
Professors Behaving Badly
Faculty Misconduct in Graduate Education
Johns Hopkins University Press
Will be published approx. on 26. January 2012
Book
Hardback
240 pages
978-1-4214-0219-2 (ISBN)
Description
* A faculty member publishes an article without offering coauthorship to a graduate assistant who has made a substantial conceptual or methodological contribution to the article. * A professor does not permit graduate students to express viewpoints different from her own. * A graduate student close to finishing his dissertation cannot reach his traveling advisor, a circumstance that jeopardizes his degree. This book discusses these and other examples of faculty misconduct-and how to avoid them. Using data collected through faculty surveys, the authors describe behaviors associated with graduate teaching which are considered inappropriate and in violation of good teaching practices. They derive a normative structure that consists of five inviolable and eight admonitory proscriptive criteria to help graduate faculty make informed and acceptable professional choices. The authors discuss the various ways in which faculty members acquire the norms of teaching and mentoring, including the graduate school socialization process, role models, disciplinary codes of ethics, and scholarship about the professoriate and professional performance.
Analyzing the rich data gleaned from the faculty surveys, they track how these norms are understood and interpreted across academic disciplines and are influenced by such factors as gender, citizenship, age, academic rank, tenure, research activity, and administrative experience.
Analyzing the rich data gleaned from the faculty surveys, they track how these norms are understood and interpreted across academic disciplines and are influenced by such factors as gender, citizenship, age, academic rank, tenure, research activity, and administrative experience.
Reviews / Votes
Tools for monitoring and evaluating the behavior of graduate teachers are also provided, in this practical, serious-minded reference and resource that no campus administrator or supervisor should be without. -- James A. Cox Midwest Book ReviewMore details
Language
English
Place of publication
Baltimore, MD
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Paper over boards
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 155 mm
Thickness: 20 mm
Weight
431 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4214-0219-2 (9781421402192)
DOI
10.1353/book.10325
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

John M. Braxton | Eve M. Proper | Alan E. Bayer
Professors Behaving Badly
Faculty Misconduct in Graduate Education
E-Book
01/2012
Johns Hopkins University Press
€36.49
Available for download
Persons
John M. Braxton is a professor of education at Peabody College, Vanderbilt University, and editor of Reworking the Student Departure Puzzle, Perspectives on Scholarly Misconduct in the Sciences, and Faculty Teaching and Research: Is There a Conflict? Eve Proper is an assistant professor of management at LIM College, New York, N.Y. Alan E. Bayer is a professor emeritus of sociology at Virginia Tech and director emeritus and founder of the Virginia Tech Center for Survey Research. Professors Braxton and Bayer are coeditors of Faculty and Student Classroom Improprieties and coauthors of Faculty Misconduct in Collegiate Teaching, the latter also published by Johns Hopkins.
Author
Associate ProfessorDepartment of Educational Leadership
LIM College
Professor of Sociology and DirectorCenter for Survey Research
Content
List of Tables
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Critical Role of Norms in Graduate Education
1. Incidents of Faculty Improprieties in Graduate Training
2. Study Design
3. The Normative Structure of Graduate Education
4. Norm Espousal by Institutional Type and Academic Discipline
5. Personal Attributes and Norm Espousal
6. Norm Espousal and Faculty Professional Attainments and Involvement
7. Core Norms, Differentiated Norms, and Key Differentiating Factors
8. Graduate School Socialization and the Internalization of the Norms of Graduate Study
9. The Support of Graduate Teaching Norms by Supporting Organizations
10. Further Perspectives on the Internalization of the Norms of Graduate Teaching and Mentoring
11. Conclusions and Recommendations for Research, Policy, and Practice
Appendix A: The Graduate Teaching and Mentoring Behaviors Inventory
Appendix B: Means and Standard Deviations for Behaviors Included in the Graduate Teaching and Mentoring Behaviors Inventory (GTMBI)
Appendix C: Respondent Bias Assessment
References
Index
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Critical Role of Norms in Graduate Education
1. Incidents of Faculty Improprieties in Graduate Training
2. Study Design
3. The Normative Structure of Graduate Education
4. Norm Espousal by Institutional Type and Academic Discipline
5. Personal Attributes and Norm Espousal
6. Norm Espousal and Faculty Professional Attainments and Involvement
7. Core Norms, Differentiated Norms, and Key Differentiating Factors
8. Graduate School Socialization and the Internalization of the Norms of Graduate Study
9. The Support of Graduate Teaching Norms by Supporting Organizations
10. Further Perspectives on the Internalization of the Norms of Graduate Teaching and Mentoring
11. Conclusions and Recommendations for Research, Policy, and Practice
Appendix A: The Graduate Teaching and Mentoring Behaviors Inventory
Appendix B: Means and Standard Deviations for Behaviors Included in the Graduate Teaching and Mentoring Behaviors Inventory (GTMBI)
Appendix C: Respondent Bias Assessment
References
Index