The institution
publishes and implements policies regarding the appointment, employment, and
regular evaluation of faculty members, regardless of contract or tenure status.
x Compliance o Non-Compliance o Partial Compliance
UL Lafayette
publishes and implements policies regarding the appointment, employment, and
regular evaluation of all faculty members.
The University’s Faculty Personnel Policies published in the Faculty Handbook provide the policies regarding appointment for all
types of faculty. Faculty appointments are broadly divided into Regular
Continuing appointments (non-tenure track, tenure track, or tenured) and
Special Appointments (Temporary, Adjunct, Visiting, Lecturers, Off-Campus, and
Research Scientist/Research Associate Faculty). The specific conditions of
appointments are explained for each of these categories.
In practice, the
faculty appointment process begins with the Department Head entering a
requisition for a position in Cornerstone. The Office of Faculty Affairs
reviews each vacancy announcement submitted for full-time continuing faculty
appointments to ensure that the qualifications align with the Teaching
Qualifications Tables and the Teaching Qualifications Policy. Candidates apply for a position through Cornerstone, at which
time the Office of Human Resources confirms that the applicant meets minimum
qualifications defined in the vacancy announcement by reviewing application
materials and searching the National Student Clearinghouse.
The Department
Head normally names a Qualifications Screening and Nominating (QSN) Committee
(which may consist of the entire continuing faculty in small departments) to
review each applicant and select finalists. After preliminary interviews, the
Department Head submits a list of finalists for on-campus interviews for the
Dean’s approval. Once a candidate has been chosen, the Dean authorizes an offer
letter to be extended to the applicant. When an offer letter is signed by the
candidate, the Department Head initiates a Personnel Action Form (PAF) to begin
the appointment process. The PAF serves as the verification mechanism for many
of the appointment policies spelled out in the Faculty Personnel Policies,
including qualifications, duration of appointment, probationary period, and
course load. Once signed by the chain of command through the Provost, signed
copies of the PAF are distributed to the college and department, but the
finalist is not considered employed until the UL System BOS has formally
approved the applicant, rank, salary, and period of employment.
During the 2019
calendar year, the paper PAF is being replaced by an electronic requisition to
hire submitted through Cornerstone. In this new system, the approval process is
streamlined because the credential verification and requisition approval
processes are separated.
The following
documents show appointments at all faculty levels:
· Sample Filled PAF Continuing Instructor
· Sample Filled PAF Tenure Track
· Sample Filled PAF E-T Instructor
· Sample Filled PAF Visiting Assistant Professor
· Sample Filled PAF Research Scientist/Research Associate
The University employs regular
processes to evaluate the effectiveness of both continuing and non-continuing
faculty members. Continuing faculty members are evaluated
annually by their immediate supervisors and
peers during the tenure and promotion process, and by their students via the
University Student Evaluation of Instruction (SEI) administered in every
course. Non-continuing faculty are evaluated through SEI and, beginning in Fall
2019, through a new performance evaluation process in Cornerstone. In addition,
in some colleges, Department Heads or peer committees regularly observe faculty
classes and provide an evaluation.
In keeping with
best practices and BOS regulations, UL Lafayette conducts an annual evaluation through Cornerstone of the effectiveness of all full‐time
faculty members in three specific areas: teaching, research and professional
activities, and university and community service. Below are sample annual performance
evaluations for each college:
·
B.I. Moody III
College of Business Administration, Senior Instructor
·
Education, Master
Instructor
·
Engineering,
Assistant Professor
·
Liberal Arts,
Associate Professor
·
Nursing and
Allied Health, Professor
·
Ray P. Authement
College of Sciences, Department Head
The University’s policy for faculty evaluations includes definite and stated
criteria, consistent with policies and procedures of the BOS and the
institution. The composite description of the “Ideal University Professor” provides benchmarks for assessing
faculty performance in annual evaluations and merit raise considerations, as
well as in tenure and promotion decisions. Detailed procedures included in the Faculty
Handbook are summarized
in the following paragraphs.
