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AAHC Suggested Guidelines for Evaluating Digital Media Activities
in Tenure, Review, and Promotion

 

Introduction

Guidelines for Appointment, Reappointment, Promotion, and Tenure Committees

1. Delineate and Communicate Responsibilities.

When chairs and hiring committees seek candidates who have expertise in the use of digital media, explicit reference to such work should be included in job descriptions, and candidates should be apprised of their responsibilities relative to this work. When candidates wish to have work with digital media considered an integral part of their positions, the expectations and responsibilities connected with such work, and the recognition given to it, should be clearly delineated and communicated to them at hiring.

2. Engage Qualified Reviewers.

Faculty members who work with digital media should have their work evaluated by persons knowledgeable about the use of these media in the candidate's field. At times this may be possible only by engaging qualified reviewers from other institutions. The American Association for History and Computing will help departments and review committees in search of appropriate expertise to locate and coordinate qualified outside evaluators whenever requested.

3. Review Work in the Medium in Which It Was Produced.

Since scholarly work is sometimes designed for presentation in a specific medium, evaluative bodies should review faculty members' work in the medium in which it was produced. For example, Web-based projects should be viewed online, not in printed form.

4. Seek Interdisciplinary Advice.

If faculty members have used technology to collaborate with colleagues from other disciplines on the same campus or on different campuses, departments and institutions should seek the assistance of experts in those other disciplines to assess and evaluate such interdisciplinary work.

5. Stay Informed about Disability Issues.

Search, reappointment, promotion, and tenure committees have a responsibility to become and remain informed of technological innovations that permit disabled individuals to conduct research and carry out other professional responsibilities effectively. Information on this issue is available at CAST (http://www.cast.org/index.cfm) and the Adaptech Project (http://omega.dawsoncollege.qc.ca/adaptech/adengtoc.htm).

1. Ask about Evaluation and Support.

When candidates for faculty positions first negotiate the terms of their jobs, they should ask how credit for work with digital media in teaching, research, and service will be considered in the reappointment, tenure, and promotion processes. In addition, candidates and faculty members should confirm that they will have institutional support and access to facilities so that they can work creatively and productively with digital media.

2. Negotiate Your Role.

Faculty members and job candidates should negotiate their responsibilities and departmental roles in the use, development, and support of information technologies in their teaching, service, and research. Faculty members and candidates for positions that combine administrative and faculty responsibilities, including the development and support of technological infrastructures, must have a clear understanding of how their work will be evaluated.

3. Document and Explain Your Work.

Faculty members who work with digital media should be prepared to:

o make explicit the results, theoretical underpinnings, and intellectual rigor of their work. They should be prepared, to the same extent that faculty members in other fields are held accountable, to show the relevance of their work in terms of the traditional areas of teaching, research, and service. You should take particular care to

o Describe the process underlying the creation of work in digital media (e.g., the creation of infrastructure as well as content).

o Describe new collaborative relationships with other faculty members and students required by your work in digital media.

 

Note: These recommendations were developed in consultation with the Modern Language Association and the American Political Science Association.

For more information, contact Dennis Trinkle, Executive Director, American Association for History and Computing, Department of History, DePauw University, Greencastle, IN 46135. Dtrinkle@theaahc.org. 765-658-4592.

 Posted November 30, 2000