Department Chairs’ and Deans’ Advice about Tenure
Create Your Own Development Plan
· Have an individual development plan started in your first semester for teaching, scholarship and service agendas.
· Be proactive in your own process – don’t rely on a mentor or committee to direct you.
· Focus your activities and balance between your interests and department/university interests (if not aligned).
· Be proactive – set goals and receive feedback on what is “productive.”
· Strive to align your passions with activities that are also aligned with metrics of tenure assessment (w/ Venn diagram).
Manage Service
· Define service obligations/opportunities as those that only contribute to teaching and research agendas.
· Don’t say “yes” to so many committees (service) that you are unable to meet the scholarship requirement.
· Manage your service commitments
· Be selective about service
· Learn how to say “no” if you find yourself being asked to do too much service – it won’t get you tenure even if you do all the service in the world.
· Choose service that aligns with your talents/skills and/or that will help you learn new skills – be strategic.
· Rotate committee membership.
· Just Say No – avoid service which does not advance your research agenda.
Develop Your Portfolio (Binders)
· Look at good binders for your school.
· Talk to Chair of P&T committee to identify who would have a good example portfolio (a successful promotion).
· Start collecting materials now, keep CV up to date.
· Look at other faculty’s binders/ask for advice.
· Begin putting binders together early.
· Ask to look at recent tenured faculty binders for templates, etc.
· Ask for examples of tenure binders and annual P&T review folders.
Understand Expectations
· Ask questions about BSU expectations.
· Make sure your activities and accomplishments count not only within your department, but also with your colleagues across the college.
· Work with your department head and/or dean to ensure your workload meets their expectations for output.
· Read all applicable policies.
· Abide by any rubric your department created in order to “meet expectations” annually/bi-annually.
· Become very familiar with your college P&T document.
· Have clear conversation with your chair and P&T committee about what the expectations are, both in a written document and the “unwritten” expectations.
· Read policies carefully.
Partner with Mentors
· Participate in university-level mentoring programs as available. Ask who BSU mentors are (outside of your department/college) and confer with them by the start of year.
· Use your mentors.
· Request that your department pay for an external mentor in a sub-field.
· Have a mentor and seek guidance in preparing your portfolio.
· Find a mentor(s), perhaps outside your college – it was a safe place to talk.
· Find a good mentor within/outside department. Chair will help w/the process. Mentor can help with research & teaching questions.
· Seek mentors.
· Find or be assigned a mentor.
· Find a mentor, change mentor if match is not good.
Ask for Help
· Be sure to ask for help.
· Talk to your department chair. When you feel the need to, when you are having trouble, when you need help with writing, etc.
· Ask for help and guidance as soon as you feel (or realize) that you may be falling behind in meeting expectations.
· Ask for help.
Ask for Feedback
· Get feedback early and often; and listen to it.
· Learn your unit’s expectations! Do this with regular feedback from your chair and colleagues.
· Seek feedback within and out of department.
· Demand annual feedback on a departmental level and document the feedback.
· Make sure that feedback on annual reviews is aligned with biennial pre-tenure reviews.
· Ask for feedback from your worst critic, not just your best.
Engage with Faculty outside Your Department
· Stay engaged with community and other faculty.
· Join a writing group.
· Network! Both within and without your unit.
· Collaborate across disciplines.
Make Room for Scholarship
· Make sure your publications are submitted/accepted by journals on the acceptable list.
· Prioritize scholarship.
· Unfortunately, prioritize research and publication.
· Use grant buy-outs.
· Learn to say no, protect research time.
· Get manuscripts out ASAP.
· Schedule your weeks so you have a consistent day or two devoted just to research, writing and scholarship.
· Find a productive collaborator to partner with in research efforts.
· Commit your research agenda to writing – include in TPR materials – discuss with TPR and chair. This enables you to build your specific case for what your research agenda is and how you are meeting it ASAP.
· Establish your research agenda immediately.
· Communicate with your chair and P&T committee about the research projects that you would like to work on so that your colleagues understand how they will be valued when applying.
· Write/attempt proposals (a lot).
· Utilize summers to work on scholarship.
Improve Your Teaching
· Be humble: It is hard to teach the first couple of years, and it will get better if you actively work to engage students.
· Learn the P&T policies early on; get to know everyone who will be in your T& P committee.
· Observe other faculty in teaching.
· Ensure you teach at least three courses at both grad and undergrad levels.
· Teach the same classes each year.
· Attend CTL Workshops.
· Participate in peer assessment in classroom.
· Figure out how you are going to demonstrate your excellence in teaching. It is easy to do for research, but teaching – very tough.
· Define your continuous improvement strategy in teaching.
· Participate in CTL’s “Ten before Tenure.”
Build Department Relationships
· Be on good terms with all people.
· Cultivate relationships and positive perceptions among your colleagues.
· Get to know the key faculty players in your college.
· Listen to your department colleagues. Talk to them about your work and aspirations.
· Remember that the significant majority of your senior colleagues are here to help and mentor you. They are not out to “get” you.
· Don’t be afraid to speak up.
· Don’t be afraid to contribute at department meetings.
· Be visible in the department; talk about your work.
· Try to stay above departmental politics.
· Be a good department citizen – do disagree with colleagues, but with a civil tone.
· Be social with faculty from across your department.
Pay Attention to Wellbeing
· Do what you love, do it well, breathe.
· Find something you are passionate about.
· Don’t fret the details of the P&T process – instead focus on the whole person you need to become – excellent researcher, excellent teacher, valuable contributor of service --- and then do it.
Connect outside Boise State University
· Join a committee at your professional society and attend the annual meeting; try to organize/co-organize a symposium.
· Cultivate external references through conference attendance and service to field (session chair).
· Make some solid connection outside university.
· Prioritize professional relationships within the field.
Other
· Ensure you have thoroughly completed Faculty 180 (performance evaluation tool).
· Just say “no.” Practice saying “thank you for that opportunity; I would like to take some time to think about it.” Then weigh how it fits with goals/responsibilities.
· Identify campus/department resources (e.g. Library faculty and staff)