TY - JOUR
T1 - The unintended consequences of a quantitative, centralized faculty promotion system: empirical evidence from a developing country
AU - Sabagh, Zaynab
AU - Moshtari, Mohammad
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2025.
PY - 2025/1/25
Y1 - 2025/1/25
N2 - The Iranian higher education system is expansive, boasting nearly 80,000 faculty members. To guarantee transparency, fairness, and the alignment of professors’ activities with the priorities of higher education policies, its promotion system is centralized and relies heavily on quantitative measures of performance. This study identifies the unintended consequences facing the promotion system in Iranian public universities. The data sources include interviews and discussion sessions with faculty members and policymakers, along with policy and regulatory documents related to the promotion system. The results reveal that the system’s shortcomings have led to low-quality teaching and research activities, devaluation of academic tasks other than research publication, unethical practices, and a decline in faculty well-being. The impact, however, varies depending on each faculty member’s individual profile and institutional factors. Despite the unintended consequences of a centralized quantitative promotion assessment, decentralization does not appear to be feasible or straightforward for all higher education institutions, at least in the short term; not all institutions have the capability and resources to craft and enforce their promotion system. However, the criteria and processes used in the centralized promotion system could be improved by simplifying the measures, enhancing the evaluation processes, adding some qualitative dimensions of assessment, and providing institutional resources for faculty members’ professional development.
AB - The Iranian higher education system is expansive, boasting nearly 80,000 faculty members. To guarantee transparency, fairness, and the alignment of professors’ activities with the priorities of higher education policies, its promotion system is centralized and relies heavily on quantitative measures of performance. This study identifies the unintended consequences facing the promotion system in Iranian public universities. The data sources include interviews and discussion sessions with faculty members and policymakers, along with policy and regulatory documents related to the promotion system. The results reveal that the system’s shortcomings have led to low-quality teaching and research activities, devaluation of academic tasks other than research publication, unethical practices, and a decline in faculty well-being. The impact, however, varies depending on each faculty member’s individual profile and institutional factors. Despite the unintended consequences of a centralized quantitative promotion assessment, decentralization does not appear to be feasible or straightforward for all higher education institutions, at least in the short term; not all institutions have the capability and resources to craft and enforce their promotion system. However, the criteria and processes used in the centralized promotion system could be improved by simplifying the measures, enhancing the evaluation processes, adding some qualitative dimensions of assessment, and providing institutional resources for faculty members’ professional development.
KW - 516 Educational sciences
KW - faculty promotion
KW - centralized assessment
KW - quantitative assessment
KW - unintended consequences
KW - grounded theory
KW - developing country
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85217410100&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s10734-024-01391-y
DO - 10.1007/s10734-024-01391-y
M3 - Article
SN - 0018-1560
JO - Higher Education : The International Journal of Higher Education Research
JF - Higher Education : The International Journal of Higher Education Research
ER -