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Bylaws, Department of Speech-Language-Hearing: Sciences and Disorders

Procedure
Purpose: 

To define the rules and regulate the affairs of the Speech-Language-Hearing: Sciences and Disorders Department.

Applies to: 

Faculty and Staff within the Speech-Language-Hearing: Sciences and Disorders Department.

Campus: 
Lawrence
Medical Center, Kansas City
Policy Statement: 

These Bylaws describe the basic structure of the Department of Speech-Language-Hearing:  Sciences and Disorders, hereafter the Department, and outline its normal operating procedures and relationships to other agencies of the University.

The Department is an academic unit within the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.  The Department is responsible for the B.A. and B.G.S. degrees in Speech-Language-Hearing. Graduate degrees (the M.A. degree in Speech-Language Pathology, the Clinical Doctorate of Speech-Language Pathology, the Audiology Doctorate, and the Ph.D. degrees in Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology) are offered in conjunction with the Department of Hearing and Speech in the College of Allied Health at the University of Kansas Medical Center.  Each graduate degree is administratively housed on one campus and thus typically follows the campus policies and procedures of the administrative home. Specifically, the MA SLP, PhD SLP, and PhD AUD are housed on the Lawrence campus, whereas the SLPD and AuD are administratively housed on the KUMC campus. These graduate degree programs are coordinated through the Executive Committee (hereafter IEC) of the Intercampus Program in Communicative Disorders (hereafter the IPCD). Refer to IEC bylaws for further details of this arrangement.

The Department maintains the Schiefelbusch Speech-Language-Hearing Clinic on the Lawrence campus and provides for diagnostic and remedial service for speech, language and hearing problems.  The nature of clinical training in Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology requires a close liaison between the clinic and the academic program.  The Department faculty maintains research programs with various speech, language and hearing laboratories.

Faculty

  1. Faculty:  All resdient faculty who have an appointment of 50% effort or greater in the Department participate in matters of the Department.
  1. Duties and Responsibilities: All faculty are required to carry out the responsibilities of teaching/advising, research, and service as outlined in the Handbook for faculty and other Unclassified Staff (http://policy.ku.edu/provost/faculty-and-unclassified-staff-handbook) and Departmental guidelines. The graduate degree programs administered through the Intercampus Executive Committee require additional responsibilities for the faculty, e.g., various Intercampus committees Faculty are also subject to certain reviews and processes:
  1. Faculty Evaluation: The Department articulates its criteria and procedures for faculty annual evaluation in the unit’s Faculty Evaluation Plan formally located in the Policy Library at: https://policy.drupal.ku.edu/CLAS/faculty-evaluation-plan-splh.
  2. Progress Toward Tenure Review: The progress toward tenure review is a formal review conducted approximately midway through the probationary period for tenure-track faculty. The documents for this review are available from the Provost Office website at: http://facultydevelopment.ku.edu/pttr.
  3. Promotion and Tenure: The Department articulates its criteria and procedures for promotion and tenure in the unit’s Promotion and Tenure Policy formally located in the Policy Library at: http://policy.ku.edu/CLAS/promotion-tenure-speech-language-hearing.
  4. Post-tenure Review: The Department articulates its criteria and procedures for post-tenure review in the unit’s Post-Tenure Review Policy formally located in the Policy Library at: http://policy.ku.edu/CLAS/post-tenure-review-splh.

Student Representation

Students shall have representation in Department meetings and policy making committees. For departmental meetings, this will entail representation by one undergraduate student and one graduate student. For smaller committees, a single student representative is appropriate with preference given to the most directly relevant student group (e.g., for an undergraduate curriculum committee, preference would be given to an undergraduate student representative).  Student groups will be asked to nominate, typically at the start of the fall semester, appropriate representatives to the Chair, who will appoint an appropriate student to the committee. Each student representative has one vote in general matters of the Department.  The student representatives will not have voting privileges with regard to any decision involving personnel matters, such as the election of the Department Chairperson, hiring of new faculty, and promotion and tenure recommendations. Additional student input may be sought in personnel decisions, but the students involved will not have voting privileges. Likewise, student representatives will not have voting privileges or be eligible to participate in discussions of confidential matters involving other identified students (e.g., nomination of students for awards or scholarships). This stipulation is not relevant to topics involving de-identified students or student data (e.g., aggregate student learning outcomes).

