Tenure track will no longer automatically lead to professorship

Tenure track will no longer guarantee professorship

The university no longer wants people on a tenure track to automatically become professors. The UG wants to prevent becoming too ‘bloated’; a situation in which too many academic employees are professors.
15 December om 14:11 uur.
Laatst gewijzigd op 15 December 2020
om 15:53 uur.
December 15 at 14:11 PM.
Last modified on December 15, 2020
at 15:53 PM.
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Door Christien Boomsma

15 December om 14:11 uur.
Laatst gewijzigd op 15 December 2020
om 15:53 uur.
Avatar photo

By Christien Boomsma

December 15 at 14:11 PM.
Last modified on December 15, 2020
at 15:53 PM.
Avatar photo

Christien Boomsma

Christien is sinds 2016 achtergrondcoördinator bij UKrant. Ze plant de achtergrondverhalen en begeleidt de auteurs. Bij haar eigen verhalen ligt de focus op wetenschap en academisch leven. Daarnaast schrijft ze veel over onderwerpen als sociale veiligheid en maakt ze graag persoonlijke interviews. In haar vrije tijd schrijft ze jeugdboeken en geeft schrijftrainingen.

Scientific employees who start out as assistant professor on a tenure track always end up as professors, as long as they meet publishing requirements and bring in sufficient grant money.

Back when the university only had regular professorships and new people were hired only when professors died or retired, this system worked perfectly. But it’s led to some unintended consequences: there are too many professors.

Leiden

Not all professors make good managers. ‘Some people simply don’t have the skills to be a group leader’, rector Cisca Wijmenga said during a recent university council meeting. ‘It requires both hard and soft skills. So we’re seeing things happening as a result of people lacking those skills that we don’t want.’

The process needs to be customised. Right now, they only have a research track in place, but the board of directors envisions tracks for education, impact, leadership, and clinical work, with the latter applying only to the UMCG.

The Faculties of Science and Engineering and Economics and Business want to set up pilots for tenure tracks that can end in the position of associate professor.

Criticism

The plan has been met with criticism. Simon van der Pol with the council’s personnel faction is worried this will create a ceiling that young researchers won’t be able to break through. Lorenzo Squintani with the science faction doesn’t think the new plans will solve much.

According to Squintani, the people lacking leadership skills are already professors. ‘Things are already out of whack. Several faculties lack the room to promote staff to higher positions.’

Wijmenga acknowledges the problem, but still feels that the process of appointing professors should be scrutinised. She hopes other faculties will follow the FEB and FSE example. ‘Other faculties have said that they’re interested in doing a pilot.’

Dutch

15 December 2020 | 15-12-2020, 15:53
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