Note: This information below was published on September 15, 2017.
All RTPC Teaching Faculty
This policy applies to all full-time RTPC faculty who continually teach for at least 75% of their full-time effort, whether they have a teaching, clinical, or practitioner title; for convenience the term “teaching faculty” is used.
As a pathway to recognize our best teachers, all full-time teaching faculty will be considered candidates for continuing appointment, as detailed below.
The performance of every teaching faculty member should receive careful review by an appropriate faculty committee every three to five years as to whether promotion is appropriate and whether reappointment is appropriate.
If the review indicates promotion seems appropriate, the school will initiate the further evaluations required by its Provost-approved RTPC promotion process. Decisions on promotion will only be made after review and recommendation by an appropriate faculty body. The committees must include both tenured and RTPC faculty. If the dean does not concur with the advice of the faculty committee, the Provost will decide after receiving the advice of the University Committee on RTPC Promotions.
As with all faculty appointments and promotions, decisions on teaching faculty should reflect our commitment to merit, equal opportunity, diversity, and inclusiveness.
Multi-year appointments
Longer-term contracts should be associated with successful promotion reviews. When a full-time teaching faculty member is promoted to the RTPC Associate Professor (or Senior Lecturer) level, the expected contract length will be three years. When an individual is promoted to the RTPC full Professor (or Master Lecturer) level, the expected contract length will be five years. (These terms have long been the practice in large parts of the University.) If there is an exceptional case where a shorter initial contract length is needed because the teaching need is uncertain, the dean must request special permission from the Provost.
All deans should propose to the Provost appropriate raises to recognize each successful promotion.
For faculty on multi-year contracts, the periodic assessment of performance should occur before the end of each three or five-year term, preferably in the fall of the last year of the term. Decisions on reappointment will be made after review and recommendation by an appropriate faculty body.
A teaching faculty member on a multi-year appointment should be notified of non-reappointment by the beginning of the final semester of the appointment, but at a minimum 90 days before end of the multi-year contract term. If the faculty member is not given 90 days’ notice of non-reappointment, the faculty member will receive pay and extension of benefits to the extent notice falls short of 90 days. The reasons, as well as the process, for any proposed non-reappointment of faculty on multi-year contracts will be reviewed by the Vice Provost for Academic and Faculty Affairs. To provide an opportunity for improvement in performance, instead of non-reappointment the school may offer reappointment for a lesser number of years than usual, after consultation with a faculty committee. Shorter than usual reappointments will include an appeal process. The first appeal level is to the dean. If the dean denies the appeal, the faculty member can appeal to the Vice Provost for Academic and Faculty Affairs.
A multi-year contract may be terminated mid-contract for poor performance or adequate cause as defined in the Faculty Handbook, after consultation with a faculty committee. If so terminated, the faculty member will receive 90 days’ notice or pay and extension of benefits to the extent notice falls short of 90 days.
A multi-year contract may also be terminated mid-contract for programmatic or economic reasons. If there is a proposal to terminate for programmatic or economic reasons, other opportunities to retain the faculty member, as determined by the dean, will be considered by the dean; if terminated for programmatic or economic reasons the faculty member should receive one semester’ s notice, but at a minimum 90 days’ notice of termination. If the faculty member is not given 90 days’ notice of termination, the faculty member will receive pay and extension of benefits to the extent notice falls short of 90 days.
Mid-contract terminations for those holding multiyear appointments will include an appeal process. The first appeal level is to the dean. If the dean denies the appeal, the faculty member can appeal a mid-contract termination to the Vice Provost for Academic and Faculty Affairs.
Promotion of Teaching Faculty to Continuing Appointment
After a full-time teaching faculty member has been promoted to the full Professor (or Master Lecturer) level, and if the dean can demonstrate continuing programmatic need and financial support for the position, the individual can be considered for a continuing appointment. Continuing appointment will be based on exceptional performance and the expectation of continued excellence and growth in performance and expertise. The criteria and relevant evidence for continuing appointment differ from those for tenure and focus on teaching excellence, so external referees will usually not be appropriate. Each new grant of continuing appointment must improve the average teaching quality at USC.
Continuing appointment can be granted by the President of the University, through the Provost, after a recommendation by the school’s faculty and dean, and review of the file and recommendation by an appropriate panel of the University Committee on Appointments, Promotions and Tenure, which will include both tenured and RTPC teaching faculty.
Unlike consideration for tenure or continuing appointments for librarians, the review of teaching faculty proposed for continuing appointment will not be an up or out decision. Teaching faculty not approved for continuing appointment can continue in their current position, subject to applicable University and school policies.
Continuing Appointment Status
Continuing appointment is a high honor that may be awarded by the President of the University. Teaching faculty members achieving this status will have the modifier “with Distinction” added to their official title, e.g., “ Professor (Teaching) of <Discipline>, with Distinction”), unless their school uses a school-specific title approved by the Provost. Individuals on continuing appointment may (outside official contracts and listings) instead employ the undifferentiated title (e.g., “Professor of <Discipline>”), if they wish.
Deans should propose to the Provost appropriate raises to recognize each grant of continuing appointment.
Continuing appointment contracts do not need to be reissued. They are not subject to reappointment or non-reappointment. A decision to end such a contract is expected to be highly unusual and would be regarded as a mid-contract termination. Any proposal to terminate a continuing appointment will be automatically reviewed by the dean. If the dean believes that mid-contract termination is necessary, there will be a second automatic review by the Provost. Only the President, acting through the Provost, can approve a termination of a continuing appointment.
A continuing appointment can be terminated for programmatic or economic reasons, poor performance, or adequate cause as defined in the Faculty Handbook. If there is a proposal to terminate a continuing appointment for programmatic or economic reasons, the dean will consider other opportunities to retain the faculty member, as determined by the dean. In addition, the Provost will review that determination and consider other opportunities to retain the faculty member outside the school, as determined by the Provost.
If terminated for programmatic or economic reasons, the faculty member will receive one year’s notice, or pay and extension of benefits to the extent the notice falls short of a year.
Termination of a continuing appointment for poor performance or adequate cause requires that a faculty committee be consulted. If terminated for these reasons, the faculty member will receive reasonable notice or pay and benefits in lieu of notice, as determined by the President, acting through the Provost, taking into account the length and quality of service and the character of the grounds upon which the action was based.
Last updated May 2024