Education
|
Posted By: Alton Clark on December 10, 2008 Did You Know according to: Racial Gaps in Faculty Job Satisfaction Surveys by COACHE — the acronym for the Collaborative on Academic Careers in Higher Education — have played a key role in recent years in drawing attention to the frustrations and hopes of young faculty members. The studies have been influential in campus discussions about the need for more clarity about tenure expectations or the importance of family-friendly policies. While the studies have in some cases had data for minority and white junior professors, they have not featured breakdowns among racial and ethnic groups. A new analysis — released Thursday — features breakdowns by ethnic and racial groups, with some notable findings. Generally, white and Latino faculty members had similar levels of job satisfaction. But among the 8,500 pre-tenure faculty members interviewed at 96 four-year colleges and universities — public and private, liberal arts oriented colleges and research universities — there were gaps among other groups. Compared to white faculty members, African American, Asian and Native American faculty were less satisfied on a series of questions on climate, culture and collegiality at their institutions. Of the 10 climate measures in the survey, Asians were less satisfied on 6; Native Americans on 5; and African Americans on 4, all by statistically significant margins. These gaps may be particularly important to colleges seeking to diversify their faculties, as a key theme of COACHE reports has been the idea that today’s younger generation of professors — far more than previous generations — will judge colleges as employers on issues of campus culture and supportive employment policies, not just on prestige or compensation. At the same time, the new data show that the issues are not identical for all minority groups and that colleges that “lump everyone together” may not be reaching the topics crucial to different populations, said Kiernan Mathews, director of COACHE. “Culture, climate and collegiality remain the key — and a persistent problem — not just for minority groups, but for women, too,” Matthews said. “And the experiences of individuals in different groups are in fact different.” For black faculty members, for example, job satisfaction levels with regard to work-life balance were similar to those for white faculty members. But they reported lower levels of satisfaction on interactions with tenured and pre-tenure colleagues, with sense of “fit” at their institutions, and with their sense of fair treatment in their departments. African American faculty members are also less likely than their white counterparts to believe that tenure decisions are made primarily on job performance. Cathy Trower, research director of COACHE, said in a statement that these gaps suggest that ” African American faculty may be experiencing some lingering aspects of racism — real or perceived — as evidenced by their concern with fair treatment and lower satisfaction with the amount of interaction and collaboration with others.” Asian faculty members indicated a different set of issues. Compared to their white counterparts, Asian faculty reported greater clarity about tenure expectations and higher levels of satisfaction on many questions about job satisfaction. But when it comes to questions related to teaching, they were less happy on most questions. While the number of Native American faculty members in the survey was low, as in the professoriate generally, they were less satisfied than white professors almost across the board. Trower said that these data show a need for sustained attention since “mixing lack of clarity about the tenure process and criteria with dissatisfaction with workplace culture and climate is not a recipe for success.” Matthews said that based on these results, future research will focus more on the reasons for differing job satisfaction levels by different groups, but that individual campuses may want to consider these findings right now as they consider their own policies and cultures. Here are some of the key results, in which those surveyed answered on a 5-point scale, with 5 representing either the greatest level of agreement or clarity or satisfaction. On tenure, professors are more clear on process than standards, women experience less clarity than men on a variety of tenure measures, and minority group responses vary. Men are more confident than women that they know whether or not they will win tenure. Tenure Standards All Men Women White American Indian Asian Black Latino Clarify of process 3.71 3.75 3.67 3.71 3.42 3.76 3.64 3.69 Clarity of criteria 3.61 3.63 3.59 3.61 3.32 3.64 3.59 3.58 Clarity of standards 3.26 3.29 3.23 3.24 3.08 3.41 3.29 3.33 Clarity on whether or not I will achieve tenure 3.65 3.74 3.54 3.65 3.45 3.68 3.58 3.66 Agreement that tenure decisions are made primarily on performance and not other factors 3.59 3.67 3.50 3.62 3.33 3.68 3.23 3.47 In a series of questions about the nature of their work, faculty members generally said that they were more satisfied with teaching than research, and women were less satisfied than men with how they spend their time and with work hours. Satisfaction With Nature of Academic Work All Men Women White American Indian Asian Black Latino Satisfaction with way time is spent 3.75 3.83 3.66 3.74 3.71 3.82 3.79 3.77 Satisfaction with work hours 3.38 3.54 3.20 3.34 3.50 3.56 3.59 3.45 Satisfaction with teaching (composite) 4.00 4.00 4.00 4.02 3.94 3.87 4.06 4.01 Satisfaction with research (composite) 3.42 3.53 3.28 3.43 3.21 3.46 3.31 3.34 On work-life balance, as in previous surveys, the striking gaps are between men and women, with men generally more satisfied than women with various measures. While gender gaps remain, professors are generally more satisfied by the efforts of their colleagues on these issues than those of their institutions. Work-Life Balance Policies Men Women Institution does what it can to make having children and the tenure track compatible 3.03 2.81 Institution does what it can to make raising children and the tenure track compatible 2.91 2.57 Departmental colleagues do what they can to make having children and the tenure track compatible 3.56 3.44 Departmental colleagues do what they can to make raising children and the tenure track compatible 3.54 3.37 Colleagues are respectful of my efforts to balance work and home responsibilities 3.96 3.64 On broad questions related to culture and collegiality, in many categories male and white professors are more satisfied than others are. Culture and Collegiality All Men Women White American Indian Asian Black Latino Fairness with which supervisor evaluates work 4.02 4.06 3.97 4.04 3.94 3.92 3.96 4.05 Interest tenured faculty take in your professional development 3.53 3.56 3.50 3.54 3.14 3.56 3.45 3.49 Opportunities to collaborate with tenured faculty 3.35 3.45 3.22 3.36 2.85 3.38 3.17 3.30 How well you fit in the department 3.81 3.84 3.76 3.84 3.47 3.73 3.55 3.83 Feeling that department treats pre-tenure faculty fairly compared to one another 3.79 3.90 3.66 3.81 3.33 3.83 3.60 3.75 The above results translate indirectly into broad satisfaction figures from varying groups. Generally, across racial and gender groups, departments are viewed more favorably than are institutions. Global Satisfaction All Men Women White American Indian Asian Black Latino Satisfaction with department as a place to work 3.89 3.92 3.84 3.91 3.69 3.85 3.76 3.89 Satisfaction with institution as a place to work 3.67 3.68 3.65 3.67 3.47 3.65 3.70 3.69 Agreement that “if I could do it all over, I would work at this institution” 4.06 4.07 4.05 4.10 3.97 3.87 3.98 4.05 Rating of institution as a place for pre-tenure professors to work 3.77 3.81 3.72 3.78 3.45 3.78 3.73 3.74 — Scott Jaschik The original story and user comments can be viewed online at http://insidehighered.com/news/2008/12/05/... © Copyright 2008 Inside Higher Ed If you enjoyed this article, Join BlackInAmerica.com today for similar content and opportunities via email! |
Comments
|
Thank you for sharing this. I am forwarding it on to the several Black junior faculty members that I am mentoring. It may be helpful for them to see that they are not isolated in terms of their experiences with academe.
