Tips and tricks

How hard is it to be a tenured professor?

How hard is it to be a tenured professor?

While being granted tenure at an institution does make it very difficult, but not impossible, to be fired and is a form of career security, job satisfaction and happiness are not guaranteed. Thus, true tenure or “permanence of position” throughout a career is one’s ability to secure another position when desired.

How often is tenure denied?

In the most recent report (covering the 2010-11 academic year), over 90\% of tenure applications were successful (455 faculty tenured, 42 denied). That’s across all fields at all campuses; the linked reports also break the annual numbers down by campus and field.

Can a professor lose tenure?

No matter how egregious the reasons may be, a tenured faculty member has the right to a hearing before being fired. Tenure, by definition, is an indefinite academic appointment, and tenured faculty can only be dismissed under extraordinary circumstances like financial exigency or program discontinuation.

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Can tenured professors be dismissed?

How long does it take to become a tenured professor?

The NEA indicates the average tenure takes seven years to earn at a four-year college. Job security is not the only benefit of becoming a tenured professor. You will also position yourself for better compensation.

Does academic tenure make it harder to fire bad teachers?

There have been cases of tenure making it next-to-impossible to to fire bad teachers at the grade school level, including a teacher who threw books at students and insisted they call her “Ms. God.” Others argue that academic tenure only serves to cultivate deadbeat professors.

What is the future of academic tenure?

Academic tenure has protected many faculty members from being dismissed based upon the whims of a donor. Faculty will continue to fight to keep the tenure system as it provides protections for academic freedom. However, colleges are changing. For profit institutions (which do not give tenure) are becoming bigger players in the market.

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Should community colleges have tenure-track faculty?

Many community colleges (including my own) have publication requirements for tenure-track faculty comparable to those at four-year institutions, while other community colleges may discourage an ambitious research agenda so that faculty members can focus primarily on teaching and working with students.