But this leaves Harvard at a disadvantage, forcing candidates to teach twice as many classes as they would at another school--but the University still is unwilling to hire faculty before they have established themselves in academia.
"The question becomes, are you willing to take a risk to appoint someone younger who is a world-class but maybe not world-known scholar?," MacFarquhar says. "I think Harvard tends to be risk-averse because we are claiming to hire the best."
Stuck on the Ladder
Although there is a consensus that Harvard has improved on this front from its past insistence on sending promising candidates away before rehiring them with tenure, administrators say many candidates fear old habits die-hard.
"Even in departments where there has been successful promotion from within, the perception is that it doesn't happen," Fisher said. "People who choose to go elsewhere have a better sense of their future prospects than they do here."
This perception also reinforces itself by discouraging top junior faculty from staying through the end of Harvard's eight-year junior appointment and undergoing the tenure review process.
"The cases [where candidates don't get tenure] tend to resonate more loudly," said Vincent J. Tompkins, Associate Dean for Academic Affairs. "And a junior faculty member will find that by the fourth or fifth year, they're getting offers elsewhere."
Read more in News
Fineberg Testifies in Discrimination CaseRecommended Articles
-
Faculty Council Approves Dissertation ChangeThe Faculty Council yesterday approved a proposal to raise the number of readers required to sign and approve Graduate School
-
Knowles: Faculty Recruitment Will Be Top PriorityThe Faculty of Arts and Sciences' top priority this year will be to increase the number of junior and senior
-
First Faculty Meeting Emphasizes SeminarsThe Faculty discussed possibly revamping the Freshmen Seminar program and the current dearth of Core classes at yesterday's full Faculty
-
Summers Hints at Huge Faculty IncreaseWhen Harvard's presidential search committee asked its final choice candidate, president-elect Lawrence H. Summers, how he would revitalize the University's
-
Freshman Seminar Offerings DoubledThe Faculty of Arts and Sciences will offer over 62 freshman seminars in the next academic year, nearly twice as
-
Undergraduate Education Dean To Step DownDean of Undergraduate Education Susan G. Pedersen ’81-’82 will step down at the end of the academic year, after a