Department Chairperson

  1. Designation
  1. The Department Chairperson shall be elected to serve an initial five-year term. University and College procedures will be followed when selecting a chairperson. http://policy.ku.edu/CLAS/procedures-for-selection-of-chairs; http://policy.ku.edu/governance/FSRR#art10sect1.
  2. When the position of the Department Chairperson is vacant, the dean is invited to the unit to initiate the search. A search committee consisting of Department faculty and student representative(s) will be formed.  The search committee will serve as a screening committee and will make recommendations to the faculty as a whole.  The search committee will be selected by the faculty acting as the whole. The search committee will designate a committee chairperson to coordinate committee efforts and report committee conclusions to the dean.
  3. To be designated Department Chairperson a candidate must be approved by a majority vote of the Department faculty.

B.  Duties: Duties of the chair include the following:

  1. Provides oversight and leadership for all unit activities. 
  2. Administers the undergraduate and graduate academic programs of the unit.
  3. Reviews and modifies the long-range planning for the unit. 
  4. Oversees all internal budgetary, administrative, and personnel matters. 
  5. Supervises and reviews the unit’s faculty and professional, academic, and University support staff.
  6. Seeks enhancement of all unit resources by actively seeking external funding.
  7. Develops and enhances research and educational relationships between the unit and other units across the College and University, as well as with agencies outside the University, governmental, public, or private.
  8. Develops long-term planning for future leadership by cultivating/mentoring future faculty members.   
  9. Executes College and University policy in the unit effectively.
  10. Represents the unit and reports to CLAS, and represents the unit to other University entities.
  11. Requests letters from external referees for promotion and tenure.
  12. Responsible for assigning faculty and staff to office space.
  13. Presides over the meetings of the Department faculty, determines the agenda for those meetings, sets the time and place of meetings, and delegates business to individual faculty members and to committees of faculty members.
  14. Serves as the principal representative of the Department to the Chairperson of the Department of Hearing and Speech located at the Kansas University Medical Center.
  15. Serves as co-director of the Intercampus Program in Communicative Disorders.
  1. Reappointment

After completing the initial appointment, and in accordance with University policy, an incumbent chair will undergo formal review by the College Committee on Evaluation of Chairs and Directors (CECD). This formal review utilizes University procedures for chairperson review includes an assessment utilizing feedback from faculty, staff, students, and other University personnel. CECD provides a summary and recommendation to the dean in the reappointment of the chairperson. It is ultimately the dean’s decision, in consultation with the chair.  A Chairperson’s second term may be 3- to 5-years in length. Typically a Chairperson should serve no more than two consecutive terms. However, the faculty may recommend to the Dean that a Chairperson be allowed to serve additional consecutive terms if it is in the best interest of the department. Additional details are available at http://policy.ku.edu/CLAS/procedures-for-selection-of-chairs.

  1. Resignation

Resignation of the Department Chairperson from his/her duties shall be communicated to the Department faculty as soon as possible so that a new Chairperson can be selected in a timely manner.

  1. Recall
  1. The Department Chairperson appointment may be terminated by the dean due to failure to carry out administrative functions.
  2. The Department faculty has the right to recall the Department Chairperson by a two-thirds vote of the faculty.  The faculty shall make known to the Department Chairperson the reasons for recall.

