The institution
employs an adequate number of full-time faculty members to support the mission
and goals of the institution.
x Compliance o Non-Compliance o Partial
Compliance
The University of Louisiana at
Lafayette endeavors to ensure that it supports an adequate number of full-time
faculty to provide an optimal learning environment and advance the University’s Mission:
Mission:
The University of Louisiana at Lafayette offers an exceptional
education informed by diverse worldviews grounded in tradition, heritage, and
culture. We develop leaders and innovators who advance knowledge, cultivate
aesthetic sensibility, and improve the human condition.
Values:
We strive to create a community of leaders and innovators in an
environment that fosters a desire to advance and disseminate knowledge.
Vision:
We strive to be included in the top
25% of our peer institutions by 2020, improving our national and international
status and recognition.
UL Lafayette’s
Mission calls for “an exceptional education informed by diverse worldviews” and
“innovators who advance knowledge, cultivate aesthetic sensibility, and improve
the human condition.” These objectives require a sufficient number of full-time
faculty to teach students, conduct research and scholarship, and create
expressive works. The creation of optimal learning environments requires the
presence of qualified faculty from relevant study and research areas. An
appropriate quantity of faculty is needed to represent areas of specialization,
broaden the spectrum of student engagement and experience at UL Lafayette, and
offer a range of educational methods responsive to the needs of a diverse
student population. For the Fall 2018 semester, the University employed 639
full-time faculty members representing a full spectrum of disciplines.
The full-time
faculty consist of non-tenure track, tenure-track (probationary) faculty, and
tenured faculty, and faculty appointments can be full-time continuing,
full-time temporary, or part-time.
The qualifications for continuing faculty are defined in UL Lafayette’s Teaching Qualification Policy and Teaching Qualifications Tables (See standard 6.2.a).
To fill
short-term vacancies, the University regularly hires faculty at all ranks in
response to instructional needs. Such appointments carry the same requirements
for qualification and are normally limited to a period of two years.
The title of
“adjunct” (e.g., Adjunct Instructor, Adjunct Assistant Professor, Adjunct
Associate Professor, or Adjunct Professor) refers to appointments of persons
who serve the University in an advisory capacity, whose principal employer may
be other than the University (but who make a substantial regular contribution
to the academic activities of the University), and/or who fill temporary
positions of instruction created by enrollment demand.
Part-time faculty
must possess the same credentials and qualifications as full-time faculty. The
same qualification standards are applicable whether a class is taught on campus
or at a site off-campus, as addressed in the Policies for Off-Campus Faculty. In general, part-time faculty members are not expected to
perform duties outside of their teaching obligations. At the start of each
academic year, part-time faculty undergo a special orientation and training sessions on the
University’s course management system, Moodle.
Many larger academic units also offer college or departmental level
orientations for part-time faculty.
Several metrics
provide evidence that the number of full-time faculty members is adequate to
support the mission of the University, and to ensure the quality and integrity
of its academic programs: ratio of full-time to part-time faculty,
student-to-faculty ratio, and number of undergraduate sections with large
enrollments.
The percentage of
full-time faculty at UL Lafayette is adequate for its mission and goals. At
least 70 percent of the University’s faculty is full-time. The institution
identified the 70% threshold for full-time faculty within the colleges and
programs as an adequate and appropriate level of full-time faculty based upon
the institution’s analysis of historical trends and actual faculty experiences
demonstrating full-time faculty are able to meet their teaching, research, and
service expectations. The support of adjuncts and other part-time faculty who
provide additional support to the teaching mission ensures full-time faculty
are afforded sufficient time to meet the expectations for research,
scholarship, and service. The 70% threshold for full-time faculty is generally
exceeded by most colleges and programs across the university. Table 6.1 – 1 provides
additional details about the percentage of full-time to part-time faculty
across the institution while Table 6.1 – 2 provides a similar breakdown for the
three most current years by UL Lafayette colleges.
Table
6.1 — 1: Percentage of Full-Time and Part-Time
Instructional Faculty
as Reported in the Common Data Set
Semester |
Full-Time |
Part-Time |
Total
Number |
||
|
Actual
Number (Not FTE) |
Percent |
Actual
Number (Not FTE) |
Percent |
|
Fall 2018 |
639 |
75 |
209 |
25 |
848 |
Fall 2017 |
640 |
75 |
213 |
25 |
853 |
Fall 2016 |
610 |
76 |
191 |
24 |
801 |
Fall 2015 |
601 |
76 |
192 |
24 |
793 |
Fall 2014 |
598 |
80 |
150 |
20 |
748 |
Fall 2013 |
607 |
79 |
158 |
21 |
765 |
Fall 2012 |
596 |
79 |
158 |
21 |
754 |
Fall 2011 |
584 |
79 |
159 |
21 |
743 |
In each academic
college, 70 percent or more of class sections are taught by full-time faculty.
