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A Guide to the Promotion and Tenure Process

A Guide to the Promotion and Tenure Process. By: Richard N. Pierson III, M.D., FACS, Professor of Surgery Senior Associate Dean for Academic Affairs, School of Medicine Based on presentations prepared by

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A Guide to the Promotion and Tenure Process

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  1. A Guide to the Promotion and Tenure Process By: Richard N. Pierson III, M.D., FACS, Professor of Surgery Senior Associate Dean for Academic Affairs, School of Medicine Based on presentations prepared by Bruce A. Jarrell, MD, Achsah D. Keegan, Ph.D., Brad Alger, PhD, James Kaper, PhD and Alan Cross, MD .

  2. Academic Titles • Academic titles are conferred only in SOM Departments on recommendation by the Chair, (not in Centers, Programs, or Institutes). • Titles: • Instructor/Research Associate (NTT) • Assistant Professor (TT, NTT) • Associate Professor (TT, NTT, tenured) • Professor (TT, NTT, tenured) • Prefixes: part-time, volunteer, visiting, emeritus • Tenure is not a title, but a performance-based commitment by SOM to a faculty member TT = tenure track, NTT = non-tenured track

  3. There is Promotionand there is Tenure(at UMSOM they are NOT connected) One can be appointed or promoted without tenure, (even on the tenure-track). One can be evaluated and receive tenure without being promoted. One can only change tenure tracks ONCE NTT to TT; TT to NTT

  4. Criteria for Promotion, Tenure Objective evidence of Quality, Originality, Impact, (Independence), Trajectory • Research/scholarly contributions • Teaching • Institutional/non-institutional service • Clinical activities (if applicable)

  5. Mission of the SOM Committee on Appointments, Promotion, and Tenure (APT) • APT is advisory to the Dean • APT considers recommendations made to the Dean by Departmental Chairs • APT considers: • New Appointments • Associate Professor (TT or with tenure) • Professor (TT or with tenure) • Promotions to Associate Professor or Professor • All tenure recommendations

  6. Present (FY12) APTCommittee Membership (Member: 3-year term; Chair: 1-2 years) • Paul S. Fishman, M.D. Ph.D. (Neurology) – Chair • Robert W. Buchanan, M.D. (Psychiatry) • Richard L. Eckert, Ph.D. (Biochem/Molecular Biol) • Joseph P. Kao, Ph.D. (Physiology) • Patricio O’Donnell, M.D., Ph.D. (Anatomy & Neurobiology) • Mark W. Rogers, PT, Ph.D., FAPTA (PTRS) • Mary-Claire Roghmann, M.D., (Epidemiology/PH) • J. Marc Simard, M.D. (Neurosurgery) • Rose M. Viscardi, M.D. (Pediatrics) All tenured professors; basic and clinical departments

  7. Normal Steps in the Process • Initial appointments at Assistant Professor • Chair  Dean  SOM council  VP/President  Dean • Initial appointments at Professor or Associate Professor on the tenure track or with tenure • Chair  Dean  SOM APT Com.  Dean  SOM Executive Com.  SOM Council  VP/President  Dean • Promotions to Associate Professor or Professor, and/or for award of tenure • Dept. APT Com.  Chair  Dean  SOM APT Com.  Dean  SOM Executive Com.  SOM Council  VP/President  Dean • Recommendations for faculty members who are members of centers or institutes are made jointly between the Department Chair and Center/Institute Director

  8. GATHER DOCUMENTS REQUIRED FOR THE DOSSIER DEPARTMENT REQUESTS LETTERS OF RECOMMENDATION FAVORABLE REVIEW BY DEPARTMENTAL APT COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATION BY DEPARTMENT CHAIR FULL DOSSIER TO APT via DEAN’S OFFICE (DUE IN DECEMBER) TWO APT REVIEWERS PRESENT INDEPENDENT REVIEWS TENURE?: ADDITIONAL (OUTSIDE) REVIEWER DISCUSSION AND VOTE [Y/N/Defer] BY APT APT PROCESS

  9. APT REVIEW VOTE TO APPROVE (Y/N/Defer) OFTEN UNANIMOUS DEFER for additional info ReRev NO FACULTY CHAIR DEAN YES SOM EXEC COMM SOM COUNCIL UMB VP/Pres DEAN

