| The Preparing
Future Faculty Program: What Difference Does It Make?
by A. Leigh DeNeef
ABOUT THIS PUBLICATION
The Preparing Future Faculty (PFF) program was launched in
1993 to develop new models of doctoral preparation for a faculty
career by including preparation for teaching and academic
citizenship as well as for research. Through a series of four
national competitions, grants have been awarded to forty-three
doctoral producing universities and their departments to develop
and implement such model programs that bring expectations
for undergraduate professors into the graduate preparation
of future academics. One stipulation of grants has been that
the universities cannot do this work by themselves; they must
form a cluster of diverse institutions so that the graduate
students can have direct, personal experience with faculty
life as it is lived in institutions with different missions,
student bodies, and expectations for faculty. Often the students
work with an assigned mentor at another institution.
Since the first of these new programs was introduced in
1994, we have done a great deal of assessment. We also know
a great deal about good practice in the operations of PFF
programs and about how PFF participants—graduate students,
graduate faculty, and faculty from partner institutions—judge
the value of their experiences (generally, very positively).
But only recently have these new programs produced enough
alumni who have found faculty positions and have gained enough
experience to assess the value of PFF in their early faculty
careers. The basic premise of PFF is that these new preparation
programs produce alumni who are better assistant professors
than their counterparts with more traditional preparation
that focuses almost exclusively on learning to do scholarly
research. Until now, this premise has been supported only
by anecdotal evidence.
We commissioned Dr. Leigh DeNeef, professor of English and
associate dean of the graduate school at Duke University,
and his colleagues to assess this central premise. The present
essay summarizes their major findings. The results are based
on questionnaire surveys of 129 individuals who completed
a PFF program, received their doctorate, secured a faculty
position, and agreed to complete their questionnaire. They
also are based on a qualitative analysis of follow-up telephone
interviews with twenty-five individuals. While the numbers
are small and there was no control group, these results begin
to flesh out a more systematic understanding of the outcomes
of these new faculty preparation programs.
| Jerry G. Gaff
Co-Director, Preparing Future Faculty
Association of American Colleges and Universities |
|
Anne S. Pruitt-Logan
Co-Director, Preparing Future Faculty
Council of Graduate Schools |
|