See Table 6.1 – 2.
Table
6.1 — 2: Total Percentage of Class Sessions
Taught by Faculty Who Are Classified as Full- Time (Includes Labs, Lower
Division, Upper Division, and Graduate Classes)
College |
2016-2017 |
2017-2018 |
2018-2019 |
Arts |
80% |
80% |
79% |
Business Administration |
84% |
83% |
81% |
Education |
75% |
73% |
76% |
Engineering |
94% |
90% |
92% |
Liberal Arts |
70% |
69% |
71% |
Nursing & Allied Health |
90% |
84% |
84% |
Sciences |
84% |
83% |
84% |
UL Lafayette Total |
78% |
77% |
78% |
Table 6.1 — 3
shows credit hour production by course level and by instructor type. This table
demonstrates that the University relies on graduate students to teach
relatively few courses in a small number of disciplines, further indicating
that it has adequate full-time faculty.
Table
6.1 — 3: Credit Hour Production (CHP) by Course
Level & Instructor Type
|
Full Time Faculty |
Part Time Faculty |
Other |
Grad Assistant |
Grand Total |
||||
|
CHP |
Percent |
CHP |
Percent |
CHP |
Percent |
CHP |
Percent |
|
Lower Level |
70550 |
62.81% |
18749 |
16.69% |
8196 |
7.30% |
14827 |
13.20% |
112322 |
Upper Level |
75967 |
88.44% |
7542 |
8.78% |
1991 |
2.32% |
393 |
0.46% |
85893 |
Master’s Level |
9575 |
78.87% |
1647 |
13.57% |
918 |
7.56% |
0.00% |
12140 |
|
Doctoral Level |
2419 |
93.04% |
51 |
1.96% |
130 |
5.00% |
0.00% |
2600 |
|
Grand Total |
158511 |
74.43% |
27989 |
13.14% |
11235 |
5.28% |
15220 |
7.15% |
212955 |
UL Lafayette has
an adequate undergraduate student-to-faculty ratio for its goals and mission,
as defined by IPEDS. This data is shown in Table 6.1 – 4.
Table
6.1 — 4: UL Lafayette Undergraduate
Student-to-Faculty Ratio
as Reported in the Common Data Set I-2
Semester |
Students |
Faculty
FTE |
Ratio |
Fall 2018 |
15,073 |
709 |
19:1 |
Fall 2017 |
15,666 |
711 |
22:1 |
Fall 2016 |
15,045 |
674 |
22:1 |
Fall 2015 |
15,072 |
665 |
23:1 |
Fall 2014 |
14,700 |
648 |
23:1 |
Fall 2013 |
14,363 |
660 |
22:1 |
Fall 2012 |
14,509 |
649 |
22:1 |
Fall 2011 |
14,865 |
637 |
23:1 |
UL Lafayette’s
student-to-faculty ratio remains comparable to that of several peer
institutions. The University's IPEDS peer group averaged 18.9 to 1 in 2018 and
averaged 19.2 to 1 over the past five years. The University has averaged 22.6
to 1 over the past five years. Responding to this position among peers, the
University Strategic
Plan 2015-2020
aimed to lower the student-to-faculty ratio. However, while enrollment has
increased over the past ten years due to strategic recruitment efforts, the
number of full-time faculty has also increased, and the student-to-faculty
ratio has decreased for the Fall 2018 semester to the current ratio of 19 to 1.
Table 6.1 – 5 compares UL Lafayette’s ratios to that of its peers.
Table
6.1 — 5: IPEDS Peers 2017 Student-to-Faculty
Ratios
Institution |
Student
to Faculty Ratio |
Student
Population |
UL Lafayette |
19 to 1 |
17,297 |
Florida Atlantic University |
24 to 1 |
30,208 |
Portland State University |
20 to 1 |
26,693 |
University of Alabama-Huntsville |
16 to 1 |
9,101 |
University of Memphis |
14 to 1 |
21,521 |
University of Texas-Arlington |
24 to 1 |
46,497 |
University of North Carolina-Greensboro |
18 to 1 |
19,922 |
University of Southern Mississippi |
17 to 1 |
14,478 |
University of Texas-El Paso |
20 to 1 |
25,078 |
Louisiana Tech University |
25 to 1 |
12,839 |
Southern Illinois University-Carbondale |
14 to 1 |
14,554 |
University of Mississippi |
18 to 1 |
23,136 |
University of New Orleans |
22 to 1 |
7,964 |
University of North Carolina-Charlotte |
19 to 1 |
29,317 |
Wichita State University |
20 to 1 |
15,075 |
Wright State University |
14 to 1 |
15,957 |
The University
has adequate faculty for its mission and goals as indicated by the fact that it
does not rely on large sections to produce student credit hours. Almost 70% of
all sections have fewer than 30 students, and fewer than 3% of sections have
100 students or more, as indicated in Table 6.1 – 6.
