< Previous page ^ Table of Contents Next page >

Promotions to senior academic offices: Notice by the General Board

3 December 1997

 1. This Notice describes the outcome of the General Board's consideration of the topics on which they were required by the Regent House to hold a consultative exercise and to report by the end of the Michaelmas Term 1997, viz. the introduction of promotional criteria which recognize in specific terms high quality teaching and (where appropriate) administration and research management, the possible introduction of an office of Senior Lecturer, the titles of senior academic offices, the criteria for promotion from Senior Lectureships (if introduced) to Professorships, and the number of annual promotions to senior academic offices. In their Notice dated 11 June 1997 (Reporter, 1996-97, p. 880) the General Board published an interim report on the progress that they had made in their consideration of these topics. A questionnaire containing a number of detailed questions, together with a copy of the Notice, was subsequently circulated to all University officers whose duties include teaching and research. The questionnaire also provided an opportunity for University officers to comment on the issues and to make suggestions. Faculty Boards and Councils of the Schools were also invited to consider the issues and to submit comments.

The response to the consultative exercise

 2. The questionnaire was sent to 1,200 University officers. The percentage of those who returned the questionnaires was high for an exercise of this kind, almost fifty per cent, although the percentage response to each question varied. (The percentage of officers who returned the questionnaire relating to promotion arrangements for personal Professorships and Readerships was of the order of 40 per cent.) A number of Faculty Boards and Councils of the Schools did not comment on the issues, preferring to leave it to individual officers to respond to the General Board via the questionnaire. The Appendix to this Notice gives the responses to each question and the number of those responding.

 A detailed analysis of the results of the consultation and the comments received from Faculty Boards and Councils of the Schools is available for consultation by members of the Regent House in the General Board Office at the Old Schools.

The outcome of the consultative exercise and the way forward

 3. The Board have considered the responses to the questionnaire and the comments made both by individual officers and by Faculty Boards and Councils of the Schools. They have agreed that their proposals should reflect as far as possible the consensus views which have emerged from the consultative exercise.

 4. There is an overwhelming consensus in favour of expecting the very highest academic standards in research in promoting University officers to personal Professorships and Readerships. There is also a clear consensus that the recently revised arrangements for the consideration of applications for promotion to personal Professorships and Readerships should not be changed as a result of any new arrangements that may be adopted for the recognition of teaching and other forms of contribution; if there are to be new arrangements, these should recognize exceptional teaching and administrative contributions. The results indicate little enthusiasm for titular promotions which involve no increase in remuneration. There is a division of opinion with regard to the number of promotions, and in particular on the question whether, in any year in which there is a large number of outstanding candidates, the University should fund the requisite number of promotions, even if this has to be at the expense of funds for new needs, infrastructure, filling of vacant offices, etc. However, some Faculty Boards and Councils of the Schools have tended to take a cautious view on this question, and the General Board therefore remain of the view that financial considerations should not be wholly discounted when the number of promotions in any particular year is under discussion.

 5. Of the four possible schemes outlined in the Board's Notice of 11 June 1997 and included in the questionnaire, Scheme 2 (extension of the University Lecturer scale beyond a bar at the current maximum of that scale, and introduction of the office of Senior Lecturer) has emerged as the scheme preferred by a clear majority of the respondents as a means of recognizing exceptional teaching and administrative contribution, together with its corollary, the phasing out of the discretionary awards scheme for University Lecturers.

The preferred scheme: Scheme 2

 6. Of the four schemes considered, Scheme 2 harmonizes most closely with the University's present structural arrangements. It affords recognition of distinction, as well as additional remuneration. It would not affect or require any adjustment of the promotional criteria for personal Professorships and Readerships. It would be possible for those promoted to Senior Lectureships under this scheme to be subsequently promoted to personal Professorships or Readerships, as the majority of respondents favour.

 7. In the account of Scheme 2 given in the Notice of 11 June 1997 it was stated that eligibility for consideration for promotion to a Senior Lectureship would be limited to those who had reached the top of the University Lecturer scale and who had completed at least three years in office before the date for the submission of applications. The questionnaire therefore did not ask whether eligibility for consideration should be restricted to University Lecturers who are at the top of the scale. The Board have given further consideration to this point and have now concluded that the arrangements introduced for recognizing teaching and administrative contribution should be open to all University Lecturers who have passed their probationary period, i.e. who have been reappointed to the retiring age. The Board would expect, however, that because the criteria require evidence of a sustained contribution both in teaching and in other activities, the great majority of successful candidates would be University Lecturers who are at or near the top of the scale.