Director of Schiefelbusch Speech-Language-Hearing Clinic

  1. Designation
  1. Clinic Director shall be elected to serve an initial five-year term.
  2. The Clinic Director shall be a faculty member (tenured/tenure-track or clinical faculty) of the Department.
  3. When the position of Clinic Director is vacant, the Chair initiates the search process by forming a search committee consisting of Department faculty and student representative(s). The search committee will serve as a screening committee and will make recommendations to the faculty as a whole. The Chair will designate a search committee chairperson to coordinate committee efforts and report committee efforts to the department as a whole.
  4. To be designated Clinic Director a candidate must be approved by a majority vote of the Department faculty. Once approved, the Clinic Director will be appointed by the Chair.
  1. Duties
  1. The principal duty of the Director is to monitor and guide the general development and direction of the clinical services, clinical training, and research mission of the Speech-Language-Hearing Clinic.
  2. The following duties are included:
  1. Represent the Clinic within and outside the University a.  This includes maintaining a productive liaison with the Department Chairperson, Deans of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the School of Education, and appropriate Vice-Chancellors regarding all aspects of the Clinic.  Maintaining and expanding working relationships with other professionals in the community; maintaining and expanding avenues of public information about services available in the Clinic.
  2. Maintain a coordinated program among speech, language, and hearing services of the Clinic.
  3. Maintain a liaison with the Clinical Committee of the Intercampus Executive Committee.
  4. Aid in the preparation of applications for accreditation of clinical and training services and the annual reports associated with the accreditation.
  5. Oversee with the Department Chairperson Clinic functions (including budget, free structure, processing clients, special client needs, etc.) to insure maximum efficiency.
  6. Report annually to the Department Chairperson clinic achievements from the past year and goals for the coming year.
  1. Preside over meetings of the Clinic faculty, determine agenda, and delegate business to individual clinical faculty members of committees.  Collaborate with the faculty member designated by the Department Chairperson to teach SPLH 671.  Collaboration will include planning, organization of content, and related teaching and supervisory responsibilities.
  1. Reappointment

After completing the initial appointment, an incumbent Clinic Director will undergo formal review by the Department. This formal review will be conducted by a Department committee appointed by the Chair and include an assessment utilizing feedback from faculty and students. The committee provides a summary and recommendation to the department as a whole. Reappointment will be by majority vote. A Clinic Director’s second term may be 3- to 5-years in length. Typically a Clinic Director should serve no more than two consecutive terms. However, the faculty may recommend to the Chair that a Clinic Director be allowed to serve additional consecutive terms if it is in the best interest of the department and the clinic.

  1. Resignation

Resignation of the Clinic Director from his/her duties shall be communicated to the Department faculty as soon as possible so that a new Clinic Director can be selected in a timely manner.

  1. Recall
  1. The Clinic Director's appointment may be terminated by the Chair due to inability to carry out administrative functions.
  2. The Department faculty has the right to recall the Clinic Director by a two-thirds vote of the faculty.  The faculty shall make known to the Clinic Director the reason for recall.

Director of Graduate Studies

As previously noted, the department’s graduate programs are offered in conjunction with the Hearing and Speech Department at KUMC via the Intercampus Program in Communicative Disorders (IPCD). Thus, the committee structure to support collaborative administration of these programs is outlined in the bylaws of the IPCD (see http://policy.ku.edu/http%3A//policy.ku.edu/CLAS/bylaws-IPCD). However, three of the graduate programs (i.e., MA SLP, PhD SLP, PhD AUD) are administratively housed on the Lawrence campus, requiring that a Lawrence faculty member be designated as Director of Graduate Studies (DGS) to liaise with College and University offices and facilitate administrative function of those programs.

