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An
assistant professor of history will be considered for promotion and the
awarding of tenure next year. Consequently, she has been focusing on strengthening
her professional portfolio. She has a doctoral student who has been working
with her for several years. The assistant professor recently returned from
a professional meeting where she met an individual who shares her research
interests. This person is a tenured faculty member at another institution
who has been working in the same area as the assistant professor for a number
of years. In fact, this faculty member had established a consortium of investigators,
each from a different institution, and she asked the assistant professor
to join in this collaborative study. The assistant professor felt that being
a participant in this collaborative study would benefit her professionally,
especially for her promotion and tenure review, and readily agreed to join.
In follow-up correspondence, she asked for details about the arrangements
for this group, and was told that it is a loose arrangement without any
formal agreements. The assistant professor sensed that the faculty member
who invited her to join in the collaborative study has a leadership role
in this consortium but other aspects of this collaborative arrangement remained
unclear.
During the academic
year, the doctoral student indicated that he would like to attend a national
meeting and present some of his research findings. This would also give
him an opportunity to meet with prospective employers, since he hoped
to complete his graduate studies soon. The assistant professor knew he
had sufficient material for this presentation but worried about what the
other consortium members might think about this. Although most of doctoral
student’s studies were carried out before the assistant professor
was asked to join the group, the subject matter was very similar. In the
meantime the assistant professor was developing her portfolio for her
upcoming promotion and tenure review. In describing her involvement in
the consortium she felt that her case would be strengthened if she described
herself as the initiator of this consortium effort. After all, she argued,
it is a very informal arrangement and she could have easily been the person
responsible for establishing it. Sometime later the assistant professor
received a curt message from her contact in the consortium asking why
she had agreed to have her graduate student present material without seeking
authorization from the consortium. Her contact indicated that the group
may consider asking her to "resign" from the collaboration.
She begins to see her professional life in serious jeopardy.
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