 8. The Board believe that Scheme 2 would benefit a larger number of University officers than any of the other schemes considered; it would be more effective in addressing the problems arising from the fact that a great majority of University Lecturers are at the top of the scale, and it would offer a good prospect of promotion to University Lecturers in the course of their University career.

Method of making a proposal

 9. In accordance with the views of the majority of respondents, the Board have agreed that proposals should be made by individual application.

Criteria

 10. The Board have agreed that, in broad terms and in accordance with the responses of a substantial majority of respondents, these should be:
(a) Sustained excellence in teaching (in contributions to the development of courses, and in at least one of lecturing, conducting seminars, and supervision of postgraduates).
(b) Sustained supportiveness and efficiency in undertaking administrative and organizational tasks (including, where appropriate, the management of research groups).
(c) Achievement in research/scholarship.

Evaluation

 11. A significant majority of the responses from University officers suggest that cases for promotion should be strictly referenced to the criteria, although there is a body of opinion against this view. The Board have given further thought to this matter, and they have taken the view that the same evaluative approach should be adopted in relation to the criteria for Scheme 2 as has been adopted for promotions to personal Professorships and Readerships, namely that evaluation in respect of each criterion should be in the following terms:
(1) awaiting further evidence and/or the evaluation of recent or immediately forthcoming work;
(2) reasonable doubt about the degree to which the candidate currently meets the relevant criterion;
(3) satisfactory evidence in respect of the relevant criterion, but the case is not yet overwhelming;
(4) proposal for promotion made on the grounds of very clear evidence being available in respect of the relevant criterion.

The Board are aware of some concern that such an approach could degenerate into a mechanical assessment of cases, but they believe that sufficient flexibility can be built into the process to avoid this, particularly if emphasis is placed on the overriding importance of academic judgement being exercised collectively in order to reach decisions.

Documentary evidence

 12. The Board propose, in line with the opinion expressed by the majority of respondents, that this should include:

 13. Although the results of the consultative exercise indicate majority support for the inclusion of a portfolio containing summaries of student questionnaires, comments received from individuals and from Faculty Boards and Councils of the Schools reveal considerable unease with regard to the use of such evidence in the assessment of cases for promotion. The Board have therefore taken the view that student questionnaires should not form part of the documentary evidence to be assessed.

 14. A clear majority of respondents were opposed to the inclusion of evidence in relation to College teaching in the documentation required for the assessment of cases for promotion. However, it is evident from the replies received from a number of Faculty Boards and Councils of the Schools that there is concern at the possible exclusion of all aspects of teaching provided by Colleges, particularly where the provision of College teaching involves some contribution on the part of the Faculty or Department in co-ordinating arrangements or ensuring liaison with Directors of Studies. The Board are therefore inclined to allow officers whose Faculty or Departmental duties include responsibilities concerning College teaching to put forward those responsibilities in support of their case for promotion. However, because College teaching itself is rewarded by Colleges, the Board do not think that it would be appropriate for College teaching undertaken by University officers on behalf of a College to be taken into account as part of the evidence.

Committees

 15. In their Notice of 11 June 1997 the Board envisaged that under the arrangements for Scheme 2 Faculty Committees would receive applications and would forward those judged to be of the required standard to Committees of the Councils of the Schools, who would receive an annual allocation of funds, as they do now for discretionary payments. Although there is some difference of view expressed by some of those Faculty Boards and Councils of the Schools who submitted comments, the replies to the questionnaire indicate substantial support for a proposal that applications should be considered initially by Faculty Appointments Committees and then by Committees of the Councils of the Schools, who would consider how many promotions could be approved within the annual allocations made to them. The replies to the questionnaire also indicate support for the suggestion that Faculty Appointments Committees should rank candidates' applications before forwarding to the Committees of the Councils of the Schools those that they judge to be of the required standard.

 16. With regard to the membership of these Committees, the Board have agreed that a University Lecturer who is a member of an Appointments Committee and who intends to apply for promotion to a Senior Lectureship in a particular year should be replaced for the purpose of the exercise by an officer who is not eligible or who is not applying.

Feedback and appeals

 17. The questionnaire survey reveals an overwhelming consensus in favour of the introduction of feedback and appeal arrangements. The Board envisage that these arrangements would be similar to those which have been approved in respect of promotions to personal Professorships and Readerships.

