Tenure and Promotion to Associate Professor

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Overview

Coming up for tenure is a pivotal point in a faculty member’s career. Once a faculty member receives tenure at Lehigh, their position is essentially guaranteed until retirement (except in very unusual situations in which tenure is revoked). 

This concept of tenure is critical for safeguarding academic freedom, allowing faculty to use their scholarship and expertise to attain and disseminate knowledge, without undue pressure from corporate, government, or political voices, or from the University itself.

The tenure review for an untenured, tenure-track faculty member (Assistant Professor or untenured Associate Professor) takes place in the final year of their probationary period. This is typically their sixth academic year, i.e., the third year of their second appointment. A faculty member may request an extension to their tenure clock for various reasons, including parenthood or public service, or may request to “come up early” for tenure before the final year of their probationary period. In most cases, a faculty member who is not granted tenure may remain at Lehigh for one academic year, after which their appointment ends. 

Scholarship, teaching, and service work done prior to joining Lehigh (e.g., while in graduate school or employed at a previous institution) counts toward a candidate's tenure dossier. Lehigh does not discount such work because it was done at another institution. This is true whether the candidate is coming up for tenure early or on-schedule.

Unlike the reappointment review and annual reviews, the tenure review involves input from external evaluators from the candidate’s field(s) of study. These evaluators are asked to provide an expert assessment of the faculty member’s dossier, especially regarding their research and scholarship. 

The tenure review also involves input from the tenured members of the candidate’s department/program, the Department Chair, the college Dean, and the Provost. The Lehigh University Board of Trustees makes the final decision on whether to grant a faculty member tenure.

Department Chairs and other colleagues should foster a supportive environment for the faculty member during the tenure review, and indeed in the years leading up to it. The tenure review is a consequential process that must be undertaken with rigor, but colleagues should also be mindful that the tenure process is a stressful one for the candidate. (See Guidance for Department Chairs and Guidance for Internal Faculty Evaluators.) 

The Process

Who Undergoes a Tenure Review, and When?

Per R&P §2.2.4.1, all untenured faculty members are reviewed every year. During year 3 (by default), this is the reappointment review. During year 6 (by default), this is the tenure review. (This timing may change for various reasons, such as tenure-clock extensions.) During other years, an annual review is conducted.  

How Does the Tenure Review Process Work?
Initiating the Review Process

The tenure review process begins in the Fall semester for most faculty members, but can occur in the Spring semester if, for example, a faculty member’s start date was in the Spring semester. (See Which Review Cycle Am I On?)

Typically, the tenure review process is initiated automatically during the final year of an untenured, tenure-track faculty member’s probationary period. However, the tenure review can also occur early, either at the candidate’s request or at the department’s suggestion. See Coming Up for Tenure Early.

Before the Review Begins

Before the tenure process begins (usually in the preceding semester) the department and the candidate each nominate a list of external reviewers. The final lists of external reviewers are approved by the Dean and Provost, in consultation with the Department Chair. The final list must contain at least five external reviewers, one to two of whom must be from the list of reviewers nominated by the candidate. (Some colleges require more than five external reviewers.) The candidate knows who is on the two lists of nominees, but is not permitted to know which nominees were asked and/or agreed to serve as reviewers. (See Faculty External Evaluation.)

By late spring/early summer (for Fall-cycle tenure reviews) or early Fall (for Spring-cycle tenure reviews), the candidate uploads to Interfolio the materials that will be provided to external reviewers. (These materials vary by department and college.) The Department Chair requests letters from the selected external reviewers, and sends the candidate’s materials to the reviewers who have agreed to write letters. The Chair can manage this process in Interfolio—both the sending of materials by the Chair and the submission of letters by the reviewers—or can handle it by email and upload the letters to Interfolio manually.

The candidate uploads the rest of their tenure dossier materials to Interfolio. The deadline for doing so is typically around September 15 for Fall-cycle reviews and January 15 for Spring-cycle reviews. (See Tenure Review Schedule below for the schedule for the current academic year.)

Department Review

The Department Chair then forwards, via Interfolio, the complete dossier (including the external letters, which should have been received by this point) to the department faculty involved in the tenure review process. This is typically the tenured faculty members in the department, but may differ, e.g., for small departments or for faculty with joint appointments. The Department Chair meets with the faculty involved in the review to discuss the untenured faculty member’s dossier.

Each faculty member involved in the review process votes on the candidate’s tenure and writes a letter, addressed to the Department Chair, expressing their opinion about whether the candidate merits tenure: 

These letters of evaluation must be substantive letters that appraise the candidate’s record in teaching, research and scholarship, and service and that address the questions of whether or not the candidate merits tenure and the reasons for the recommendation. (R&P 2.2.6.4)

Faculty members record their votes in Interfolio and email their letters to the Department Chair.