  1. Designation
  1. The Director of Graduate Studies (DGS) is appointed by the Chairperson, in consultation with IPCD co-Director from KUMC, and serves a term that corresponds in length to that of the Chairperson’s. An incoming or re-appointed chair, in consultation with the incumbent DGS, may choose to re-appoint the incumbent DGS for less than a full term to facilitate leadership transition. Alternatively, an incoming or re-appointed chair may re-appoint the incumbent DGS for a full term, if this is in the best interest of the department and agreeable to the DGS. He/she coordinates and supports faculty and staff involved in graduate advising.
  2. The DGS provides oversight of the graduate programs that are administratively housed on the Lawrence campus (i.e., MA SLP, PhD SLP, PhD AUD). This is in partnership with intercampus faculty and committees as described in the IPCD Bylaws.
  3. DGS duties can be split between the DGS and the Chairperson such that each person coordinates a specific graduate program (i.e., MA SLP Coordinator, PhD Coordinator).
  4. The DGS will be involved in the Curriculum Committee identified in the IPCD Bylaws by serving as the designated chair or coordinator of the relevant degree program(s) (i.e., MA SLP and/or PhD SLP/AUD). That role can be shared with a faculty member from KUMC as needed to facilitate intercampus collaboration.
  1. Duties
  1. The DGS is responsible for oversight of all matters related to the Department’s graduate programs administratively housed in Lawrence. He/she facilitates and monitors the day-to-day activities of his/her designated graduate program and acts as a liaison between the Department and the College Office of Graduate Affairs and the Office of Graduate Studies.
  1. The DGS is responsible for:
  1. coordinating curriculum committee actions as described in the IPCD Bylaws for the designated graduate program (MA SLP and/or PhD SLP/AUD);
  2. applying for College or University funding on behalf of the department;
  3. coordinating the evaluation and nomination of Department graduate student candidates for College or University or Lawrence Department honors or awards; and,
  4. attending meetings pertaining to graduate studies at KU.
  1. Reappointment

The DGS can be re-appointed by the Chairperson.

  1. Resignation:

The DGS can resign his/her position by communicating this intention to the Chairperson, preferably a semester or a year in advance.

Director of Undergraduate Studies

  1. Designation
    The Director of Undergraduate Studies (DUS) is appointed by the Chairperson and serves a term that corresponds in length to that of the Chairperson’s. An incoming or re-appointed chair, in consultation with the incumbent DUS, may choose to re-appoint the incumbent DUS for less than a full term to facilitate leadership transition. Alternatively, an incoming or re-appointed chair may re-appoint the incumbent DUS for a full term, if this is in the best interest of the department and agreeable to the DUS.
  1. Duties
  1. The DUS is responsible for oversight of all matters related to the Department’s undergraduate programs. He/she facilitates and monitors the day-to-day activities of the undergraduate programs and acts as a liaison between the Department and the Office of Student Academic Success and the Office of Undergraduate Studies. He/she coordinates and supports faculty and staff involved in undergraduate advising.
  2. The DUS is responsible for (in conjunction with appropriate committees and staff):
  1. coordinating recruitment and advising of undergraduate majors and minors;
  2. liaising with the Department’s College advising specialist to facilitate advising for majors and minors;
  3. coordinating the evaluation and nomination of Department undergraduate student candidates for College or University or Department honors or awards;
  4. overseeing the undergraduate curriculum, including updating of courses, approving new courses, and updating program handbooks, websites, and blackboard communities;
  5. implementing the Assessment Plan for the undergraduate degree programs;
  6. coordinating departmental participation in the broader mission of undergraduate studies (e.g., contributing courses to general education and CORE requirements, participating in multi-department certificate programs);
  7. facilitating co-curricular activities (e.g., service learning, research, global awareness, study abroad, internships) for undergraduate students by appointing (in consultation with the chairperson) and overseeing faculty undergraduate advisors to lead each of these programs; and,
  8. attending meetings pertaining to undergraduate studies at KU.
  1. Reappointment

The DUS can be re-appointed by the Chairperson.

  1. Resignation

The DUS can resign his/her position by communicating this intention to the chairperson, preferably a semester or a year in advance.