Structural considerations

 18. Progression from a University Lectureship to a Senior Lectureship should, in the Board's view, be clearly regarded as a promotion. There should not be a presumption that promotion would be likely to occur in the course of an officer's career merely on the evidence of adequate performance; evidence of sustained excellence would be required. Access to Senior Lectureships through promotion should be restricted to the holders of University offices whose duties are primarily concerned with teaching and research.

 19. The introduction of a scheme along the lines of Scheme 2 would provide an opportunity to make adjustments in the Cambridge academic structure by addressing aspects of that structure which compare unfavourably with the national structure. To that end, the Board have agreed to propose:

 I. That the Cambridge Readership stipend (currently £34,942) should be aligned with the top discretionary point of the national scale for Senior Lecturers (£35,893). The recurrent annual cost of this adjustment, at current rates, would be of the order of £175,000.

 II. That the scale of stipends for the Cambridge Senior Lectureship should be aligned as far as possible with the top points of the national Senior Lecturer scale (excluding the discretionary points). The model that the Board have particularly in mind is a three-point scale, the first point of which would be the present maximum of the Cambridge University Lecturer scale (£29,875) with the addition of a sum equal to the present value of a discretionary payment (£1,738), the next two points being equivalent to the top two points of the national Senior Lecturer scale (£32,238 and £33,202). There would be automatic incremental progression up the scale. This proposal, and its relation to the national scale, are shown in the following table:

National Cambridge
£ £
Lecturer B (maximum) 27,985
Senior Lecturer 29,380 University Lecturer (maximum) 29,875
30,318
32,238 Proposed Senior Lecturer 31,613
33,202 32,238
33,202
Discretionary Points 34,038
34,091
35,893 Proposed Reader 35,893*

* Currently £34,942

 20. The Board recognize that a number of variants are possible if the national scale is to be used as a basis for determining what the Cambridge scale should be, and they will give further thought to these possibilities. However, they are of the view that there should be a significant differential between the top of the Senior Lecturer scale and the Readership stipend, especially in view of the fact that Readers are more heavily restricted than University Lecturers in the amount of additional remuneration that they may earn from College teaching.

 21. The Board also have under review the arrangements for remunerating officers whose stipends are at professorial level and above. In the course of that review they will take into account the effect on differentials, in relation to both academic and academic-related offices, of the introduction of Senior Lectureships in the Cambridge structure, if the latter is approved by the Regent House.

Number of promotions and cost

 22. Other universities whose establishments include Senior Lectureships have had these posts for many years, with the result that they are in a steady state as regards the relative size of their establishment of Professorships, Readerships, Senior Lectureships, and Lectureships. The General Board have considered what an appropriate steady state might be regarding the balance of Professorships, Readerships, Senior Lectureships, and University Lectureships (including University Assistant Lectureships) within the overall academic establishment of the University. In their view it would not be desirable to apply a rigidly fixed ratio in determining the annual number of promotions. They believe that promotions should be determined on merit, but that affordability is a factor which the Board must take into account in any given year.

 23. The Board have also considered whether access to Senior Lectureships should be possible only through internal promotion, as is the case with personal Readerships. The Board accept that there is an argument for establishing Senior Lectureships on the same basis as University Lectureships to facilitate, for example, recruitment from senior academic posts at other institutions, or to allow necessary adjustments to be made from time to time to the balance of academic establishments of particular institutions, which would not be possible if Senior Lectureships were accessible through promotion alone. The Board intend to give further thought to this aspect of the matter.

 24. The present UEF-funded academic establishment at Cambridge is as follows: Professors 20 per cent; Readers 16 per cent; University Lecturers, University Assistant Lecturers, and Assistant Directors of Research 64 per cent. The General Board have taken account of the position at other institutions belonging to the Russell Group, these being large research-oriented pre-1992 universities.1 On the basis of information extracted from HESA Resources of HE Institutions, 1995-96, the average of the academic establishments comprising institutionally funded posts at these institutions is: Professors 21 per cent; Senior Lecturers and Senior Researchers 32 per cent; Lecturers 47 per cent. University College London has the most favourable balance in favour of senior posts: Professors 28 per cent; Senior Lecturers and Senior Researchers 35 per cent, and Lecturers 37 per cent. (These figures exclude the Universities of Edinburgh and Glasgow, which are not included in HESA data, and Oxford. The Oxford position following the recent titles exercise is as follows: Professors 27 per cent; Readers 12 per cent; University Lecturers 61 per cent.) The General Board would expect that if arrangements such as those described above are approved and implemented, the number of applications meeting the criteria would enable the University in the first exercise to achieve a balance in its academic establishment no less favourable than the average for Russell Group institutions indicated above.

