishing to devote a significantly
greater percentage of time to research and scholarship than,
say, to formal teaching, may do so if they have completed
a portfolio contract.
- Service
- Service consists of those activities
which help sustain or promote ongoing programs and services
in the College, at the University, in the state, and elsewhere.
In the College, it is expected that faculty will agree to
offer some service in activities such as program coordination,
student admissions, faculty and staff searches, review of
programs and services, and by serving on standing committees
in such areas as technology, diversity, and student financial
assistance. At the University, it is expected that faculty
will agree to serve on standing committees, ad hoc committees,
and task forces. Beyond the University, faculty are encouraged
to become involved with their professional organizations,
to be of service to other public and governmental bodies,
and to consult with professional constituencies.
- Each faculty member is expected
to devote at least several hours per week, on average, to
such service activities. Although service activities are
important, commitments which might reduce a faculty member's
level of involvement in teaching and scholarly activity
are to be pursued cautiously and only after discussion with
the DEO. Assistant professors are particularly discouraged
from involving themselves in time consuming service activities
which can interfere with their successful start to their
teaching and scholarly careers.
- Grants and Contracts
The College encourages faculty to support
their work by regularly seeking out and applying for grants,
contracts and private gifts which can attract additional resources
to help them advance their own professional activities as well
as the work of their colleagues and students. Clearly, success
in attracting such resources is a key to sustaining and enhancing
the long standing quality of our academic programs, the training
opportunities for our students, and the contributions our College
makes to education. For simplicity, we refer to all such funding
sources below as a "grant."
If a faculty member wishes to devote a significant portion
of their time to an activity supported through a grant --
particularly if it is an extramural source -- they should
seek to enter into a portfolio contract and be prepared to
agree to direct a portion of the budget from the grant, to
replace their time, as follows:
- For each formal course release, the faculty
member will be shifted to salary support on the grant for
a minimum of 10 percent of their academic year salary.
- Faculty with joint appointments should
work with their DEO's to coordinate salary allocations across
Colleges.
- The College, in consultation with
the faculty member's DEO, may arrange to have the course
taught by someone else, which may require additional salary
funds to be released from the grant.
APPLICATION
OF THE POLICY
- This policy will apply to all
tenure track faculty in the College with the exception
of:
- Deans, Directors, DEOs
- Faculty with Individualized
Portfolios (including those on developmental assignment)
- Consistent with the University's policy
on Post-tenure Effort Allocation, any tenured faculty
member may ask his/her DEO to consider developing an agreement
permitting the faculty member a waiver from the College's
normative load expectation, in the form of an Individualized
Portfolio. The DEO is not obliged to agree to such a contract
if it is not deemed to be in the best interests of the
Department or the College. The Dean, similarly, will not
be obliged to agree to such a contract.
September
1999 (revised January, 2000)

POLICY
& PROCEDURE QUESTIONS: Contact
Judy Brewer.
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