Standards of Shared Governance
on the 16 UNC Campuses
Adopted
by the Faculty Assembly of the University
of North Carolina April
2005
Preamble
A strong tradition of shared governance is essential to the
excellence of any institution of higher learning. This principle is embodied in
Section 502D(2) of the Code of the Board
of Governors, which makes it the responsibility of the chancellor of each
constituent institution of The University of North Carolina to ensure that the
institution’s faculty has the means to give effective advice with respect to
questions of academic policy and institutional governance, with particular
emphasis upon matters of curriculum, degree requirements, instructional
standards, and grading criteria, and that the appropriate means of giving such
advice is through an elected faculty senate or council and an elected chair of
the faculty. To the end that chancellors may more effectively carry out this
responsibility, the Faculty Assembly commends the following statement of
essential standards of governance.
Definitions
As used in this document, the following terms have the meanings indicated:
- “Faculty” includes all persons
holding full-time tenure-track appointments in the institution and such
other faculty members and librarians as may have been accorded voting
privileges in faculty elections.
- “Faculty senate” means the elective
body, by whatever nomenclature, empowered by the faculty to exercise its
legislative powers.
- “Chair of the faculty” means the
faculty member, by whatever nomenclature, elected by the faculty at large
or by the faculty senate as the chief faculty officer and spokesperson.
The Faculty Senate
- The
faculty senate must hold regularly scheduled meetings throughout the
academic year.
- With
few exceptions, voting membership of the senate must be limited to elected
faculty representatives.
- Members
of the senate must represent the academic units of the institution and
must be elected directly by the faculty of those units.
- While
it is the chancellor’s prerogative to preside over the senate, it is
preferable and customary for the chancellor to delegate this privilege to
the chair of the faculty, especially for those portions of meetings during
which the senate is deliberating on questions of academic policy and
institutional governance.
- The
officers of the senate must be elected by the membership of that body or
by the faculty at large.
- The
structure, method of election, and powers of the senate must be specified
in a document approved by and amendable by the faculty at large or its
designated representatives.
- Procedures
for the operation of the senate must be established by reference to
recognized authorities such as Roberts’ Rules of Order or in published
bylaws adopted by the senate.
- The
senate must be given adequate resources to ensure effective governance,
including:
a.
an adequate budget
b.
reasonable authority over its budget
c.
adequate office space
d.
adequate secretarial support
The Chair of the Faculty
- There
must be a chair of the faculty who is elected either by the faculty at
large or by the faculty senate. The chair of the faculty shall be the
chief spokesperson for the faculty.
- The
chair of the faculty must be allowed reassigned time commensurate with the
duties of the office.
Faculty Governance Responsibilities
- The
legislative and consultative powers of the faculty must be codified in a
published governance document approved by and amendable by the faculty or
their elected representatives.
- The
university’s curriculum is the responsibility of the faculty. The faculty,
acting as a committee of the whole or through representatives elected by
the faculty or designated pursuant to procedures established by faculty
legislation, must give approval to academic policies prior to their
implementation, including but not limited to the following:
- graduation
requirements
- the
undergraduate curriculum
- the
establishment, merger, or discontinuation of departments, schools, and
colleges
- the
establishment of new degree programs (including online programs)
- the
establishment of or substantive changes to majors
- the
elimination or consolidation of degree programs
- the
establishment of individual new courses
- admissions policies
- attendance
and grading policies
- grade-appeal
procedures
- drop/add
policies
- course-repeat
policies
- policies
for honors programs
- honor-code
policies
- The
curriculum leading to and policies with respect to the award of graduate
and professional degrees must be established by the faculties of the
schools or colleges that admit and certify candidates for those degrees.
- The
faculty, through its designated representatives, must be consulted on any
proposal to adopt or amend campus policies of reappointment, tenure, and
promotion, and of post-tenure review. It is expected that any such
proposals will be initiated by the faculty, and that full opportunity for
faculty analysis and discussion will be allowed before any modifications
in such proposals are adopted.
- The
faculty, through its designated representatives, must be afforded full
opportunity to review and approve faculty handbooks, academic policy
manuals, and any institutional policy statements that affect the faculty’s
teaching, research, or conditions of employment.
- For
joint committees on which the faculty is represented:
a. Faculty
representation must appropriately reflect the degree of the faculty’s stake in
the issue or area the committee is charged with addressing.
b. The
faculty members of joint committees must be selected in consultation with the
elected faculty leadership or by processes approved by the senate.
- The granting
of honorary degrees is a prerogative of the faculty. All nominees for
honorary degrees must be approved by the faculty or its designated
representatives before final approval by the board of trustees.
Administration-Faculty Collegiality
- A
collegial, candid, and cooperative relationship should exist between the
administration and the faculty. When requested, administrators should
appear before the senate and respond to questions.
- It is
expected that senior administrators will uphold the decisions of the
senate in areas in which the faculty has primary responsibility, such as
curriculum and tenure/promotion policies.
- The
chancellor and other senior administrators should consult in a timely way
and seek meaningful faculty input on issues in which the faculty has an
appropriate interest but not primary responsibility, including but not
limited to the following:
- the
university mission, emphases, and goals
- budget
- campus
master plan or strategic plan
- building
construction
- enrollment
growth
- tuition
policy
- student
discipline
- intercollegiate
athletics
- faculty
and staff benefits
- libraries
and other research facilities
- The
chancellor should effectively advocate the principles of shared governance
to the Board of Trustees.
- The
chancellor should typically sustain the recommendations of faculty tenure,
hearings, and grievance committees. When the chancellor acts against the
recommendations of such committees, the chancellor should meet with the
committee or otherwise adequately communicate the reasons for not sustaining
its recommendations.
- The
Board of Trustees should exercise due respect for the governance
prerogatives of the faculty.
- The
faculty should participate meaningfully in the selection of academic
administrators through membership on search/hiring committees and the
opportunity to meet and comment on “short-listed” candidates before hiring
decisions are made.
- The
faculty of each college, school, or department should be consulted in the
appointment or reappointment of the dean or department chair either through
majority membership on the search or evaluation committee or by direct
consultation with the appointing administrator either in person or by
other means approved by the faculty senate.
- The
term of appointment of academic deans and department chairs should not
exceed five years. If appointed for an indefinite term, an academic dean
or department chair should be formally evaluated for continuation in
office not less frequently than every five years.
- The chancellor or provost, in
consultation with the faculty senate, should establish effective
procedures that enable members of the faculty having voting privileges to
regularly evaluate the performance of senior administrators. This
evaluation should be in addition to and independent of the mandated periodic
evaluation of administrators by the chancellor or the board of trustees.
Compliance
It is the responsibility of the faculty of each campus to
advocate, seek, and monitor the campus’s adherence to the Standards of Shared
Governance. When a campus is not in compliance with one or more standards,
faculty should seek resolution through processes at the campus level. However,
when the faculty’s sustained efforts to secure compliance have not been
successful, the faculty, through its senate or the chair of the faculty, is
encouraged to consult with the officers of the Faculty Assembly, who will bring
the matter to the attention of the President and work with all parties to
achieve a resolution.