Down the Drain

Greg Newby Fails in his Bid for Tenure at UNC

What do you get after working for 6 years at UNC-Chapel Hill? Well, what I got was walking papers! Getting turned down for tenure is not unusual in higher education (The Chronicle of Higher Education has a whole section about the topic). What happened to me is somewhat unusual, though, as I was turned down at the highest administrative level, rather than in my School.

Is this just another chapter in how UNC has screwed me over the years? Is a demonstration of lack of faith in my School's administration? Perhaps it is over-reliance of Chancellor James Moeser on his committees, including appointing a conservative professor, well past retirement age, as chair to an advisory committee suffering an identity crisis.

Before itemizing some of the not-so-happy parts of my tenure experience at UNC, I want to point out some of the good parts:

Timeline

  1. July 1, 1997: Appointed as Assistant Professor in the School of Information and Library Science at UNC-Chapel Hill.
  2. Fall, 2002: Submission of tenure packet to the SILS administration.
  3. December, 2002: Dean Joanne Marshall informed me that the SILS Personnel Committee had recommended me for promotion to associate professor with tenure, that the SILS full professors had unanimously voted to grant me promotion with tenure, and that she concurred.
  4. February, 2003: Dean Joanne Marshall informed me that the next-level review committee, SCOPS, had approved my promotion with tenure.
  5. April, 2003: Prof. Barbara Moran (who was dean when she hired me in 1997) told me that the Chancellor's Advisory Committee was negatively inclined towards my tenure case. She was a member of the committee (though she excused herself from the room during votes on my case). She sent a little extra information about my research funding and publications to the committee.
  6. May, 2003: I got a letter from UNC's chancellor informing me I was not granted tenure, and was fired effective the end of 2003-04.
  7. June 2, 2003: After a little email to set things up, I spoke with Bernadette Grey-Little, one of the UNC vice-chancellors. She was assigned by the chancellor to interact with me, as part of UNC's tenure denial grievance process. I quickly got a letter afterwards from the Chancellor, saying that he had not changed his mind and I was still fired.
  8. June, 2003: I called every lawyer in the RTP area, and could find none who were interested in helping to fight my tenure denial. The grievance process at UNC was exhausted, unless I could find evidence of discrimination or other similar wrongdoing.
  9. August, 2003: I visited the UNC Legal Counsel office to review my personnel files (two files, one from UNC and another from SILS). I was able to review nearly all items about me:

The bottom line of all this is that people get denied tenure all the time. It's very unusual (based on what I read in the Chronicle and elsewhere) for tenure to be denied by the top administration after the external reviews and home school/department recommends tenure. It's true that people can be turned down for any reason, such as a lack of funding or changing priorities in a University's mission. In my case, though, the reason given in the letters to and from the Chancellor was a lack of research productivity.

Consider:

Letter to the Chancellor

I sent this letter by email to the Chancellor after my talk with Bernadette Grey-Little in June:

Hello, Bernadette.  Thanks for spending time on the phone with me
today.  This message is to follow up by outlining some of my argument
for the Chancellor's decision to be reversed.

After our conversation, I understand the major concern of the
Chancellor's Advisory Committee has to do with my written scholarly
output.  My view, from participating in tenure review of colleagues at
SILS, is that my scholarly output is at a consistent level and
quantity with my peers who received tenure.

- I have publications in the leading journals for information science:
	J. of the Amer. Society for Information Science & Technology
	Information Processing and Management

- The Proceedings of the annual meeting of the Amer. Society for
Information Science & Technology has seen my publications very
regularly.  This refereed forum has a reputation of rigor in the peer
refereeing process.

- My publication record in TREC (which I hope was not what the
committee characterized as a "Web group," since the proceedings are
published by the US GPO via NIST) has probably been the most important
component of my ability to receive government grants.  Through TREC,
I've demonstrated my research ideas in the practice of information
retrieval.  While the conference papers are not refereed, the barrier
to entry is quite high.  With hundreds of unique participants over the
years, I'm in a select group who has been able to participate with new
innovations in information retrieval year after year.

I would also like to emphasize the faith in my research capabilities
demonstrated by the NSF and other funding agencies.  It is hard for me
to understand why a million-dollar faculty member would not get
tenure.  I have a $100,000 second supplement for my "TeraScale
Retrieval" grant forthcoming, and several other grants under review at
the NSF and elsewhere.  There is every reason to think that I will
continue to be successful in grantsmanship.

My publications span a number of topics.  The impact of information
science on so many diverse areas is what drew me to the field
originally.  To quote from my personal statement (via
http://ils.unc.edu/gbnewby/tenure):

"My mission is to bring people and information together: to join human
needs, topics and situations with the right information, having the
right qualities, in the right format, at the right time. ...  The main
theme throughout my academic life is this model of pursuing better
information systems by drawing on knowledge of human communication.
At the same time, I am committed to making information more easily
accessible to all people by all available means.  This is dominant in
my interest in freely available information retrieval systems, my work
in the classroom to enable individuals to achieve their own
information goals, and my service activities."

As an undergraduate seeking a field for an advanced degree, the
breadth of information science is what drew me to it.  Rather than
working within the narrow contraints of a particular theory or method,
as I saw faculty in psychology or communication doing, I realized that
my work could have a broader impact.  I believe I am having that
impact, and will continue -- through my research and the practice it
inspires.

In conclusion I will quote from the SILS promotion and tenure
guidelines:

"... to be considered for tenure, a faculty member must have
demonstrated research ability, be committed to ongoing research, have
a strong teaching record, and be recognized as a helpful and valued
colleague who has consistently performed needed service within the
academic professional community.  Only those persons showing promise
of continuing achievement in all three areas of research, teaching and
service will be tenured" (Section V.B).

It it my understanding that the SILS personnel committee, the external
reviewers, SILS' dean, and SCOPS all agreed that I met these criteria
and was deserving of tenure.  In rejecting that support in favor of
the advice of the Chancellor's Advisory Committee, the Chancellor has
chosen to act on the guidance of those with the least field expertise
and fewest qualifications over those better qualified to judge my
credentials.

I urge the Chancellor to reconsider this decision.  By carefully
considering the guidelines under which I have sought tenure, and the
evaluation of my reviewers at UNC and elsewhere, I believe the case
for tenure will be clear.

With regards,
  Greg Newby


Most recently updated: September 18, 2003