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Kang, Bai; Miller, Michael T. – Journal of Applied Research in the Community College, 1998
Describes a survey of chief academic officers at 65 randomly selected community colleges that assessed perceptions regarding faculty sabbatical leaves. Reveals that administrators agreed that sabbaticals contribute to a sense of rejuvenation and renewal, among other things, but tended to disagree that they help faculty become better scholars and…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, College Faculty, Community Colleges, Faculty Development
Miller, Michael T.; Kang, Bai – Journal of Staff, Program & Organization Development, 1998
Describes a study that reviewed the sabbatical program at the University of Alabama. Indicates that while faculty believed they were better teachers and scholars as a result of taking sabbatical leave, the objective data do not support these perceptions. (JDI)
Descriptors: Case Studies, College Faculty, Faculty Development, Faculty Evaluation
Kang, Bai; Miller, Michael T. – 1999
This paper reviews the history of sabbatical leave in secondary and postsecondary education, as well as contemporary research on sabbatical leave, and offers some personal narratives of the sabbatical experience. It explains that sabbatical leave programs began at Harvard University in 1880, with professors granted a year of leave at half-pay…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Educational Attitudes, Educational History, Higher Education
Kang, Bai; Miller, Michael T. – 2000
This literature review assesses where higher education is in relation to faculty development and where faculty development efforts need to go. Literature on faculty development has addressed the nature of faculty development in light of faculty needs at various stages of their professional careers. Results suggest that career stage affects…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Faculty Development, Higher Education, Job Satisfaction
Kang, Bai; Miller, Michael T. – 1998
To identify the benefits and outcomes of sabbatical leave practices of community colleges, a survey was undertaken of senior academic affairs administrators at community colleges across the United States. Questionnaires were mailed to 100 administrators requesting information on sabbatical practices at their college, their perceptions of the…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, College Faculty, Community Colleges, Comparative Analysis