 25. In addition to the above proposals, the Board would wish to maintain their present policy relating to the number of annual promotions to personal Professorships and Readerships, and would expect the annual rate of promotions to continue to be of the order of ten Professors and thirty Readers. Hence, over the medium term, the Board would expect the University to move to a position where the proportion of senior academic offices was comparable with that of institutions such as University College London, which is in the top quartile of Russell Group institutions. The effect of the annual number of promotions approved each year on the overall academic establishment of the University would be monitored and reported to the University from time to time.

 26. The problem facing the University is to identify funds to meet the steep initial cost of introducing Senior Lectureships in the first year or years at a level necessary to reach a steady state as soon as possible. The Board believe that it is essential to achieve such a steady state quickly, since it is reasonable to assume that a significant proportion of University Lecturers deserve recognition in respect of the excellence of their contribution in teaching, administration, and research. The additional recurrent cost of achieving a proportion of senior academic offices on a par with the Russell Group average, on the assumption that 40 per cent of University Lecturers would be promoted of whom a substantial majority are at the top of the scale, would be of the order of £750,000 a year. This cost would be offset by savings accruing from the gradual phasing out of the discretionary payments for University Lecturers, the annual level of which would be of the order of £150,000.

The next steps

 27. The Board have requested the Vice-Chancellor to hold a Discussion to give members of the Regent House an opportunity to comment on the proposals set out in this Notice, and the Vice-Chancellor has agreed that these matters should be included among the topics for consideration at the Discussion to be held on 20 January 1998. After considering the remarks made at the Discussion, the Board will bring forward detailed proposals for approval by the Regent House in the course of the Lent Term.

1 The Russell Group comprises Birmingham, Bristol, Imperial College, Leeds, Liverpool, the London School of Economics, Manchester, Newcastle, Nottingham, Sheffield, Southampton, University College London, and Warwick.

APPENDIX

RESPONSES TO THE CONSULTATIVE QUESTIONNAIRE

Part A: Numbers and titles

Question 1: Should the University continue to expect the very highest academic standards in research in promoting University teaching officers to Readerships and Professorships?
Response: YES 531
NO 18
NO REPLY 13
Question 2: Should the title of Reader be abolished and those currently Readers become Professors (Class 1) with no additional stipend or change of duties?
Response: NO 287
YES 51
NO REPLY 224
Question 3: If in any one year there is a large number of outstanding candidates, should the University fund the requisite number of promotions, even if this means less money for new needs, infrastructure, filling of vacant posts, etc.?
Response: YES 211
NO 205
NO REPLY 146
Question 4: Should the University continue to fund promotions at the current level (if that is possible) but introduce in addition:
(i) a new titular Professorship?
Response: NO 298
YES 132
NO REPLY 132
(ii) a new titular Readership?
Response: NO 317
YES 104
NO REPLY 141
Question 5:
(i) One view is that those holding titular Professorships and Readerships should be able to apply for personal Professorships and Readerships. Do you agree?
Response: YES 295
NO 190
NO REPLY 77
(ii) If yes, should the recently agreed criteria and procedures for promotion to personal Professorships and Readerships apply in the case of titular Professors and Readers applying for personal Professorships and Readerships?
Response: YES 325
NO 54
NO REPLY 183
(iii) Another view is that those holding titular Professorships and Readerships should be debarred from applying for personal Professorships and Readerships? Do you agree?
Response: NO 341
YES 70
NO REPLY 151
Question 6: If you are in favour of titular schemes, please indicate the one you prefer. If you are happy with more than one of these schemes, please rank them in order of preference: The 'Cambridge' approach, the North American approach, the Oxford approach.
Preference: 'CAMBRIDGE' 137
NORTH AMERICAN 47
OXFORD 35
No Reply/No Preference Shown: 343

