Title
Historical Note
Scope and Content Note
Table of Contents
Minutes of Meetings
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RECORDS OF THE
COMMITTEE
ON COLLEGE POLICY
1946-1960
RG# 131
HISTORICAL NOTE
On February 19, 1946, at a faculty meeting at the
University of Rhode Island under the administration of President Carl R. Woodward, a
proposal was made to create a Committee on College Policy. It was to consist of
representatives of the faculty and officers of administration and was to provide the
medium for a joint effort in forming rules and regulations, for structuring the
administration, and for deciding on policy relating to rank, salary, tenure, and
sabbatical leave.
Rhode Island State College, as the University of Rhode
Island was then called, was undergoing extensive change as a result of the end of World
War II and the subsequent crush of applicants to the College. As enrollment was growing,
the College was experiencing a concomitant difficulty in recruiting qualified teachers due
to a lack of policy on faculty status. Previously, no formal system of tenure existed, no
provision for sabbatical leave was in place, and no universally accepted schedule of
salaries was available. The Committee on College Policy was established to provide
standardized policies for the faculty and administration.
At the first meeting, President Woodward proposed examining
policy for 1) the administrative organization and its units, 2) the purpose and duties of
administrative officers, 3) instruction, research, and extension personnel, 4)
the faculty, 5) the Executive Council, 6) business procedures, and 7) any additional
categories which the Committee deemed wise. The Committee would divide into
sub-committees, composed both of administrative officers and of faculty, which would
examine individual matters. The sub-committees would then report to the Committee, which
would review all decisions collectively. The Faculty Manual, produced in 1947 by
the Committee after thirty-three meetings, stated for the first time in writing what was
expected of the faculty and what they, in turn, could expect from the College.
A new President, Francis Horn, began his term at the
beginning of the academic year, 1960-1961. With his tenure came a new system of
administrative and faculty organization. The Policy Committee ended its work over the
summer of 1960 and its activities were taken over by the newly formed Faculty Senate. For
information on the Senate meetings, see RG
122.
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