The following appointments may be awarded to persons whose academic contributions to the college are limited in time or scope. For persons holding rank at another accredited institution of higher education, the rank awarded will usually be consistent with the rank held at the primary institution.
A resident or fellow who teaches dental students may be eligible for rank as instructor. This appointment is considered temporary and will automatically terminate upon the completion of the training program. Residents or fellows who are employed by the university will have "visiting instructor" appointments while those who are employed elsewhere will have "clinical instructor" appointments.
The dean, working with the support of the office of the provost, shall solely review and approve recommendations for appointment in the following categories upon recommendation by the department chair in whose department the appointment is sought. The dean may, at his/her discretion, forward an application to the college appointment and promotion committee.
The university may confer titles of distinction including "emeritus" and "distinguished" for qualified faculty in accordance with the university faculty bylaws and emeritus status policy.
The committee consists of six voting core faculty members and one ex-officio, non-voting member appointed as described in rule 3349-3-74 of the Administrative Code. While it is preferable to draw all committee members from the college faculty, the dean may in his/her discretion appoint qualified faculty from outside the college.
Committee recommendations are forwarded to the dean to review when evaluating the materials to develop his/her recommendation regarding promotion. The dean may accept or reject the recommendation of the committee and the timeline shall proceed as described in paragraph (J) of this rule.
The required levels of development for candidates are classified as follows:
The level of intent describes a candidate who is in the planning stages of developing a teaching portfolio, service record, and scholarly activity documentation.
The level of pursuit describes a candidate who is actively developing or engaging in their teaching activities, service requirements, and scholarly activity. Quality of the activities will be weighted more than the quantity of activities. It is recognized that faculty roles and responsibilities change over time. Pursuit level provides credit for services or activities that were developed or engaged in, but are no longer active, and new activities. Pursuit in teaching should demonstrate a progression of teaching with a clearly developed teaching philosophy. Candidates should engage in service as an active participant and consider stepping into leadership roles. Scholarly activities must include at least one peer-reviewed publication outlined in paragraph (G)(2)(b)(i)(a) and/or (G)(2)(b)(i)(b) ofthis rule.
The level of acquisition describes a candidate who is engaged in sustained activity with national or international recognition by their colleagues with a teaching portfolio that includes a clear teaching philosophy and evidence of consistent, quality performance in all teaching activities; service activities reflect consistent quality contributions and should include leadership roles; and a scholarly activity portfolio that is well established and reflects consistent, quality contributions, and must include contributions outlined in paragraph (G)(2)(b)(i)(a) and/or (G)(2)(b)(i)(b) of this rule.
Candidates qualified for this rank are competent to; demonstrate intent by developing a practice, if appropriate for their position and institution, fulfilling teaching and service responsibilities, and beginning to build professional/public service and scholarly activity experience.
Candidates appointed to or promoted to this rank demonstrate evidence of pursuit in all three areas (e.g., teaching, service, and scholarly activity). These candidates fulfill their faculty responsibilities and are recognized as active participants at the college and their practice sites, if applicable.
Candidates appointed to or promoted to this rank demonstrate a level of acquisition in all three areas (e.g., teaching, service, and scholarly activity). These candidates should be recognized as leaders at their practice site (if applicable), college and/or university, region, state, and on the national or international level.
Standards and documentation for initial appointment and promotion include but are not limited to:
Teaching is a central mission of the university and its component colleges. A candidate's teaching quality is documented by evidence of clear teaching philosophy, review of teaching materials, recognition and feedback from students, alumni and peers. Positive contributions to the learning environment and curriculum may also support a candidate's record of teaching.
Scholarly activities are central to the mission of the university and is an expectation of all faculty. Given the complexity of the university and its component colleges and the great diversity of talent within, it is imperative that various kinds of work be recognized through a broad vision of scholarship. Scholarly activity includes, but is not limited to, the scholarship of discovery, integration, application and teaching/learning. Scholarship is understood to include the traditional science of inquiry, investigation and experimentation known as research. Scholarly activity may also include participation in clinical trials and commercialization, patent and technology transfer activities. While clinical care alone is insufficient to merit promotion, clinical innovation and improvement activities done in a scholarly manner and acknowledged to be of regional or national importance are important indicators of distinction.
Evidence of scholarly activities includes, but is not limited to, the sources listed in this paragraph. In joint endeavors, the evidence should specify the extent of the individual's contribution.