Part B: Rewards for excellent teaching/general contribution

Question 1: Should the present arrangements for promotion to Professorships and Readerships remain unchanged?
Response: YES 316
NO 210
NO REPLY 36
Question 2: Should there be new arrangements to recognize exceptional teaching and administrative contributions? If YES:
(i) Should the new arrangements introduce a title?
Response: YES 311
NO 178
NO REPLY 73
(ii) Should the title be Senior Lecturer?
Response: YES 299
NO 164
NO REPLY 99
Question 3: Please indicate which scheme you would prefer (and which would be your second preference):
Scheme 1 (Senior Lectureship, equivalent to Readership, limited numbers)
Scheme 2 (Senior Lectureship, one increment above the top of the University Lectureship scale, most Lecturers would aspire to this)
Scheme 3 (no Senior Lecturer title, current Discretionary Payments Scheme continues)
Scheme 4 (Senior Lectureship, no stipend implications, criteria and procedures as under Scheme 1 or Scheme 2)
First Choice: SCHEME 2 271
SCHEME 1 138
SCHEME 3 78
SCHEME 4 22
NO REPLY 53
Second Choice: SCHEME 4 69
SCHEME 2 67
SCHEME 1 50
SCHEME 3 29
NO REPLY 347*
* NB: Many respondents did not indicate their second preference.
Question 4: If you prefer Scheme 1, should Senior Lecturers, promoted under such a scheme, be eligible to apply for Professorships, even in the absence of outstanding performance in research? (cf. your answer to A1)
Response: NO 179
YES 94
NO REPLY 289
Question 5: If you prefer Scheme 2, would you agree that the current Discretionary Payments Scheme should be phased out, to (partly) fund the scheme? (This assumes that those currently paid a discretionary payment will continue to receive it for the full five-year period of their award.)
Response: YES 318
NO 88
NO REPLY 156
Question 6: If you prefer Scheme 2, should formal rewards for teaching/contribution take the form of an enhanced scheme of prizes for outstanding performance in these areas?
Response: NO 93
YES 39
NO REPLY 430

Part C: Procedures for application for a Senior Lectureship

Question 1: Should this be by application?
Response: YES 397
NO 76
NO REPLY 89
Question 2:
(i) There is a view that College teaching should be excluded from the assessment. Do you agree?
Response: YES 258
NO 187
NO REPLY 117
(ii) If yes, would the reason for this be because College teaching is accessible to and rewarded by the College and is not a duty that can be required by the University's contract of employment?
Response: YES 280
NO 55
NO REPLY 227

Part D: Schemes 1 and 4 (both parallel to existing Readership scheme)

Note that if posts under Scheme 1 were seen as equivalent to Readerships, the financial implication would be that there would be few promotions in any one year and there would effectively be a University-wide competition for the few promotions annually available.
Question 1: The present arrangements for considering applications for promotion to personal Professorships and Readerships require that applications be considered first by a Faculty Promotions Committee and then by a central Committee, the General Board's Committee on personal Professorships and Readerships.
(i) Should applications be dealt with by Faculty Promotions Committees in the first instance?
Response: YES 431
NO 26
NO REPLY 105
(ii) and then by a central Promotions Committee?
Response: YES 396
NO 70
NO REPLY 96
Question 2: Should the criteria include:
(i) outstanding achievement in teaching (in innovative teaching, in lecturing, and in postgraduate supervision - i.e. outstanding contribution across-the-board)?
Response: YES 407
NO 38
NO REPLY 117
(ii) outstanding achievement in administrative and organizational tasks (imaginative, exceptionally efficient, supportive of others)?
Response: YES 355
NO 84
NO REPLY 123
(iii) some achievement in research/scholarship?
Response: YES 392
NO 70
NO REPLY 100
Question 3: Should the evidence in support of these achievements (which should be equivalent to the lists of books and articles submitted in support of a Readership application) include:
(i) a portfolio containing summaries of student questionnaires over a period of three years?
Response: YES 252
NO 208
NO REPLY 102
(ii) a record of all courses taught during the previous three years, including course descriptions, summaries of individual lectures, seminars and classes, hand-outs, bibliographies, and other relevant material?
Response: YES 341
NO 117
NO REPLY 104
(iii) details of course development, innovative teaching materials and new materials?
Response: YES 359
NO 99
NO REPLY 104
(iv) a list of postgraduates supervised, with their results, over the officer's period of employment?
Response: YES 372
NO 95
NO REPLY 95
(v) a list of research publications?
Response: YES 376
NO 91
NO REPLY 95
(vi) a list of all administrative duties, including, where appropriate, the management of high quality research, over the officer's period of employment?
Response: YES 365
NO 74
NO REPLY 123
(vii) a personal statement of not more than two pages in support of the officer's case?
Response: YES 384
NO 86
NO REPLY 92
(viii) a statement by the Head of the Department or the Chairman of the Faculty Board, as the case may be, in support of the officer's case?
Response: YES 317
NO 101
NO REPLY 144
(ix) two further referees' statements?
Response: YES 339
NO 101
NO REPLY 122
(x) should those appointed to Senior Lectureships under these schemes be eligible to apply for personal Professorships and Readerships in the usual way?
Response: YES 341
NO 92
NO REPLY 129
Question 4: Should these, together with actual classes and lectures, be professionally evaluated in addition to the Faculty Promotion Committees by:
(i) internal Teaching Quality Assurance assessors?
Response: YES 297
NO 203
NO REPLY 62
(ii) the Staff Development Officer?
Response: NO 397
YES 103
NO REPLY 62
(iii) external Teaching Quality Assurance assessors?
Response: NO 315
YES 185
NO REPLY 62
Question 5: Should evaluation of the case for promotion be strictly referenced to the criteria?
Response: YES 312
NO 206
NO REPLY 44
Question 6: Should Faculty Promotions Committees be asked to rank candidates before sending on all the relevant papers to the central Promotions Committees?
Response: YES 299
NO 219
NO REPLY 44
Question 7: Should there be feedback, as in the case of the existing Professorship and Readership Promotions scheme?
Response: YES 358
NO 160
NO REPLY 44
Question 8: Should there be an appeals mechanism, as in the case of the existing Professorship and Readership Promotions scheme?
Response: YES 359
NO 159
NO REPLY 44