The “Faculty
Workload Policy” provides the framework for understanding the University’s
expectations regarding faculty roles and performance, and structures the eventual
evaluation process:
This workload policy document attempts
to be structured enough to serve as a management tool to assist administrators
at the department and college levels in setting faculty loads and
responsibilities, but flexible enough to allow description of the myriad
activities of different faculty and departments. While it does not specifically
prescribe workloads, it does provide detailed guidance as to the University’s
expectations of its faculty. This policy and the Goals and Evaluation of actual
workload are essential components by which the University accounts for the work
efforts of its faculty to its management boards. Equally importantly, these
documents ensure consistency in the construal of work efforts from one
department to the next and from one faculty member to the next.
The document
defines four workload tracks for faculty, with differing
expectations in the areas of teaching, research, and service. The primary
factors determining the track to which faculty are assigned are the mission and
needs of the department and/or college in which they reside, and the faculty
member’s alignment with those needs. Until 2019, faculty used a paper evaluation system comprised of a Workload Document and Annual Performance
Evaluation. The following sample
evaluations are representative of this process:
·
Annual Performance Evaluation - Instructor
·
Annual Performance Evaluation - Assistant
Professor
·
Annual Performance Evaluation - Associate
Professor
·
Annual Performance Evaluation - Professor
In the Spring of
2019, the University adopted Cornerstone’s evaluation module and implemented it
for the evaluation of calendar year 2018 performance. Under this system, at the
beginning of the year, faculty members enter goals into their Cornerstone
profile, detailing anticipated activities in teaching, research, and service.
At the end of the year, faculty members report their actual activities during
the evaluation process in Cornerstone, and the evaluation is routed to the
Department Head or immediate supervisor, who then evaluates the faculty
member’s performance. The faculty evaluation instructions make it clear that
“descriptions of workload expectations do not equate to subsequent performance
evaluation; performance evaluation is driven by the quality of one’s work, not
the fact that it meets the percentage expectations of the workload track to
which one is assigned.”
Evaluators assign
scores to faculty according to the following merit scale: Exemplary (5),
Accomplished (4), Very Good/Good (3), Below Expectations (2), and Significantly
Below Minimum Expectations (1). Only faculty members receiving a score between
Exemplary (5) and Below Expectations (2) are eligible for merit-based salary
increases. Merit evaluations are conducted using a department-based rubric, and
each department is awarded a merit raise pool based on the salary total in that
department. The Department Head’s evaluation of the faculty member is then
reviewed by the college Dean, and then by the Provost, who reviews a report of
merit scores of all University faculty. Both Dean and Provost may adjust,
within defined limits, a faculty member’s overall evaluation.
According to the Faculty
Handbook, a rating that falls lower than Below Expectations (2) twice in
any consecutive three‐year period indicates continuing failure to meet
expected standards in teaching and/or research, and must be addressed by the
faculty member, the Department Head, and the Dean. In compliance with the UL System Policy and Procedures
Memorandum FS-III.X.D-1,
procedures are in place for remediation of unsatisfactory performance. The “Remediation Procedures for UL
Lafayette Personnel with Category 1 Merit Evaluations” were formulated by the Faculty
Senate and were approved by both the Provost and the University President.
The policies of
UL Lafayette regarding tenure and promotion are described in the current
edition of the Faculty
Handbook, and follow
prescriptions contained in the Board of Regents “Statement on Academic Freedom, Tenure
and Responsibility.”
Additionally, the University’s tenure policies are in accord with BOS rules for
the UL System. As per these rules, faculty members are not eligible for tenure
at the Instructor of Lecturer level.
Full-time
academic personnel at the rank of Assistant Professor serve a probationary
period not to exceed six years of continuous service. Faculty members hired at
the rank of Associate Professor serve a probationary period approved by the
President of the University, but not less than one year or more than four
years. Faculty members initially employed at the rank of Professor may be
granted tenure upon appointment or, at the discretion of the University, may be
required to serve a probationary period not to exceed four years. Thus, the
probationary period for hires at the Associate and Full Professor ranks is
always specified in the Hiring Requisition. The final evaluation for tenure
usually occurs during the penultimate year in the probationary term. In all
cases, faculty are notified by the University administration of the results of
their evaluations.