The Chair then summarizes the faculty’s vote and evaluation in a letter addressed to the Dean, addressing in detail the criteria as they apply to the candidate. The Chair provides their summary letter to the candidate and meets with the candidate to discuss it. The Chair advises the candidate of the strength of the department's recommendation (e.g., unanimous, strong majority, narrow majority). The candidate may request the substance of this discussion in writing. The Chair may not disclose the statements or opinions of individual evaluators. The candidate either responds in writing to this letter or submits a declination to respond. 

College Promotion and Tenure Committee Review

The Chair then forwards the dossier to the Dean, including both the internal and external letters. The deadline for doing so is typically around October 1 for Fall-cycle reviews and February 15 for Spring-cycle reviews. Once the tenure dossier leaves the department, no other substantive information may be added to it, except as described in the next steps.

The Dean then forwards the dossier to the college Promotion and Tenure Committee. (Some colleges have a single committee that handles both promotion and tenure, while some have separate committees for promotion and for tenure. This page will use “Promotion and Tenure Committee,” or “P&T committee,” to refer to either case.)

The P&T committee reviews the tenure dossier. The committee may request any additional materials that it deems relevant from the candidate, the department, the Dean, or the Provost. The committee makes a recommendation to the Dean regarding whether the candidate should be granted tenure. Their recommendation should be “substantive and independent” (R&P 2.2.6.9), based solely on whether the dossier meets the criteria of excellence in research and scholarship, teaching, and service. In other words, the P&T committee should not be influenced by the department recommendation or any other factors outside of the dossier.

At least five members of the P&T committee must vote. No faculty member may vote both at the department level and at the college committee level; typically this means that a representative on the P&T committee who is from the candidate’s own department will vote at the department level but abstain from voting in the P&T committee. 

The P&T committee members record their votes (including abstentions) in Interfolio and upload a summary letter. If the committee vote is not unanimous, a member of the committee writes a letter expressing reasons for the minority opinion. The deadline for the committee to submit its recommendation is typically around December 1 for Fall-cycle reviews and March 15 for Spring-cycle reviews.

If the P&T committee and department make the same recommendation, this is called a faculty recommendation. If the P&T committee and the department disagree, there is no faculty recommendation. 

Dean Review

The Dean then makes their own recommendation about the tenure case. The Dean meets with the candidate and informs them verbally of both the P&T committee’s recommendation and the Dean’s own recommendation. (R&P does not explicitly say that the Dean writes a letter indicating their recommendation, but in practice the Dean usually does.) The Dean advises the candidate of the strength of the P&T committee’s recommendation (e.g., unanimous, strong majority, narrow majority). The candidate may request the substance of this discussion in writing. The Dean may not disclose the identities of individual evaluators. The candidate either responds in writing to the P&T committee’s and Dean’s recommendations or submits a declination to respond. 

If there is no faculty recommendation, or if there is one but the Dean is considering the opposite recommendation, the Dean, before making their recommendation, meets with both the committee and the department to discuss the case; see R&P 2.2.6.10.

Provost Review

The Dean then forwards the dossier, including all recommendations so far, to the Provost. The deadline for doing so is typically around January 15 for Fall-cycle reviews and April 1 for Spring-cycle reviews. The Provost reviews the dossier and makes their own recommendation regarding tenure. The Provost shares their recommendation with the candidate, usually about one week before the Board of Trustees meeting (typically in May for Fall-cycle tenure reviews, in October for Spring-cycle).

If there is no faculty recommendation, or if there is one but the Provost is considering the opposite recommendation, the Provost, before making their recommendation, meets with the Dean and both the committee and the department to discuss the case; see R&P 2.2.6.13.

The Board of Trustees makes the final decision regarding tenure. The candidate is notified of their decision within one week of the Board of Trustees meeting.

Candidates Who are Denied Tenure

If a candidate is denied tenure by the Board of Trustees, they receive an appointment for one additional year at Lehigh (beyond their probationary period). 

Tenure-Clock Extensions

Faculty may request extensions to their tenure clocks due to parenthood, prolonged illness, or other extenuating circumstances. They may also request a one-year extension for any reason. For more on the policies governing these extensions, see the page on Tenure-Clock Extensions.

Coming Up for Tenure Early

A faculty member may come up for tenure earlier than the default timing, i.e., prior to the final year of their probationary period. This can happen either at the candidate’s request or at the department’s suggestion. 

In either case, the tenured members of the department meet to discuss the candidate coming up for tenure early, and the Department Chair writes a letter to the candidate summarizing the department’s support (or lack thereof) for doing so. See R&P 2.2.6.1.

