0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
  • All Departments
Price
  • R500 - R1,000 (1)
  • R2,500 - R5,000 (1)
  • -
Status
Brand

Showing 1 - 2 of 2 matches in All Departments

Inclusive Collegiality and Non-Tenure Track Faculty - Engaging All Faculty as Colleagues to Promote Healthy Departments and... Inclusive Collegiality and Non-Tenure Track Faculty - Engaging All Faculty as Colleagues to Promote Healthy Departments and Institutions (Paperback)
Don Haviland, Jenny Jacobs, Nathan F Alleman, Cara Cliburn Allen, Adrianna Kezar
R880 Discovery Miles 8 800 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

This book focuses on the status and work of full-time non-tenure-track faculty (NTTF) whose ranks are increasing as tenure track faculty (TTF) make up a smaller percentage of the professoriate. NTTF experience highly uneven and conditional access to collegiality, are often excluded from decision-making spaces, and receive limited respect from their TTF colleagues because of outdated notions that link perceived expertise almost exclusively to scholarship. The result is often a sub-class of faculty marginalized in their departments, which reduces the inclusion of diverse voices in academic governance, professional relationships, and student learning. Given these implications, the authors ask, how can departments, institutions, and the profession do more to engage NTTF as full and active colleagues? The limited access of NTTF to the rights and responsibilities of collegiality harms institutional success in several ways. Given the full-time nature of their work and the heavy (but not exclusive) focus on instruction, NTTF are likely to be on campus as much or more than TTF, and thus be engaged with students, colleagues, and administrators in ways that more closely resemble TTF than part-time faculty. Their limited access to collegial spaces makes it harder for them to do their jobs by restricting access to information and input into decision-making. Moreover, since the greatest growth among women faculty and faculty of color is in NTTF roles, their exclusion from collegiality and decision-making negates the very diversity the profession claims to seek. Finally, colleges and universities face financial, curricular, and organizational challenges which require broad input, although the burden of governance is falling on fewer shoulders as the percentage of TTF declines and NTTF are excluded from these spaces.Ultimately, NTTF must be engaged as partners and colleagues in supporting institutional health. This book -- the fruit of extensive data collection at two institutions over a five-year period -- describes lessons learned from and benefits experienced by departments that have successfully supported and engaged NTTF as colleagues. Drawing on their research data and analysis of "healthy" departments that integrate NTTF, the authors identify the practices, policies, and approaches that support NTTF inclusion, shape a more positive workplace environment, improve morale, satisfaction, and commitment, and fully leverage the expertise of NTTF and the valuable human capital they represent. The authors argue that this more inclusive collegiality improves governance, supports institutional success, and serves diverse institutional missions. Though primarily addressed to institutional leaders, department chairs, tenure-line faculty, and leaders in the academic profession, it is hoped that the findings will be useful to NTTF who are engaged as advocates for and partners in the change process required to address the evolving structure of the university faculty.

Inclusive Collegiality and Non-Tenure Track Faculty - Engaging All Faculty as Colleagues to Promote Healthy Departments and... Inclusive Collegiality and Non-Tenure Track Faculty - Engaging All Faculty as Colleagues to Promote Healthy Departments and Institutions (Hardcover)
Don Haviland, Jenny Jacobs, Nathan F Alleman, Cara Cliburn Allen, Adrianna Kezar
R3,964 Discovery Miles 39 640 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

This book focuses on the status and work of full-time non-tenure-track faculty (NTTF) whose ranks are increasing as tenure track faculty (TTF) make up a smaller percentage of the professoriate. NTTF experience highly uneven and conditional access to collegiality, are often excluded from decision-making spaces, and receive limited respect from their TTF colleagues because of outdated notions that link perceived expertise almost exclusively to scholarship. The result is often a sub-class of faculty marginalized in their departments, which reduces the inclusion of diverse voices in academic governance, professional relationships, and student learning. Given these implications, the authors ask, how can departments, institutions, and the profession do more to engage NTTF as full and active colleagues? The limited access of NTTF to the rights and responsibilities of collegiality harms institutional success in several ways. Given the full-time nature of their work and the heavy (but not exclusive) focus on instruction, NTTF are likely to be on campus as much or more than TTF, and thus be engaged with students, colleagues, and administrators in ways that more closely resemble TTF than part-time faculty. Their limited access to collegial spaces makes it harder for them to do their jobs by restricting access to information and input into decision-making. Moreover, since the greatest growth among women faculty and faculty of color is in NTTF roles, their exclusion from collegiality and decision-making negates the very diversity the profession claims to seek. Finally, colleges and universities face financial, curricular, and organizational challenges which require broad input, although the burden of governance is falling on fewer shoulders as the percentage of TTF declines and NTTF are excluded from these spaces.Ultimately, NTTF must be engaged as partners and colleagues in supporting institutional health. This book -- the fruit of extensive data collection at two institutions over a five-year period -- describes lessons learned from and benefits experienced by departments that have successfully supported and engaged NTTF as colleagues. Drawing on their research data and analysis of "healthy" departments that integrate NTTF, the authors identify the practices, policies, and approaches that support NTTF inclusion, shape a more positive workplace environment, improve morale, satisfaction, and commitment, and fully leverage the expertise of NTTF and the valuable human capital they represent. The authors argue that this more inclusive collegiality improves governance, supports institutional success, and serves diverse institutional missions. Though primarily addressed to institutional leaders, department chairs, tenure-line faculty, and leaders in the academic profession, it is hoped that the findings will be useful to NTTF who are engaged as advocates for and partners in the change process required to address the evolving structure of the university faculty.

Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
Eclipse of the Body - How We Lost the…
Christopher West Paperback R261 Discovery Miles 2 610
A Discourse Concerning Natural and…
Stephen Nye Paperback R510 Discovery Miles 5 100
An American Life with I Am
Herbert Frye Paperback R292 R257 Discovery Miles 2 570
Bibliotheca Anti-Quakeriana; Or, a…
Joseph Smith Paperback R630 Discovery Miles 6 300
Nature and Life - Sermons
Robert Collyer Paperback R511 Discovery Miles 5 110
The Book of Proverbs - God's Book of…
Gerry D. Fox Hardcover R433 Discovery Miles 4 330
Shackled - One Woman's Dramatic Triumph…
Mariam Ibraheem, Eugene Bach Paperback R441 R375 Discovery Miles 3 750
The First-Day Sabbath - Clearly Proved…
Thomas M. Preble Paperback R630 Discovery Miles 6 300
A Discourse of the Right of the Church…
Herbert Thorndike Paperback R592 Discovery Miles 5 920
Terreur in Kaboel
Hannelie Groenewald Paperback R280 R241 Discovery Miles 2 410

 

Partners