84% of professional faculty agree meeting times are compatible with personal needs*
Seventy-three percent of faculty agree their department is collegial and their colleagues are committed to diversity. Sixty-four percent of professional faculty agree their colleagues support work/life balance and 63% of professional faculty report satisfaction with how well they fit in to their department. More than 70% of FOC and Asian faculty agree meeting times are compatible with personal needs (75% and 73%, respectively) and colleagues pitch in when needed (both 72%).
28% of Associate faculty agree the Institution regularly reviews effectiveness of
governance.*
Around 30% of Associate, women, and Pre-Tenure faculty agree the Institution regularly reviews effectiveness of governance (28%) and regularly cultivates new faculty leaders (30%), and that faculty and administration regularly discuss difficult issues in good faith (31%), respectively.
Faculty reported lower levels of confidence in leadership at the divisional and departmental levels compared to peer institutions. Focus group responses from full professors indicated that they felt less engaged in their departments. Similarly, although reporting higher levels of a sense of shared responsibility between faculty and administration, the perception of the overall effectiveness of shared governance was lower than at peers. To address areas needing growth, we recommend the following:
*= UNT Outshines Peers
NOTE: FOC = Faculty of color (non-White faculty); Professional faculty = Faculty who are not on the tenure track; URM = Underrepresented minority (Black and Latinx)