Department support indicates that the department feels the candidate has a strong case for starting the tenure review. A department letter of support for initiating the tenure review process is not the same as a department tenure recommendation. Support for initiating the tenure review happens before the dossier is complete and external letters are received, while the department vote is held after. Although it is relatively uncommon, the department may support the candidate coming up for tenure early but ultimately vote against recommending tenure.

A candidate who comes up early for tenure may choose to withdraw from the tenure process before it is complete. If all recommendations up to that point (department, college P&T committee, Dean) were positive, the candidate may later request to initiate a second tenure review, as long as it is within the probationary period. The second review essentially starts from scratch, and reviewers are instructed to evaluate the candidate using the same criteria as for any other tenure case. See R&P 2.2.6.14.

Faculty with Joint Appointments

If a faculty member’s MOU specifies a special committee, the special committee participates in all of the meetings of the home department in which the candidate’s portfolio (including the list of potential external letter writers) is discussed. 

The procedure is slightly different for faculty with type-1 and type-2 joint appointments, the primary difference being that for type-1, the special committee acts more like an autonomous unit, with voting and a summary letter, whereas for type-2, the special committee acts more like an advisory body to the home department.

In particular, for faculty with type-1 joint appointments:

  • The special committee participates in the process of developing the list of potential external evaluators.
  • The members of the special committee write individual letters, addressed to the special committee chair, expressing their opinion about whether the candidate merits tenure, specifically addressing research and scholarship, teaching, and service. Special committee members record their votes in Interfolio and email their letters to the special committee chair. The special committee chair also votes, and writes an individual letter.
  • The special committee chair summarizes the special committee’s evaluation in a separate letter, addressed to the Dean. The special committee chair forwards the summary letter and the individual letters to the Chair of the home department.
  • The Chair of the home department shares the special committee summary letter with the candidate at the same time as they share the department summary letter. The candidate writes a response to both letters, or a declination to do so.
  • Individual letters from the home department are not shared with the special committee members, and vice versa. (However, the Chair of the home department has access to all of the individual letters.)
  • If the department and the special committee differ in their recommendations, the case is considered not to have a faculty recommendation.

For faculty with type-2 joint appointments:

  • If there is a special committee, it participates in the process of developing the list of potential external evaluators.
  • The members of the special committee write individual letters, addressed to the Department Chair, expressing their opinion about whether the candidate merits tenure, specifically addressing research and scholarship, teaching, and service. The special committee chair also writes such a letter. There is no vote by the special committee. If the MOU specifies that no special committee is to be used, the Chair/Director of the secondary unit provides a letter to the Chair of the home department.

  • The members of the home department who are participating in the review receive copies of the special committee individual letters and/or Chair/Director’s letter, and take into account the evaluations in these letters when writing their own individual letters. 
  • The summary letter written by the Chair of the home department includes views by both the department members and the special committee or Chair/Director. Members of both the department and the special committee provide feedback on the Chair’s summary letter before it is finalized. 

Materials to Be Submitted

The Office of the Provost requires certain elements to be included in the faculty dossier for tenure review. Individual colleges may require additional materials; candidates and Department Chairs should consult with their Dean’s office regarding any additional requirements.

Faculty Candidate Materials
CV and Statements
  • Curriculum vitae (CV), using the Lehigh CV template.
  • Statements on teaching, research, and service, including the significance and impact of the candidate’s own contributions in each of these areas. See Statements on Research, Teaching, and Service on the Faculty Review at Lehigh page for further guidance. Statements may be uploaded as one document or three. Maximum 10 pages for the three statements combined.
Research and Scholarship
  • Stature of scholarly venues. Information about the stature of venues in which the candidate published or disseminated their research, scholarship, and/or creative works. See the Dossier Materials page for futher guidance.

  • Citation information, if appropriate to the field. See the Dossier Materials page for caveats about the use of citation information. 

Teaching
  • Chronological course listing. A chronological list of undergraduate and graduate courses taught, with the number of credits for each course, and the number of grades assigned in each course.
  • Student course evaluation tabular listing. This is provided upon request by the Office of Institutional Data. The listing should include summary reports for all courses the candidate has taught at Lehigh. 
  • Student course evaluations. These are available for download at https://go.lehigh.edu/evalkit. Include evaluations from all courses taught at Lehigh.
  • Peer teaching observation reports. Optional.
  • Sample course materials (syllabi, tests, assignments, etc.) and any other supporting materials (commendations, student letters, etc.). Maximum 30 pages.
Advising
  • Student advising report. Indicate number of students advised, the dates of service, and the advisory format (frequency of contact, individual or group meetings). Include non-majors.