Table
6.1 — 6: Undergraduate Class Size as Reported in
the Common Data Set I-3
Semester |
Fewer
Than 30 Students |
31
- 50 Students |
51
- 100 Students |
More
Than 100 Students |
|
||||
|
Number
of Sections |
Percent |
Number
of Sections |
Percent |
Number
of Sections |
Percent |
Number
of Sections |
Percent |
Total |
Fall 2018 |
1,881 |
69 |
612 |
23 |
167 |
6 |
52 |
2 |
2,712 |
Fall 2017 |
1,992 |
70 |
581 |
21 |
170 |
6 |
60 |
2 |
2,733 |
Fall 2016 |
1,884 |
69 |
595 |
22 |
179 |
7 |
66 |
2 |
2,724 |
Fall 2015 |
1,931 |
69 |
617 |
22 |
175 |
6 |
79 |
3 |
2,802 |
Fall 2014 |
1,978 |
70 |
624 |
22 |
169 |
6 |
71 |
3 |
2,842 |
Fall 2013 |
1,901 |
69 |
614 |
22 |
173 |
6 |
60 |
2 |
2,748 |
Fall 2012 |
1,882 |
69 |
613 |
23 |
161 |
6 |
64 |
2 |
2,720 |
Fall 2011 |
1,828 |
67 |
665 |
25 |
152 |
6 |
69 |
3 |
5,714 |
The online and
hybrid course sizes parallel the percentage for all University courses. In the
Fall 2018 semester, 70% of online and hybrid courses had fewer than 30
students, and only 4% had more than 100 students. Table 6.1 – 7 provides class
size information for online and hybrid courses. The table also illustrates the
growth of online education at UL Lafayette from a total of 110 sections in the Fall
of 2011 to 364 sections in the Fall of 2018.
Table
6.1 – 7: Online and Hybrid Courses by Total Size Range
Semester |
Fewer than 30 Students |
31
- 50 Students |
51
- 100 Students |
More than 100 Students |
Total Sections |
||||
|
Number of
Sections |
Percent |
Number of
Sections |
Percent |
Number of
Sections |
Percent |
Number of
Sections |
Percent |
|
Fall 2018 |
256 |
70 |
68 |
19 |
24 |
7 |
16 |
4 |
364 |
Fall 2017 |
242 |
78 |
42 |
14 |
14 |
5 |
13 |
4 |
311 |
Fall 2016 |
210 |
80 |
29 |
11 |
9 |
3 |
13 |
5 |
261 |
Fall 2015 |
209 |
78 |
34 |
13 |
13 |
5 |
11 |
4 |
267 |
Fall 2014 |
201 |
76 |
49 |
18 |
6 |
2 |
10 |
4 |
266 |
Fall 2013 |
173 |
78 |
37 |
17 |
5 |
2 |
8 |
4 |
223 |
Fall 2012 |
153 |
82 |
24 |
13 |
6 |
3 |
3 |
2 |
186 |
Fall 2011 |
90 |
82 |
15 |
14 |
2 |
2 |
3 |
3 |
110 |
Table 6.1 – 8
compares UL Lafayette’s class sizes with those of the other institutions in the
University of Louisiana System, demonstrating that UL Lafayette is well within
the range of class sizes at other System institutions.
Table
6.1 — 8: University of Louisiana System
Undergraduate Class Size Fall 2018
Semester |
Fewer than 30 Students |
Fewer than 50 Students |
Fewer than 100 Students |
More than 100 Students |
Total Sections |
||||
|
Number of
Sections |
Percent |
Number of
Sections |
Percent |
Number of
Sections |
Percent |
Number of Sections |
Percent |
|
UL Lafayette |
1935 |
72% |
549 |
20% |
167 |
6% |
53 |
2% |
2704 |
Grambling State University |
452 |
56% |
274 |
34% |
69 |
9% |
5 |
1% |
800 |
Louisiana Tech University |
1068 |
73% |
284 |
19% |
93 |
6% |
29 |
2% |
1474 |
McNeese State University |
1028 |
73% |
278 |
20% |
92 |
7% |
3 |
0% |
1401 |
Nichols State University |
982 |
79% |
168 |
14% |
82 |
7% |
5 |
0% |
1237 |
Northwestern Louisiana University |
1742 |
81% |
314 |
15% |
80 |
4% |
3 |
0% |
2139 |
Southeastern Louisiana State University |
1993 |
79% |
389 |
16% |
120 |
5% |
5 |
0% |
2507 |
University of Louisiana at Monroe |
901 |
70% |
234 |
18% |
123 |
9% |
37 |
3% |
1295 |
University of New Orleans |
863 |
72% |
237 |
20% |
69 |
6% |
27 |
2% |
1196 |
The University
monitors students’ registration and enrollment in identified high-demand
courses, and responds to short- and long-term fluctuations in demand for
specific courses, allowing departments to request and make “emergency
temporary” hires. The University continues to hire full-time faculty to
instruct courses identified as “bottlenecks,” ensuring students’ efficient
progress to degree completion.