Both the university and the college of dentistry are charged with the responsibility of developing and carrying out a high-quality educational program. A crucial element of that responsibility is a service program responsive to the larger society that sustains the university and the college. The university and the college of dentistry distinguish between routine performance and service that draws upon the breadth and depth of a faculty member's professional expertise and scholarship.
Service is a central mission of the university and its component colleges. A candidate's service may exist in three domains: academic, practice of dentistry, professional/public. As a candidate achieves higher rank, his/her service should be impacting a broader network of students, trainees, colleagues, and disciplines. Faculty seeking promotion to the rank of associate professor should have a minimum of academic service at the pursuit level and one other service domain at the pursuit level. Faculty seeking promotion to the rank of professor should have a minimum of academic service at the acquisition level and one other service domain at the acquisition level.
Academic service is oriented to the needs of the department, the college, and/or the university. All faculty, regardless of rank and academic appointment, have general academic service responsibilities which contribute to the success of the university's students and the profession of dentistry throughout the university. At the dean's discretion, selected faculty carry formal administrative responsibilities as college administrators. Definition of these formal administrative responsibilities should be included in the promotion dossier, but evaluation of administrative performance is not included in the evaluation of service for promotion.
Documentation of academic service effectiveness may include, but is not limited to, records, attestations, or evaluations in the following areas:
The practice of dentistry is service oriented to the needs of the profession and/or community. The practice of dentistry includes dental care provided to a candidate's patients, to larger patient populations, and contributions to the profession. This may include direct patient-centered interactions (e.g., primary care, patient counseling, etc.), practice management and/or administration. Dentistry practice faculty may have dental practice responsibilities as a routine workload assignment.
Faculty furnish leaders and groups with objective research results, as well as clinical and other resource information for decision making. They design and conduct feasibility studies, field test basic and applied knowledge, develop procedural and technical manuals, and provide group instruction on and off campus.
Evidence of dental practice proficiency may include, but is not limited to, the sources listed in this paragraph. In joint endeavors, the evidence should specify the candidate's contributions.
Faculty have, as a basic job responsibility, the provision of professional/public service. Professional service activities are oriented to the professional policy needs of society; public service activities are oriented to public and professional needs of society. Faculty who provide professional/public service may have ongoing, direct contact with citizens and/or organizations in their practice and research areas, provide educational needs assessment, program development, training, consultation, and/or technical assistance in collaboration with local, state, national, and international leaders. Activities may also be involved with community service, volunteer opportunities or policy development.
Evidence of the effectiveness of professional/public service contributions includes, but is not limited to, the following sources:
Individuals who are not university employees and contribute primarily to the experiential teaching program of the college. Dentists appointed at or promoted to this track have met all requirements to practice dentistry. Exceptions may be made if recommended by the department chair and approved by the dean.
University employees outside of the college of dentistry who contribute significantly to the teaching, scholarship and service missions of the college. Activities, in addition to teaching, may include development, implementation, administration, assessment and/or evaluation of core competencies, pedagogy, and curricular offerings. Substantial contributions in the area of research and scholarly activity are required at the rank of professor.
The chair of the department in which appointment or promotion is sought must write a letter certifying that the professional's credentials and qualifications are appropriate for the academic rank.
A list of external evaluators will be identified by the candidate's department chair and shared with the candidate. This list may or may not include evaluators from the candidate's list.
The college appointment and promotion committee chair will forward a written document to the dean that includes the committee's recommendation, reasons therefore, and record of the vote by way of the office of the provost. All other materials (promotion dossier, letter from the chair, letters from external evaluators) will also be forwarded to the dean.
The candidate must notify the dean in writing of the intent to appeal or the right is waived. The appeal will be scheduled in January.
The dean will transmit all reports with his/her positive recommendations to the provost.
The provost will make the final decision and will forward positive recommendations for promotion to the president for transmittal to the board of trustees at its next meeting.
The college appointment and promotion committee will return the promotion application to the department chair along with a written document that includes the committee's recommendation, reasons therefore, and record of the vote.
The dean will transmit all reports with his/her positive recommendations to the provost.
The provost will make the final decision and will forward positive recommendations for promotion to the president for transmittal to the board of trustees at its next meeting.
The performance of salaried faculty (those with full and part-time appointment types, as defined in paragraph (A) of this rule,) will be evaluated at least annually by the department chair or the chair's designee as appropriate using the university "faculty performance Plan and Evaluation" form. The evaluation will provide for constructive feedback to the faculty member.
Ohio Admin. Code 3349-3-27
Promulgated Under: 111.15
Statutory Authority: 111.15
Rule Amplifies: 3350.12