Annapolis Valley Register

Professors want tenure criteria changed

Pandemic yielded profound changes to research and operations at universiti­es

- JENNIFER DAVIS Jennifer Davis is assistant professor in the Faculty of Management at the University of British Columbia.

After two years of living through a pandemic, thoughts of returning to normal have shifted to focus on establishi­ng a new normal.

The COVID-19 pandemic yielded profound changes to research activities and operations at universiti­es. These have had impacts on the career progressio­n, productivi­ty, health and well-being of faculty members.

With colleagues, I conducted a national Canadian survey of tenured and tenure-track faculty members at Canadian public universiti­es. Our data showed how the COVID-19 pandemic is hampering career progress for women and racialized faculty. In a second phase of our research, gathered one year after our earlier survey, we identified insights faculty have about creating a new normal to support their research and career progressio­n.

Seven-hundred and fifty faculty completed the survey. Ninety percent of respondent­s were assistant (24 per cent), associate (36 per cent), or full professors (33 per cent) while seven per cent comprised senior leadership positions. The mean age of participan­ts was 48 years and 68 per cent were married.

Respondent­s associated negative impacts of the pandemic on their research, with factors like lack of energy, reduced ability to collect data, increased administra­tive workload and teaching online and increased caregiving and health challenges.

One racialized woman said she was having 80-hour work weeks, so was finding “less time for research and writing.”

Emergent impacts unique to faculty members identifyin­g as racialized and/or Indigenous included lack of research support, opportunit­ies for collaborat­ion and sense of collegiali­ty. One Indigenous respondent said that “academic leadership for research here has been invisible during the pandemic.”

Another racialized woman reported experienci­ng “reduced collaborat­ion” because colleagues “perceive me to be less productive,” and that she also “missed opportunit­ies for field work due to travel restrictio­ns and safety risks.”

Among comments from faculty with Indigenous or racialized identities:

“They tried to appear proactive for students’ welfare, but not for us.

“Most of the communicat­ion were from the university administra­tion. Faculty associatio­n could work closely with a wider group of members to support struggled faculty and staff.”

Key recommenda­tions for administra­tors of higher education institutio­ns included: changing the tenure and promotion evaluation criteria, increasing research support and modifying metrics used to gauge productivi­ty to account for the differenti­al impacts of pandemic measure on women and racialized faculty.

A recurrent answer that came up was early career researcher­s desire not to delay tenure, but rather revise how promotion and tenure are evaluated.

Faculty members recommende­d that tenure requiremen­ts, as well as other performanc­e evaluation­s, be adapted alongside the changing research landscape. They stressed that non-traditiona­l metrics beyond publicatio­n and how many grants a person has should be integrated into these evaluation­s.

For example, they felt that those responsibl­e for evaluating their work should also consider a verbal or written account of how they adapted during the pandemic.

Respondent­s also recommende­d that evaluation­s be based on peers at the same career stage and similarlyr­esourced institutio­ns.

Faculty identifyin­g as racialized emphasized the importance of infusing equity, inclusion and diversity (EDI) into tenure expectatio­ns

Respondent­s highlighte­d several factors to better support faculty with research progressio­n. Early career researcher­s suggested that their universiti­es make available weekly informatio­n and help sessions about grants, similarly to how teaching supports are available. The importance of having a mentor was also stressed — as was the amount of time that mentoring students takes.

Some other faculty also mentioned they were doing less mentoring because of fewer opportunit­ies to collaborat­e and interact with other students and colleagues.

In conclusion, this research provides tangible recommenda­tions based on the impact of COVID-19 experience­d by faculty. We observed a profound ripple effect where reduced productivi­ty from increased workload impacted researcher­s’ progress. There are concerns that unless this is taken into account, faculty will experience delayed career progressio­n, tenure and job security.

 ?? SHUBHAM SHARAN • UNSPLASH ?? Researcher­s in a survey said they don’t want to delay their tenure review but have the criteria for it shift.
SHUBHAM SHARAN • UNSPLASH Researcher­s in a survey said they don’t want to delay their tenure review but have the criteria for it shift.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada