Yale Launches $50 million Faculty Diversity Initiative

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Dear Colleagues,

Yale’s education and research missions are propelled forward by a faculty that stands at the forefront of scholarship, research, practice, mentoring, and teaching. An excellent faculty in all of these dimensions is a diverse faculty, and that diversity must reach across the whole of Yale—to every school and to every department.

This commitment has been and continues to be one of the university’s most important. Over the past three decades several Yale initiatives helped to foster a more diverse and more inclusive faculty, and all of our schools have worked diligently in recent years to contribute toward this goal. We are grateful for this collective effort, and for the resources that have already been invested. But we can and should do more.

Today, we are launching a new five-year initiative and committing more than $50 million in resources to build on the excellence and diversity of our faculty university-wide. Principal elements of the plan are as follows.

Recruiting exceptional faculty to Yale

As the cornerstone of this initiative, the Provost’s Faculty Development Fund will provide $25 million in central resources over a five-year period for faculty recruitment, faculty appointments, and pipeline development. It will provide matching funds (a supplement of up to half the salary for three years) to support the appointment of faculty targets of opportunity who would enrich diversity or contribute on another dimension of strategic importance to the university. The fund will also provide support (up to half the salary) for as many as ten visiting professors each year. Deans may apply for funding by nominating distinguished scholars who would enhance the excellence, inclusivity, and/or diversity of the faculty and the curriculum. When matched by resources of the appointing school, the available funding will be $50 million.

Improved faculty development offerings

The provost’s office will develop enhanced programs to support best practices in faculty searches and tenure and promotion processes, and cultivate faculty leadership. We have already begun offering an expanded program of training on implicit bias in faculty and leadership searches as well as the tenure and promotion process. At the same time, we are augmenting existing faculty development programs. We will offer a university-wide teaching academy, with special attention to challenges and strategies for women in STEM fields as well as international and underrepresented faculty. And in partnership with the School of Management, we are piloting a program to empower mid-career faculty with the skills they will need as future leaders in higher education.

Enhancing the pipeline

We must also expand and develop the pool of young scholars who will contribute to the excellence and diversity of future generations of faculty. Yale sponsors a number of “pipeline programs” that help our students and alumni transition into graduate programs and into the academy, including the Edward A. Bouchet Fellowship, the Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship Program, and the James and Mary Pinchot Fellowship at the School of Forestry & Environmental Studies. The provost’s office has recently increased support for and coordination with the Office for Graduate Student Development and Diversity, which provides programming and support to help graduate students pursue their intellectual and professional goals.

University-wide participation

Diversity and inclusion are shared responsibilities, and the initiative we announce today builds on many effective programs already under way in schools and departments across the university. The provost’s office will develop a dedicated website on this topic with connections to analogous sites at each school. The provost will meet with each dean to review and discuss efforts at each school on an annual basis. To support this collaborative, university-wide approach, the provost’s office will continue to collect data on the demographics of our faculty and will work with schools and departments to compare their demographic profiles with those of relevant peers.


Richard Bribiescas, deputy provost for faculty development and diversity, is charged with overseeing these programs; he will be writing to provide additional details, including information about how deans may apply for funding from the initiative, later this semester.

We are committed to investing the significant funding and human capital that will be necessary to make this initiative a success. But increasing the excellence and diversity of our faculty will take more than resources; it will require the dedication and efforts of colleagues from across the university. You, the faculty of today, are our crucial partners in shaping the faculty of tomorrow. We look forward to working with you toward this important goal.

Sincerely,

Peter Salovey
President and Chris Argyris Professor of Psychology

Ben Polak
Provost and William C. Brainard Professor of Economics