Associate Chair

  1. Designation
  1. The Associate Chair may be appointed and supervised by the Chairperson.
  2. The Associate Chair serves a term that corresponds in length to that of the Chairperson’s. An incoming or re-appointed chair, in consultation with the incumbent Associate Chair, may choose to re-appoint the incumbent Associate Chair for less than a full term to facilitate leadership transition. Alternatively, an incoming or re-appointed Chairperson may re-appoint the incumbent Associate Chair for a full term, if this is in the best interest of the department and agreeable to the Associate Chair.
  3. The Associate Chair shall be a faculty member (tenured/tenure-track or clinical faculty) of the Department.
  4. The Associate Chair role may be fulfilled by a faculty member also serving as Director of Schiefelbusch Speech-Language-Hearing Clinic, Director of Graduate Studies, or Director of Undergraduate Studies.
  1. Duties
  1. Serving as the principal deputy of the Chairperson.
  2. Assisting the Chairperson in the effective leadership and management of the department.
  3. Taking the place of the Chairperson when the Chairperson is unavailable or otherwise unable to perform the duties of the Chairperson, both for internal matters and when representing the department to outside units
  4. Other responsibilities as the directed by the Chairperson.
  1. Reappointment
  1. The Associate Chair can be re-appointed by the Chairperson.
  1. Resignation
  1. Resignation of the Associate Chair shall be communicated to the Department faculty as soon as possible so that a new Associate chair can be selected in a timely manner.
  1. Recall
  1. The Associate Chair's appointment may be terminated by the Chairperson due to inability to carry out administrative functions.
  2. The Department faculty has the right to recall the Associate Chair by a two-thirds vote of the faculty. The faculty shall make known to the Associate Chair the reason for recall.

Grievance Procedures

The Department articulates its grievance procedures in the unit’s Grievance Policy formally located in the Policy Library at:  https://policy.ku.edu/CLAS/grievance-procedure-speech-language-hearing

Rules of Procedure

  1. The Department normally acts as a committee of the whole in its meetings. A quorum, defined as two-thirds of the Department's regular faculty, is required for purposes of taking binding actions.
  2. Each full-time and part-time faculty member in the Department has voting privileges. Student representatives have voting privileges as described in the section "Student Representation.”
  3. Amendments to these bylaws may be presented at any Department meeting. After a 30-day period, a vote of eligible members will be taken.  A two-thirds majority vote, based on paragraph one above, is required for passage of amendments.
Contact: 

Speech-Language-Hearing Department
University of Kansas
3001 Dole Center
1000 Sunnyside Avenue
Lawrence, KS 66045-7555

Department Chairperson:
785-864-0630

Approved by: 
SPLH Faculty
Approved on: 
Wednesday, January 21, 2015
Effective on: 
Wednesday, January 21, 2015
Review Cycle: 
Annual (As Needed)
Definitions: 

Tenure-system professors: This term refers to all assistant/associate/full/distinguished tenure-track and tenured professors.

Non-tenure-system professors: This term refers to all assistant/associate/full clinical and teaching professors.

Multi-term lecturers: This term refers to all lecturers who work full-time and hold an appointment for more than one year.  

Non-tenure-system faculty: This term refers to non-tenure-system professors, and multi-term lecturers.

Resident faculty: This term refers to tenure-system, non-tenure-system professors, and multi-term lecturers.

Lecturer: This term refers to persons employed for no more than a year, either full or part-time.  

All faculty: This term refers to resident faculty and lecturers.

Keywords: 
Bylaws, By-Laws, Standing Committees, SPLH, Program Review
Change History: 

06/01/2023: Updated policy and added definitions. Formatting.
12/02/2022: Amended; Added Associate Chair section to policy.
06/02/2017: Fixed broken link.
01/25/2015: Amended.
01/22/2009: Amended.
12/12/2008: Amended.
10/18/2006: Amended.
02/03/2000: Amended.
10/02/1985: Amended.
12/03/1980: Amended.
10/1979: Amended.
05/03/1978: Adopted.


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