  10. Criteria for Promotion Objective evidence of Quality, Originality, Impact, (Independence), Trajectory • Research/scholarly contributions • Teaching • Institutional/non-institutional service • Clinical activities (if applicable)

  11. Promotion toAssociateProfessor • Awarded for demonstration of sustained accomplishments in teaching, significant contributions to knowledge, clinical activities (if applicable), and/or service well beyond those required for an Assistant Professor. • Evidence of regional prominence (e.g., membership and leadership in regional professional activities, invitations to speak at regional conferences/grand rounds, regional referral base for clinicians. • Convincingevidence of ability to maintain excellent performance. • Never granted solely as a reward for length of service.

  12. Promotion to Professor • Awarded only for thehighestlevels of scholarly achievement, teaching, and service to SOM and UMB. • Nothing less than excellence in at least 2 categories. • Clearly establishedNATIONAL REPUTATIONand IMPACTin scholarship, teaching, service, (clinical) • First rateteacher, transformative service (+/or pt care) • Sustainedhigh level of productivity andexcellencein contributions to knowledge. • Never granted solely as a reward for length of service.

  13. Evaluation Criteria RESEARCH -Scholarly contributions (originality, impact) -Quality of peer-reviewed journals -Number of senior/primary authorships or well-annotated description of individual contribution -Citation scores (total, individual papers, h-index impact factor) -Peer-reviewed Grants (source, magnitude, dates, role, diversity, renewal history, etc) -Patents issued, licensed -Invited presentations, national and international recognition -Documentation! (Quantity, Quality, Impact)

  14. Citation Analysis and Journal Impact Factor (IF) • Citation analysis is performed on each candidate considered by the APT (Science citation index, ISI Web of knowledge). • Quality of journal is important but journal IFs are not calculated for each candidate. • In some biomedical fields, the most prestigious journals have low IF because the field is smaller. • Major, not minor differences in IF would make an impression.

  15. H Index (Hirsch 2005 PNAS 102:16569) • The highest number of papers that have each received at least that number of citations • e.g., an h-index of 50 means 50 papers have each received at least 50 citations. • Avoids undue weight to a large number of mediocre papers. • Highlights sustained and significant contributions. • Can be calculated using Science Citation Index for an author with results sorted on times cited. http://www.hshsl.umaryland.edu/resources/databases/Default.aspx?q=&p=4#results

  16. Criteria for Evaluation SERVICE -Documentation! (Quantity, Quality, Impact) -Current & past institutional (Department and SOM major committees, leadership roles important) e.g., IACUC, IRB, qualifying exam committee -Medical school applicant interviews, etc. -Significant administrative positions (School, Hosp.) -Regional, Natl. & Intl. Society membership/service committee membership, leadership; impact -Reviewing (editorial boards, grant reviews) Journal reviewer service should be tracked (#/yr/Journal) -Community service

  17. Criteria for Evaluation TEACHING -Documentation! (Quantity, Quality, Impact) -Teaching portfolio required for APT level promotions(see Dr. Nancy Lowitt) -Courses taught and/or developed (classes, number of hours, number of students) -Medical student & graduate student teaching -Non-course teaching (student, resident) -Mentoring (committees, advisees) - where have advisees ended up? -Evaluations (quantitative if possible, letters) Teaching awards (Non-trivial)

  18. Criteria for Evaluation Clinical -Documentation! (Quantity, Quality, Impact) -Clinical portfolio strongly recommended for APT level promotions (see Dr. Nancy Lowitt) -Board Certified in Specialty/Sub-specialty -Sustained record of clinical publications -Evidence of clinical excellence (RVUs, hours, letters) -Leadership role in clinical trials (delineate role) -Broad-based patient referral pattern (1 or 2 letters) -Development of new technique/procedure/device objective evidence of scholarly evaluation -Invited clinical presentations: Grand Rounds (extramural) Talks at region, national and international meetings

