At Dartmouth, an Asian-American professor receives unanimous English department backing and is rejected at higher levels. The same happened to a black historian at the college. Many see a disturbing pattern.
Tenure denials happen all the time, and they’re most often accepted by fellow professors and students as an unpleasant byproduct of the tenure system. But sometimes such denials rock an institution.
That’s what’s happening now at Dartmouth College, regarding the failed bid of Aimee Bahng, an assistant professor of English who faculty members and students alike say deserves a permanent position on campus. Beyond Bahng, concerned professors say the case speaks to bigger questions about commitments to minority faculty members, interdisciplinary research and shared governance at Dartmouth and beyond.
“The issue of faculty governance at Dartmouth is a heated one, and it extends to broader issues than [this] tenure case -- though that has been a trigger for many of the broader discussions we're having now -- and though it is widely perceived as unjust and shortsighted,” said Annelise Orleck, a professor of history at Dartmouth who criticized the tenure decision at a recent town hall about the findings of a campus climate survey. Several hundred faculty members, students and staff reportedly were in attendance.
In addition to the town hall, professors and students have taken their protest to Twitter under the hashtags #fight4facultyofcolor and #dontdoDartmouth; the latter features students and academics advising would-be applicants to avoid the institution. Public details on Bahng’s bid are few, and she did not respond to a request for comment. But fellow faculty members confirmed that she was unanimously approved by the department's tenure committee. Her bid fell short higher up in review chain, which includes the associate dean, the dean of the faculty and the arts and sciences faculty’s Committee Advisory to the President.
Dartmouth says it’s bound by confidentiality surrounding the tenure process, but that unanimous department decisions don’t always lead to tenure. And that’s true -- the departmental tenure committee merely makes a recommendation. Yet at many institutions, it’s rare for a unanimous faculty vote to be overturned. Orleck and others on campus say Bahng’s case is similar to several others in recent years, in which department votes for tenure and unanimous recommendations for tenure by outside reviewers are overruled by deans or the Committee Advisory to the President.
A number allegedly have been faculty members of color who were respected by their colleagues and students. One such case is that of Derrick White, now a visiting associate professor of history. White did not immediately respond to a request for comment, but his name and failed tenure bid last year -- despite the unanimous vote of his departmental peers and outside reviewers -- have been mentioned in many of the conversations about Bahng.
In short, the most recent case appears to be something of the last straw on a campus that’s already facing criticism for what many see as a lack of commitment to diversity...
More info: https://goo.gl/BlkVP6
That’s what’s happening now at Dartmouth College, regarding the failed bid of Aimee Bahng, an assistant professor of English who faculty members and students alike say deserves a permanent position on campus. Beyond Bahng, concerned professors say the case speaks to bigger questions about commitments to minority faculty members, interdisciplinary research and shared governance at Dartmouth and beyond.
“The issue of faculty governance at Dartmouth is a heated one, and it extends to broader issues than [this] tenure case -- though that has been a trigger for many of the broader discussions we're having now -- and though it is widely perceived as unjust and shortsighted,” said Annelise Orleck, a professor of history at Dartmouth who criticized the tenure decision at a recent town hall about the findings of a campus climate survey. Several hundred faculty members, students and staff reportedly were in attendance.
In addition to the town hall, professors and students have taken their protest to Twitter under the hashtags #fight4facultyofcolor and #dontdoDartmouth; the latter features students and academics advising would-be applicants to avoid the institution. Public details on Bahng’s bid are few, and she did not respond to a request for comment. But fellow faculty members confirmed that she was unanimously approved by the department's tenure committee. Her bid fell short higher up in review chain, which includes the associate dean, the dean of the faculty and the arts and sciences faculty’s Committee Advisory to the President.
Dartmouth says it’s bound by confidentiality surrounding the tenure process, but that unanimous department decisions don’t always lead to tenure. And that’s true -- the departmental tenure committee merely makes a recommendation. Yet at many institutions, it’s rare for a unanimous faculty vote to be overturned. Orleck and others on campus say Bahng’s case is similar to several others in recent years, in which department votes for tenure and unanimous recommendations for tenure by outside reviewers are overruled by deans or the Committee Advisory to the President.
A number allegedly have been faculty members of color who were respected by their colleagues and students. One such case is that of Derrick White, now a visiting associate professor of history. White did not immediately respond to a request for comment, but his name and failed tenure bid last year -- despite the unanimous vote of his departmental peers and outside reviewers -- have been mentioned in many of the conversations about Bahng.
In short, the most recent case appears to be something of the last straw on a campus that’s already facing criticism for what many see as a lack of commitment to diversity...
More info: https://goo.gl/BlkVP6



And
so it came to pass that Bulster finally sacked Dictator Dickie and
named a new supremo, finding the ideal replacement in a tough Scouser,
Prof Baddy Nix-off. Baddy has a proven track record of corporate
bullying “down under” having in just three years sacked a cool 15% of
his staff @ Tassie University, and earned a formidable reputation for
conducting summary dismissals. Hence staff at Tassie now collectively
refer to forced redundancy as getting the “Nix-off”. But old Baddy talks
a pretty good board-room yarn as he’s now become the highest paid
public figure in Northern Ireland, and one of the top uni “fat cats”
across the UK. At Bulster the very utterance of his name has swiftly
become the ultimate managerial expletive!
Having
quickly taken command, Baddy said “he looked forward to working with
the Northern Ireland Political Executive to ensure the higher education
sector fulfils the ambitions of young people and contributes to economic
growth”. Within a month he had announced massive course closures and a
comprehensive programme of sackings at Bulster which could only be
achieved by compulsory redundancy. "Jimmy-boy", a
Posturing
that this corporate blood on the college carpet could not be avoided,
Baddy has went on to say that “In making these decisions, a number of
factors have been taken into consideration, including student demand,
attrition rates, student satisfaction, employment statistics and
research performance” all of this coming from a uni chief whose time at
Tassie had been marked by an unprecedented problem of college retention
and disastrous staff morale. Baddy’s time at Tassie had also coincided
with a massive cheating scandal at the uni’s law faculty and a rash of
staff suicides.
There
is a rumour that as soon as Baddy arrived at Bulster he ordered a
U-Turn on Bulster’s intended sacking of HR director “Mad Bonnie” Magoo.
“Bonnie” had got himself into a bit of trouble with the police over
corporate threats and perversion of justice. Baddy seems to have assured
“Bonnie” that all could be forgiven as long as his “black arts” could
be more corporately focused. Immediately Bonnie’s disciplinary
suspension was lifted…..There is gossip too that old “Bonnie” actually
managed to get a pay rise. Fresh from the police cells and a long spell
of college “gardening leave” “Bonnie” now finds himself reinstated as
the Hitlerian Hermann Goebels of Baddy’s corporate bullying operation at
Bulster.
Recently,
at Australia’s Newcastle Uni a senior professor said in confidence that
the only college in the country which was worse for governance failings
and staff bullying was Tassie. And of all the places in all the world
the boffins at Bulster could look for Dictator Dicky’s replacement, they
found Baddy Nix-off in the very Van Diemen’s land of Oz. And so it has
come to pass that Bulster has found precisely the right man to replace
Dictator Dicky, a man whose corporate shirt-sleeves are suitably
blood-stained and who knows the price of everything and the value of
nothing.
ADVISORY… This
is a work of humorous parody and any similarities with persons or
places real or imagined is purely a matter of coincidence. 