Wednesday, December 10th 2008 at 6:26PM |
More From This Author
Latest Blogs
|
|
HOW APOSTOLIC EDIFICATION TALK WITH APOSTLE DR. PAULA PRICE ANSWERS YOUR QUESTIONS ABOUT GOD'S WORD!For Immediate Release From Kingdom-Levine-Oliver Publisher, Inc.!
JOIN APOSTLE DR. PAULA PRICE, PH.D. FOR OPEN DISCUSSION AND EDIFICATION FOR PROPHETS!
WHEN: FRIDAYS
TIME: 6:30 ...more
agnes levine • 92 Views • February 1st, 2026 |
|
|
HOW APOSTOLIC EDIFICATION BY APOSTLE JOHN ECKHARDT WELCOMES YOU, THE HEAVENS DROP, FEBRUARY DECREES....For Immediate Release From Kingdom-Levine-Oliver Publisher, Inc.!
Join Apostle John Eckhardt for Seers and Dreamers Gathering
WHEN: March 11 - 13, 2026
WHERE: Turlock, CA
...more
agnes levine • 93 Views • February 1st, 2026 |
|
|
HOW PONTIFF LEO RELEASES 2027 PRAYER LIST; APPEAL FOR OLYMPIC TRUCE; PEACE NOT WAR; YOUTH INTERCESSORS...For Immediate Release From Vatican News!
(A 15-Minute Read)
Pontiff Releases Prayer Intentions For 2027
Human dignity, art, life, migrants, the elderly, young people, and artificial int ...more
agnes levine • 148 Views • February 1st, 2026 |
|
|
Trump Suppresses the Truth Trump Suppresses the Truth
Junious Ricardo Stanton
On Thursday January 22, 2026 at 3 PM Eastern time, Donald J. Trump executed his M ...more
Junious Stanton • 36 Views • January 29th, 2026 |
|
|
Nation’s Oldest HBCU Football Rivalry Returns in 2026 with 102nd Turkey Day ClassicThe nation’s oldest HBCU football rivalry will return to the field in November 2026 as Alabama State University and Tuskegee University face off in the 102nd Turkey Day Classic. The historic Thanksgiv ...more
Reginald Culpepper • 236 Views • January 28th, 2026 |
Popular Blogs
|
|
Divorce in America in 2009 – What’s love got to do, got to do with it?
Join Brother Marcus and the cast and the crew of the Brother Marcus Show live this Sunday evening on February 1, 2009 @ 8:00 p.m. for another hot topic in our community! “Divorce in America in 2009 ...more
Brother Marcus! • 70,795,281 Views • January 27th, 2009 |
|
|
VISINE ALERT!!!Seemingly innocent medication such as Visine eyedrops are used by people to concoct a mixture with similar effects as a date-rape drug.
When mixed with alcohol and taken orally, the eyedrops can l ...more
Siebra Muhammad • 118,103 Views • May 23rd, 2009 |
|
|
Walk with me ''SCHOLARSHIP'' by DAVID JOHNSON STUDY of religion at the highest levelWELCOME to BLACK HISTORY by DAVID JOHNSON and friends !!
IF YOU WANT TO KNOW ABOUT Christians Muslims Buddha and any other RELIGION...! history note !
1400's or700 AD
what was the religi ...more
DAVID JOHNSON • 105,858 Views • October 26th, 2010 |
|
|
The Surprise WeddingOn June 7, 2013, Ryan Leak proposed to his girlfriend. Her dream was to get engaged and married on the same day, and so later on that night... He had planned her surprise dream wedding.
We have al ...more
How May I Help You NC • 103,347 Views • October 1st, 2017 |
|
|
Famous Quotes Rotating Header Image Mind your own Business Quotes LMAOOUT OF ALL THE THINGS TO DO HERE ON BIA
WHY BE A SIDELINE HATTER ? THEN BECAUSE YOU CANT HANDLE THE TRUTH YOU WANT TO RUN AND CALL MAMA ! BOOOOOO HOOOOOOO THIS IS FOR YOU !!!!
Thank you for your ...more
DAVID JOHNSON • 85,509 Views • November 3rd, 2010 |