As with faculty
evaluations, the composite description of the “Ideal University Professor” provides benchmarks for assessing
faculty performance in tenure and promotion decisions. A faculty member’s
academic department or unit may conduct periodic evaluations during the
probationary period, in accordance with that department’s usual practice. The
University requires all departments to conduct at least a mid‐tenure
review of all eligible faculty members.
Tenured faculty
and department heads initiate recommendations for tenure and promotion. The
process of tenure review at the departmental level varies depending on
department size and mission and may include a vote of all tenured faculty
members or a recommendation of a personnel committee within the department.
Those recommendations are transmitted to the appropriate academic dean, who
forwards them with his or her own separate recommendation to the Provost, who
in turn submits them with a recommendation to the President. The President
endorses and forwards all such recommendations to the BOS, which has final
authority for granting or denying tenure.
The promotion process is described in the Faculty Handbook. Advancement in
academic rank is not automatic but is based on the faculty member’s
performance. In recommending a faculty member for promotion in rank, several
factors are considered, including: (1) effectiveness as a teacher and advisor;
(2) research and professional attainments, such as continued study, refereed
publications, presentations, or suitable equivalents; (3) service to the
department, college, university; and (4) service to the community. In
evaluating a faculty member for promotion, the department and University
administration may also consider other factors, such as the Board of Supervisors guidelines (Chapter 3) regarding rank
distribution of faculty.
In addition to
the criteria described above, all colleges and a number of departments have
written tenure and promotion guidelines that reflect expectations based on
their respective missions.
The University
uses several instruments to assess the effectiveness of its educational,
administrative, and student support programs, including the Student Evaluation of Instruction (SEI), which is distributed each
semester in all classes with enrollment of five students or more. Results of the SEI are distributed to the class instructor, Department Head, and
Dean.
The Student Evaluation of Instruction Committee is charged with providing effective,
efficient, and meaningful mechanisms for the periodic student evaluation of
instruction. Primarily, the committee is concerned with the review and revision, when necessary, of the evaluation form, but can make
recommendations for changes in the mechanism of the student evaluation, such as
who should review the evaluation, when it should be administered, and other
areas.
Annual Performance Evaluation -
Assistant Professor
Annual Performance Evaluation -
Associate Professor
Annual Performance Evaluation -
Instructor
Annual Performance Evaluation -
Professor
B.I. Moody III College of Business
Administration, Senior Instructor
BOR Statement on Academic Freedom,
Tenure, and Responsibility
Engineering, Assistant Professor
English Clarified Track 3 Rubric
Faculty Handbook Performance
Evaluation and Merit Pay Policy
Faculty Handbook: Description of
“Ideal University Professor"
Faculty Handbook: Evaluations &
Promotions
Faculty Handbook: Faculty Personnel
Policies–Appointment Types p. 3
Faculty Handbook: Five Faculty
Workload Tracks
Faculty Handbook: Lafayette Faculty
Evaluation Process
Faculty Handbook: Remediation
Procedures for Personnel with Category 1 Merit Evaluations
Faculty Handbook: UL Lafayette Tenure
and Promotion Procedures
Ray P. Authement College of Sciences,
Department Head
Sample Evaluation - Arts Instructor
Sample
Evaluation - Liberal
Arts Associate Professor
Sample Evaluation - Nursing and Allied
Health, Professor
Sample Filled PAF Continuing
Instructor
Sample Filled PAF E-T Instructor
Sample filled PAF Research
Scientist/Research Associate
Sample filled PAF tenure track
Sample filled PAF visiting assistant
professor
Sample Redacted Workload Document
SEI Committee Agendas Sample Apr 2018
SEI Committee Sample Minutes Apr 2018
SEI Sample Online
Questionnaire