1 / 36

Faculty Development and the Promotion Process Sharon W. Weiss, M.D. Associate Dean

Faculty Development and the Promotion Process Sharon W. Weiss, M.D. Associate Dean Faculty Development. It is in everyone’s interest that you succeed. Faculty Replacement Cost. Hiring costs 31,000 Training 1,000 Lost productivity 23,600

sondra
Download Presentation

Faculty Development and the Promotion Process Sharon W. Weiss, M.D. Associate Dean

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Faculty Development and the Promotion Process Sharon W. Weiss, M.D. Associate Dean Faculty Development

  2. It is in everyone’s interest that you succeed

  3. Faculty Replacement Cost Hiring costs 31,000 Training 1,000 Lost productivity 23,600 Total 55,600

  4. The key to faculty success is understanding expectations

  5. And knowing where to go for help

  6. Tracks • Tenure • Clinical (CT) • Research (RT)

  7. Clinical Track (60%) • Majority in clinical departments • Skilled physician and teacher • Professional service and teaching • Unlimited period for promotion

  8. Tenure Track (30%) • Most in preclinical departments with minority in clinical departments • Heavy emphasis on scholarship • Participation in all 3 missions • Time-limited period for promotion (9 yrs)

  9. Research Tract (10%) • Majority in preclinical departments • Scientific investigator • Emphasis on scholarship with less emphasis on service teaching • Unlimited period for promotion

  10. Scholarship • New information • Peer reviewed publications • Sustained extramural funding • Presentations at prestigious national meetings • Significant review articles, chapter, books

  11. Teaching • Preparation of course materials • Design of courses, rotations • Positive evaluations • Mentoring • Workshops, lectures, CME courses • Leadership role in educational programs (e.g. director of residency, MS course)

  12. Professional Service • Patient care • Administrative responsibilities • Membership regional-national societies • National-international leadership positions • Institutional committees • Community service

  13. Tenure Clinical Outstanding Excellent Good

  14. Promotion Packet • Chair’s letter • Personal statement • Teaching portfolio • Internal Letters • External letters • Curriculum vitae • Papers (5)

  15. Teaching Portfolio • Overview of responsibilities • Assessment / methods used • Education in professional organizations and public service • Teaching materials • Awards • Trainees • Self instructional teaching courses

  16. Letters of Recommendation • 4-6 external letters • Internal letters • Educational co-ordinator • Division director • Colleagues • Students, residents, advisees • Patients (limit)

  17. External Reviewers • Nationally prominent • Professional knowledge of candidate • Personal acquaintance not necessary • Objective (no mentors, collaborators)

  18. Recommendation LettersWhat Do We Look for? • A general assessment • Impact of work • Comparison to others in the field • Promotion potential at author’s institution • Collegiality, teaching skills

  19. External Reviewers • Think in advance whom you will ask • Ask informally • Do not write to the person directly

  20. Board of Trustees Provost Presidential Advisory Committee T T CT and RT Dean Council of Chairs SOM Promotion Committee (>90% success) Chair Departmental Promotion Committee Division Director/Chair

  21. Why Promotions FailTenure Track-Research Track • Failure to establish a national reputation in area of scholarship • Few or low impact publications • No evidence of sustainable extramural funding • Weak letters of endorsement • Contribution to publications unclear • Lack of independence • Lack of focus or theme

  22. Why Promotions FailClinical Track • Failure to establish national reputation as a practitioner and teacher • Reputation as a clinician or teacher known only institutionally • Insufficient scholarship • Weak external letters

  23. Things to Remember • Some scholarship is required for all promotions • Peer-reviewed publications outweigh book chapters, case reports • National reputation as a “teacher” is difficult to establish

  24. Where Do I Start as a Faculty Member? • Assume ownership of your career • Ask for what you need to succeed • Space, time, development package • Understand your responsibilities • Relative time for research, teaching, clinical service • Salary recovery (how much of my salary must I cover with clinical service, grants etc– what will department cover?

  25. Integrate Yourself into the Department • Know faculty at all levels and across divisions • Establish a working relationship with division director • Familiarize yourself with the administration of the department

  26. Integrate Yourself into your Discipline • Attend national meetings • Identify colleagues with common interests • Learn who the leaders are in your area • Network on a regional and national level

  27. Define Your Goals • Understand the promotion criteria and whether your goals interests align with them • Think about immediate goals (1 yr) and long term goals (3-5 yrs). Write them down

  28. Define Your Scholarship • Develop an independent area of scholarship • Scholarship should play to your strengths and those of the department and institution

  29. Identify a Mentor • A mentor should be a senior faculty member who: • Has a common interest/expertise • Is in a position to advance your career • Socialization-introduction to discipline • Has time and willingness to meet with you • Is a “good fit” for you • You may need more than 1 mentor

  30. Development CoursesInternal • Becoming Better Teacher’s (Branch) • Faculty Development Lecture Series • Junior Faculty Development Course • Woodruff Leadership Academy (WLA)

  31. Development CoursesExternal • Early and mid Career Course for Women (AAMC) • Minority Faculty Course (AAMC) • ELAM (Women Associate Professors and above) • Harvard course for Physician Leaders

  32. BewaretheDeadly Traps of Academia • It is better to wait for the “home run” paper than to publish less important papers • Overpreparation can be a “killer” • I must help and collaborate with all who approach me

  33. Bewarethe Deadly Traps of Academia • All behavior of successful senior faculty should be emulated • If I work all the time, I will succeed • Learn to recognize your limits • Recognize stress and depression • Use your support system

  34. Final Thoughts • All full professors began as assistant professors • You have a right to succeed!

  35. Office of Faculty Development Website: www.med.emory.edu Sharon Weiss, M.D. sharon.weiss@emoryhealthcare.org Grady 212 WHSCAB 116 Susan Raven susan.raven@emoryhealthcare.org

More Related