Association of New Jersey State College Faculties, Inc. v. Dungan

316 A.2d 425, 64 N.J. 338, 1974 N.J. LEXIS 222, 85 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2625
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 5, 1974
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 316 A.2d 425 (Association of New Jersey State College Faculties, Inc. v. Dungan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Association of New Jersey State College Faculties, Inc. v. Dungan, 316 A.2d 425, 64 N.J. 338, 1974 N.J. LEXIS 222, 85 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2625 (N.J. 1974).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Jacobs, J.

On September 15, 1972 the defendant Board of Higher Education adopted a resolution which set forth general guidelines for the granting of tenure to faculty members in the State Colleges and for the periodic evaluation of tenured faculty members. The plaintiff Association of New Jersey State College Faculties, Inc., along with others, brought a Law Division action attacking the resolution and in due course the action was transferred to the Appellate Division. On October 20, 1972 the Board adopted a similar resolution with respect to County Colleges. The Association of New Jersey County College Faculties, Inc., along with others, appealed therefrom to the Appellate Division. R. 2:2-3(a). The matters were consolidated in the Appellate Division and while awaiting argument there we certified under R. 2 :12.

New Jersey’s Department of Higher Education (N. J. S. A. 18A:3-1 et seq.) has for some time been concerned with the proportion of tenured and nontenured faculty at State Colleges. This concern has been the subject of comprehensive study within our State and comparable concern has been the subject of comprehensive study elsewhere. See, e. g., Tenure *342 at the State Colleges of Few Jersey (Department of Higher Education, Office of the Chancellor, June, 1972); Faculty Tenure, A Report and Recommendations by the Commission on Academic Tenure 'in Higher Education (The Jossey-Bass Series in Higher Education 1973). At various intervals the Department expressed to the State Colleges and to the Board of Higher Education (N. J. S. A. 18A:3~6) its view that tenure reforms were necessary and that unduly high proportions of tenured faculty disserved sound educational interests. In. October, 1971 the Chairman of the Board of Higher Education addressed a letter to the Chairman of the Council of State Colleges suggesting the establishment of a joint committee to discuss the matter. The suggestion was not directly implemented but the Council proceeded on its own with the establishment of a committee headed by Dr. Clyde Davis of Glassboro State College. This committee prepared á report which was transmitted to the Board of Higher Education. Thereafter the Board requested the Chancellor (N. J. 8. A. 18A':3-20) to prepare a staff study on the tenure situation at the State Colleges for the Board’s consideration at its July, 1972 meeting. Such a study was prepared and its results were embodied in a June, 1972 report by the Chancellor, supra.

The report in its first section dealt with “Tenure and Institutional Flexibility.” It noted that while there is a definite advantage to an institution in having “a stable group of faculty whose professional careers are secure,” by tenure or otherwise, “an institution in which all faculty members are tenured would find itself in an intolerable situation.” It would “quickly stagnate internally and lose most, if not all, of its ability to develop and change over time, consistent with its need to be responsive to the society in which it exists.” It must retain “a degree of flexibility in the allocation of its faculty resources” so that it may start new programs, introduce young scholars, and meet urgent social policy by conduct such as active recruitment of “minority and female faculty members.”

*343 In its second section the Chancellor’s report dealt with “What Proportion of the Faculty Should Be Tenured?” It recognized that it was not possible to establish with certainty the precise proportion of tenured faculty which would ‘“provide maximum flexibility while at the same time assuring a satisfactory base of faculty security and continuity.” * It recognized further that in the ultimate the determination would involve delicate matters of policy and judgment, though empirical data would be helpful in determining an appropriate range. In this connection the practices at state colleges and universities throughout the country were reviewed. A 1969-70 study of state and land grant colleges indicated that 54.8% of their faculties were under tenure; a study of 31 major universities in 1961-62 indicated an average tenure rate of 57.6%; an earlier study indicated a tenure rate of 53%; and a very recent study indicated that most of the public four-year colleges had less than half of their faculties on tenure, a significant number had between 51% and 70% on tenure and only a small number had over 71% tenured.

The report expressed the view that “a tenured faculty of between 50% and 60% is probably normative” and that “while normative patterns cannot, of course, be assumed to reflect sound practice, the general consensus which has developed at many institutions, each operating independently of the others, is perhaps evidence that a faculty tenured at that level is desirable.” It concluded that a tenure ratio of 60% would generally “fulfill the dual and often conflicting institutional needs of both flexibility and stability.” This *344 may be compared favorably with the following recommendation in the Faculty Tenure report (Jossey-Bass Series), supra at 50-51:

The commission recommends that each institution develop policies relating to the proportion of tenured and nontenured faculty that will be compatible with the composition of its present staff, its resources and projected enrollment, and its future objectives. In the commission’s nearly unanimous judgment, it will probably be dangerous for most institutions if tenured faculty constitute more than one half to two thirds of the total full-time faculty during the decade ahead. The institution’s policy in this matter, which should be flexible enough to allow for necessary variation among subordinate units, should be used as a guide in recruitment, reappointment, and the award of tenure. Special attention should be given to the need to allow for significant expansion of the proportion of women and members of minority groups in all faculties, especially in the tenured ranks. In achieving its policy goals as to the proportion of its faculty on tenure, institutions will need to proceed gradually in order to avoid injustice to probationary faculty whoso expectations of permanent appointments may have been based on earlier, more liberal practices.

In a section captioned “The Current Tenure Status in the State Colleges” the Chancellor’s report dealt with tenure proportions as evidenced by data submitted by the State Colleges in the spring of 1972. The tenured faculty in the colleges was approximately 63% in 1971 and had climbed to 71% in January, 1972.

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316 A.2d 425, 64 N.J. 338, 1974 N.J. LEXIS 222, 85 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/association-of-new-jersey-state-college-faculties-inc-v-dungan-nj-1974.