- 著者
-
宇田川 拓雄
- 出版者
- 北海道大学高等教育推進機構
- 雑誌
- 高等教育ジャーナル : 高等教育と生涯学習 (ISSN:13419374)
- 巻号頁・発行日
- vol.24, pp.107-116, 2017-03
The Preparing Future Faculty (PFF) Initiative (1993-2002) is a project made possible through the
partnership of the Council of Graduate Schools (CGS) and the Association of American Colleges and
Universities (AAC&U). PFF is a training seminar for graduate students who desire to become professors.
The initiative aims to develop useful models for PFF and to disseminate those models nationwide. The author
conducted research on the experimental programs of four sociology departments, which were funded by the
PFF Initiative in cooperation with the American Sociological Association (ASA). Only two sociology
departments had active PFF programs; however, all four graduate schools had components of PFF programs
in their curricula and graduation requirements. The PFF Initiative has succeeded in transforming the culture
of graduate training. However, several problems have been identified with regard to faculty members. The
primary goal for a junior professor is to earn tenure and a promotion. However, participating as partner
faculty members in a PFF program may decrease junior professorsʼ research time and keep them from
achieving their goals. Because the place of PFF in the professorship is unclear, it is sometimes considered to
be a pro bono service activity in which only professors with little interest in aʠgenuineʡprofessorship
participate. Using Burawoyʼs (2002) model of public sociology, Pescosolid (2008) redefined the
professorship and identified PFF as one of the core roles of scholarship and of teaching. His thesis offered
strong support for the promotion of PFF.