  19. Criteria for Evaluation Letters of Recommendation -Chair’s letter: role, contributions to the department -5-7 external letters, 3-5 internal -At least 3 should be independent reviewers -Support for appointment at the requested rank and tenure status should be explicit in the letter -Provide new information not in dossier (evaluative comments helpful) -Significant relationships with candidate should be noted (mentor, co-investigator, personal: bias) -Comments regarding candidate’s suitability for appointment to a similar position at the reviewer’s institution is particularly compelling

  20. What is Tenure ? • Tenure acknowledges a long-term commitment by the School to the faculty member. The granting of tenure is one of the most important decisions made by the School. • Unlike many institutions where tenure is not precisely defined, tenure at UMSOM is a long-term financial commitment by the institution to provide specified minimum levels of salary support to tenured faculty who do not generate income sufficient to pay the full professional activities component of the salary. • Specific salary support information can be found at http://medschool.umaryland.edu/Newsletters/sstffin.pdf

  21. Tenure Time Clock • Assist. Professor on tenure track • Review & decision on tenure can occur at any time but must occur before the end of the 9th year after initial appointment. • Associate Professor or Professor • Decision must occur before the end of the 4th year. • If tenure is denied during a mandatory tenure review, the faculty member can be transferred to NTT. • Someone initially appointed on the NTT can be reviewed and granted tenure even without being on the TT. • Department chair requests to extend the tenure deadline are considered on a case-by-case basis, and require approval by the SOM Dean and University President.

  22. *****Criteria for Tenure***** “The paramount criterion for granting of tenure shall be evidence that the faculty member has madesubstantial, original contributions to knowledgeas demonstrated by the publication of asustained seriesof peer-reviewed articles based upon the faculty member’sindependentacademic activities.” Key criterion is sustained record of scholarly productivity and (almost always) peer-reviewed funding

  23. Tenure Evaluation THE OUTSIDE EXPERT’S OPINION • For any deliberation regarding awarding of tenure (and only for tenure decisions), the advice of an expert in the candidate’s field (usually outside of UM) is sought by scheduled conference call during the APT meeting • The expert is recruited impartially and independently by the APT coordinator • The expert is sent the entire dossier except for letters of recommendation • The expert’s independent opinion is solicited by the primary reviewer, and then questions are posed by the entire APT Committee

  24. Is there a Formula??? No. (Unfortunately. The APT’s job would be MUCH easier if there were.) The APT looks at the whole package in the context of the candidate’s field of expertise. Major accomplishments in one area may to some extent balance off a minor deficiency in another. But ‘johny one-notes’ do not usually do well. No particular quantity in any category of scholarship, teaching or service guarantees promotion or tenure.

  25. What about ROUGH guidelinesfor Promotion or Tenure??(i.e., historical precedents) • Receipt of major peer-reviewed grants as Principle Investigator. • NIH is still the gold standard • NSF, DOD, and VA awards are viewed similarly • Clinical trial leadership (clearly define role in design, conduct) • Recent successful candidates for Associate Professor (Tenure track) have had ~30 peer-reviewed papers, are 1st or senior author on >60%, and have received at least one peer-reviewed grant. • Citation scores >500, H-index typically >10 • Successful candidates for Tenured Full Professor have >50 peer-reviewed papers, successfully renewed at least one peer-reviewed grant. • Cited >1000 times, H-Index >15 • Local and national service (editorial boards, Study Section, leadership role in professional societies); high-quality teaching, clinical care • National/international profile (major talks at natl./intl. meetings)

  26. MAIN POINTS • Promotion and Tenure are separate decisions. • Standards are described in SOM APT Guidelines. • National/International Impact and Reputation. • Scholarship (peer-reviewed publications) is essential • Teaching, Service, and Clinical Excellence count equally • EXCELLENCE is primary standard. • Generally required in 2 of 3 categories for promotion to Associate Professor • Leadership in societies, statements of peers, invited talks off campus, organization of symposia, etc. • Documentation Rules! (Quantity, Quality, Impact)

  27. http://medschool.umaryland.edu/ PoliciesProcedures.asp Criteria for academic ranks and tenure * http://medschool.umaryland.edu/opd/faculty.asp http://medschool.umaryland.edu/AcademicAdmin/ Faculty development, CV, and portfolio development Information on process and required documents Where to find the BASIC INFORMATION

  28. AND THAT’S ALL THERE IS TO IT! GOOD LUCK!

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