Part E: Schemes 2, 3, and 4 (and prizes)

Promotions (and prizes) under this head might be dealt with in the way that Discretionary Payments are currently processed, by Faculty Appointments Committees and Councils of the Schools. Promotion under Scheme 2 would involve a single extra increment above the top of the University Lecturer scale. Under these schemes, each Council would receive an allocation for teaching promotions each year, so that the competition would be within each School.
Question 1:
(i) Should this be dealt with by Faculty Appointments Committees in the first instance?
Response: YES 328
NO 172
NO REPLY 62
(ii) and then by the Councils of the Schools?
Response: YES 331
NO 169
NO REPLY 62
Question 2: Should the criteria be:
(i) sustained excellence in teaching (in contributions to the development of courses, and in at least one of lecturing, conducting seminars, or supervision of postgraduates)?
Response: YES 398
NO 113
NO REPLY 51
(ii) sustained supportiveness and efficiency in undertaking administrative and organizational tasks (including, where appropriate, the management of research groups)?
Response: YES 401
NO 59
NO REPLY 102
(iii) some achievement in research/scholarship?
Response: YES 417
NO 43
NO REPLY 102
Question 3: Should the evidence in support of these achievements include:
(i) a portfolio containing summaries of student questionnaires over three years?
Response: YES 276
NO 201
NO REPLY 85
(ii) a record of all courses taught during three years, including course descriptions, hand-outs, bibliographies, etc., as appropriate?
Response: YES 328
NO 176
NO REPLY 58
(iii) details of course development, innovative teaching materials, and new materials?
Response: YES 359
NO 86
NO REPLY 117
(iv) a list of postgraduates supervised, with results, over the officer's period of employment?
Response: YES 358
NO 101
NO REPLY 103
(v) a list of research publications?
Response: YES 361
NO 98
NO REPLY 103
(vi) a list of administrative tasks (including research management where appropriate)?
Response: YES 382
NO 77
NO REPLY 103
(vii) a personal statement of not more than two pages?
Response: YES 361
NO 98
NO REPLY 103
(viii) a statement by the Head of the Department or the Chairman of the Faculty Board?
Response: YES 347
NO 111
NO REPLY 104
(ix) one further internal reference?
Response: YES 364
NO 95
NO REPLY 103
Question 4: Should evaluation of the case for promotion be strictly referenced to the criteria?
Response: YES 283
NO 193
NO REPLY 86
Question 5: Should the Faculty Appointments Committee be asked to rank candidates before sending on all relevant papers to the Councils of the Schools?
Response: YES 294
NO 171
NO REPLY 97
Question 6: Should there be feedback from:
(i) Faculty Appointments Committees?
Response: YES 405
NO 85
NO REPLY 72
(ii) Councils of the Schools?
Response: YES 411
NO 79
NO REPLY 72
Question 7: Should there be an appeals mechanism?
Response: YES 393
NO 84
NO REPLY 85
Question 8: Should those appointed to Senior Lectureships under Scheme 2 be eligible to apply for personal Readerships and Professorships in the usual way?
Response: YES 415
NO 66
NO REPLY 81

< Previous page ^ Table of Contents Next page >

Cambridge University Reporter, 10th December 1997
Copyright © 1997 The Chancellor, Masters and Scholars of the University of Cambridge.