The University
also maintains adequate full-time faculty through its track system. All
regular, continuing faculty members follow one of four workload tracks, as
described in the University Faculty Workload Policy. The teaching load consists of one to
three class sections per semester for faculty expected to make major scholarly
contributions to their fields. Faculty members with fewer research expectations
teach four to five sections per semester.
The Faculty
Workload Policy also delineates other expectations of faculty:
In addition to teaching and research, committee responsibilities
are part of full-time faculty members’ institutional and professional duties.
Faculty serve on department, college, and University committees that contribute
to all aspects of the University, including maintenance of academic programs,
design of courses and curriculum, hiring of new faculty, rendering of promotion
and tenure recommendations, testing and placement of students, and assessment
of student learning outcomes. Other duties assigned to full- time faculty include
student advising, multi section coordination, graduate program leadership, and
supervision of teaching assistants.
The University
also takes into account the wide variety of course delivery formats and
instructional pedagogies now prevalent in higher education. Non-traditional
course load equivalencies are determined in consultation with the faculty
member’s Department Head, Dean, and the Office of Faculty Affairs.
Specifications for the “Ideal University Professor” and responsibilities for full-time
faculty are articulated in Section V of the Faculty
Handbook.
The advancement of knowledge through research and creative works
is a primary component of UL Lafayette’s mission. The University promotes and
encourages a variety of research activities, including scholarship, theoretical
and applied research, externally sponsored research and creative activities,
performances and exhibitions, and support for graduate education. The
University had more than $100M in externally funded research and development
expenditures during AY2017-2018. This figure places UL Lafayette among the top
25 percent of U.S. colleges and universities in terms of research and
development funding, according to the Higher Education Research and
Development Survey, the National Science Foundation’s annual
index of research expenditures.
To
achieve its research mission, the University launched a multiyear, multilayered
strategic plan to create a
cross-campus infrastructure that bolsters research among full-time faculty,
graduate students, and undergraduates. As part of that initiative, UL Lafayette
established or enhanced several research centers and institutes aligned with
the University’s strategic goals and dedicated to life sciences, digital media,
energy, coastal and water initiatives, materials and manufacturing, and
Louisiana arts and culture. The University provided incentives to faculty who
sought external research dollars to stimulate research across campus and
encouraged collaboration among researchers from different disciplines. Through
these initiatives, the University ensures that its faculty is adequate to its
research goals and mission.
Every
year, students and faculty at UL Lafayette perform more than 150,000 hours of
service, translating into millions of dollars of economic impact. For example,
every fall, thousands of UL Lafayette students, faculty, and staff gather for “The Big Event,” a dedicated day of service to engage the local
community. The College of Education partners with UL Lafayette AmeriCorps
members to provide in-school and after-school tutoring to students at J.W.
Faulk Elementary and other area schools. Faculty and students in the Colleges
of the Arts and Engineering collaborate with Lafayette Habitat for Humanity to
build new affordable housing, and with Rebuilding Together to build wheelchair
access ramps for local residents with disabilities.
In
2014, the University earned a place on the President's Higher
Education Community Service Honor Roll for the third consecutive year. Membership in the Honor Roll recognizes the
part colleges and universities play in volunteering and service. This marks the
highest federal recognition a university can receive for its commitment to
community, service-learning, and civic engagement. With the success of these programs, UL
Lafayette demonstrates that it has adequate faculty to support its service
mission and goals.
Faculty
Handbook: Ideal University Professor
Faculty
Handbook: Off-Campus Faculty Policies
Faculty Handbook: Types of Appointments
Faculty
Handbook: Workload Policy
Higher Education Research and Development Survey
IPEDS
Survey Material Instructions
Mission, Values, and Vision statement of the
University of Louisiana at Lafayette
New Adjunct Faculty Orientation
President's Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll