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Since the University of Michigan is responsible for
maintaining high standards of teaching, research, and
service to the people of the state in a wide variety of
fields, it is essential that its faculties be composed of
men and women with superior personal and professional
qualifications. The following statement is issued for the
guidance of administrative officers and of other members of
the staff who are responsible for ensuring that all persons
appointed or promoted in the several faculties are
thoroughly qualified to discharge the duties of their
respective positions.
Teaching.
Essential qualifications for appointment or promotion are
character and the ability to teach, whether at the
undergraduate or the graduate level. Some of the elements to
be evaluated are experience, knowledge of subject matter,
skill in presentation, interest in students, ability to
stimulate youthful minds, capacity for cooperation, and
enthusiastic devotion to teaching. The responsibility of the
teacher as a guide and friend properly extends beyond the
walls of the classroom into other phases of the life of the
student as a member of the University community. It also
involves the duty of initiating and improving educational
methods both within and outside the departments.
Research.
All members of the faculties must be persons of scholarly
ability and attainments. Their qualifications are to be
evaluated on the quality of their published and other
creative work, the range and variety of their intellectual
interests, their success in training graduate and
professional students in scholarly methods, and their
participation and leadership in professional associations
and in the editing of professional journals. Attainment may
be in the realm of scientific investigation, in the realm of
constructive contributions, or in the realm of the creative
arts.
Service.
The scope of the University's activities makes it
appropriate for members of the staff to engage in many
activities outside of the fields of teaching and research.
These may include participation in committee work and other
administrative tasks, counseling, clinical duties, and
special training programs. The University also expects many
of its staff to render extramural services to schools, to
industry, to local, state, and national agencies, and to the
public at large.
Appointment and Promotion
In making their recommendation for either appointment or
promotion, the responsible departments and colleges will
study the whole record of each candidate. To warrant
recommendation for initial appointment, candidates must have
given evidence either here or elsewhere of their ability to
handle satisfactorily the duties of the positions in
question. To warrant recommendation for promotions,
candidates must have shown superior ability in at least one
phase of their activities and substantial contribution in
other phases. Naturally, persons who make a distinguished
contribution in all aspects of their work may expect more
rapid promotion than persons of more limited achievement.
Promotion is not automatic nor does it simply depend on
length of service. All promotions are recommended and made
on the basis of demonstrated merit. The University endeavors
to recognize distinguished performance by adequate increases
in salary and early promotion. For this reason a call to
another position is not be itself considered a sufficient
reason for promotion but may be one of the factors to be
taken into consideration in the timing of a promotion.
It is assumed that, as members of the staff mature in
experience, they will become more effective teachers and
scholars. To that extent the qualifications for appointment
and promotion will be progressively more exacting at each
successive rank. In particular, promotion to the rank of
associate professor, which entails indeterminate tenure,
will be approved only when a person has given such clear
evidence of ability that they may be expected, in due
season, to attain a professorship.
Adopted by the Board of Regents April 1935, revised April
1954.
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