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The success of junior
faculty in establishing their careers is of utmost
importance to the department. Therefore, all new
faculty joining the department will be assigned a
mentoring committee. This committee shall continue to
provide support to junior faculty through their
application for promotion and tenure.
Some research groups, e.g.
the Center for Neuroscience, have very effective faculty
mentoring plans. If a junior faculty member is aligned
with such a unit, they can participate in the faculty
mentoring plan of the unit or the Department of
Biochemistry plan. Because the department performs
teaching and service assignments as well as promotion
and tenure evaluations, a departmental mentor may still
be assigned to help with issues of career development as
it relates to teaching and service.
Purpose
The plan is designed to
provide a mechanism for mentoring junior faculty members
in three broad areas; 1) institutional policies and
procedures (including promotion and tenure), 2) grant
writing and 3) career development.
Mentors
The chair will assign two
senior faculty members to serve as mentors to each
junior faculty member. One mentor will be
scientifically aligned to provide insight on scientific
issues. The other mentor is not expected to be
scientifically aligned and is expected to provide more
general insight into faculty and career development. It
is recognized that all possible mentors may not be a
suitable match for all junior faculty members and
mentors can be reassigned upon further discussion
between the junior faculty member and the chair.
Schedule of Meetings
The junior faculty member
shall meet with the mentors at least twice a year, more
frequently if necessary, e.g. during intense grant
writing periods. The junior faculty member is
responsible for setting up these meetings with the
faculty mentors. The agenda for each meeting is chosen
by the junior faculty member. A list of potential
topics is provided on the following pages.
Responsibilities of the
Junior Faculty Member
The junior faculty member
is responsible for arranging meetings with their faculty
mentors twice a year and setting the agenda for the
meetings. In addition, the junior faculty member must
take the initiative to ask for further assistance from
their mentors, e.g. regarding manuscript preparation,
grant writing, obtaining examples of grant formats etc.
The goal of the junior faculty member is to utilize the
mentors to keep on track for institutional
promotion/tenure and for development of their career.
Responsibilities of the
Faculty Mentors
The mentors are responsible
for meeting with the junior faculty member at least
twice a year and providing advice to the junior faculty
member to the best of their ability. The mentors’ goal
is to provide guidance to the junior faculty member to
keep them on track for promotion/tenure. If necessary,
the mentors should recruit additional expertise, e.g.
another faculty member for specific advice on grant
writing.
Review of the Faculty
Mentoring Plan
As different junior faculty
will have different mentors, there is a need to monitor
uniformity of mentoring. The chair will call an annual
meeting of the mentors to discuss topics and issues
addressed with each of the junior faculty members and
any differences in advice reconciled. The chair will
annually solicit the opinions of the mentors and junior
faculty members about the positive and negative aspects
of the operation of the faculty mentoring plan and
recommend any changes to the plan to the faculty.
Potential Topics of
Interest to Junior Faculty Members
- Orientation Meeting
- One-year goals
- Five-year plan
- Timing of first internal grant submission
- Evaluation of publications and preliminary data
- Timeline for external grant submissions
- Lab size goals
- Building the lab
- Basics (lab keys, phones, networking, ID)
- Ordering procedures
- Furniture
- Renovations
- Hiring staff/procedures
- Recruiting students
- Regulatory issues
- IRB and human ethics training
- ACUC approval and animal usage exams/tour
- Biohazard approval
- Teaching assignments
- Department-specific requirements
- Appropriate teaching areas
- Faculty Development series
- Improving teaching skills
- Committee assignments
- Departmental requirements
- Search committees
- Student committees
- Administrative committees
- National committees
- Grant submissions
- Internal grant mechanisms
- Internal review prior to submission-One major,
several minor reviewers
- External reviewer(s) in research area
- Scheduling of grant writing
- Works in progress to present specific aims
- Grant writing seminars
- Time management
- Log of one-week activities
- Course for time management
- Books on time management
- Family issues, if appropriate
- Manuscript writing
- Organization of ideas for publication
- Time management to get papers written
- Appropriate journals for submission
- Balance of numbers vs. impact
- Relationship with former mentor
- Keeping abreast of latest research in your field
- PubMed searches
- Email with former lab mates
- Contact with mentor
- Inviting or meeting with speakers
- Personal journal subscriptions, if necessary
- Meeting attendance
- National exposure
- Manuscript reviews
- Grant reviews
- Editorial boards
- Invited seminars
- Scientific meetings
- Hosting seminar speakers in field
- Writing review articles
- Promotion and tenure preparations
- Meeting peers at other institutions for letters of
recommendation (invitations early in career)
- Preparation of file/format
- Teaching evaluations
- Service contributions
- Documentation (of everything)
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