Previous Review Letters
  • Reappointment recommendation letter from Dean.
  • Reappointment letter from Provost.
  • Annual review summary letters. Include all summary letters since hire.
Joint Appointment Information

(Only for faculty with joint appointments.)

  • Memorandum of understanding (MOU). 

COVID Impact Statement

Department Chair Materials

External Evaluation
  • Finalized list of external evaluators. Use the template on the Provost’s website. See External Evaluation for Tenure and Promotion.
  • Sample letter to external evaluators. 
  • Internal–external evaluation letter. Optional.
Department Evaluation
  • Department faculty individual letters.
  • Department summary letter. Department Chair’s summary of department review, addressed to the Dean.
  • Candidate’s response to department summary letter, or declination to respond.
Joint Appointment Information

(Only for faculty with joint appointments.)

  • Program director letter or special committee summary letter.
  • Candidate’s response to program or special committee summary letter, or declination to respond.
Promotion and Tenure Committee Materials
  • Promotion and tenure committee summary letter.

College Dean Materials
  • Dean’s recommendation letter. Addressed to the Provost, shared with the candidate.
  • Candidate’s response to Dean’s letter, or declination to respond.

Tenure Review Schedule 

The Provost’s office publishes the schedules below each year for each step in the tenure review process, in order to accommodate the deadline to submit the dossier to the Provost’s Office (January 15 for Fall-cycle reviews, April 1 for Spring-cycle reviews). The Department Chair and/or Dean’s office should inform the candidate and the Provost’s Office about any concerns in meeting the deadline.

The schedules listed below are for the current academic year. Schedules may change from year to year, but the dates are likely to be similar to the current year. See Which Review Cycle Am I On? below to determine whether a given candidate uses Fall- or Spring-cycle reviews.

Confirming Candidates for Review

 

AY2024–25

Provost’s office provides each college with a list of Assistant Professors and untenured Associate Professors due for tenure review in the upcoming academic year

February 1, 2024

Dean’s office reviews list with departments for accuracy and notifies the Provost’s office of any discrepancies

February 15, 2024

 

The Review Process

 

AY2024–25

 

Fall Cycle

Spring Cycle

Chair forwards lists of external evaluators to Dean

April 1, 2024

August 1, 2024

Dean forwards lists of external evaluators to Provost

April 15, 2024

August 15, 2024

Provost approves final lists of external evaluators

May 1, 2024

September 1, 2024

Tenure candidate submits their dossier via Interfolio

September 15, 2024

January 15, 2025

Department Chair forwards dossier, with department recommendation letters, to Dean

November 1, 2024

February 15, 2025

College P&T committee submits its recommendation to Dean

December 15, 2024

March 15, 2025

Dean forwards dossier, with P&T committee and Dean recommendation letters, to Provost

January 15, 2025

April 1, 2025

Provost notifies candidate of Provost recommendation

May 14, 2025

October 15, 2025

Board of Trustees meeting

May 16, 2025

October 17, 2025

Provost notifies candidate of Board of Trustees decision

May 23, 2025

October 24, 2025

The Provost expects quality checks at each level to ensure that all documents are included in Interfolio to avoid having to send the dossier back for corrections. College-Level Administrators (CLADs) are responsible for completing a full review of the online dossier to ensure that all letters and other materials are uploaded to Interfolio before submitting the dossier to the Dean.

Which Review Cycle Am I On?

If your start date at Lehigh was during the summer, you have a Spring-cycle tenure review. If your start date was in January, you have a Fall-cycle tenure review. 

Your review cycle is different for different types of reviews. In particular:

Review Type

If Your Start Date Was in Summer

If Your Start Date Was in January

Annual review

Spring

Fall

Reappointment

Fall

Spring

Tenure

Fall

Spring

The information above may change if, for example, you take a tenure-clock extension. 

If your start date was not during the summer or January, or if you have any other questions about which cycle you fall under, consult your Department Chair or Associate Dean for Faculty.

Relevant Sections of R&P

  • 2.2.2.2 Voting Members
  • 2.2.2.4 Probationary Period
  • 2.2.5 Tenure – General Provisions
  • 2.2.6 Tenure Review Process
  • 2.2.3.1.7 Tenure and Promotion [for faculty with joint appointments]

Additional Documents

Notes

  • This overview is intended to supplement the information contained in Lehigh’s Rules and Procedures of the Faculty (R&P). If there is a discrepancy between the guidance on this page and R&P, the provisions of R&P govern.
  • Feel free to contact your Department Chair, Associate Dean for Faculty, the Deputy Provost for Faculty Affairs, or the Director of Faculty Affairs with any questions or concerns.