- We welcomed someย new board membersย who officially start July 1 but are attending as guests to learn the ropes. We also noted two committee appointments:ย Ranjiniย Jha has agreed to continue her role on theย Pension & Benefits Committeeย for another term, and Dorothy Hadfield is interim chair of theย Lecturers Committee.ย
- Reports from theย Complementary Teaching Assessmentย Project Team andย Course Evaluationย Project Team are going to Senate on May 19. You canย read them in the Senate agendaย as soon as theyโre posted (they should be up any minute now)..ย The first part of the Senate meeting is open to the public, butย since guests canโt speak during the meeting,ย we encourage you to make sure ourย faculty senatorsย know how you feel about the recommendations in these reports.ย
- We got a preview of some of the options forย health benefits plan changesย that are being considered by the Holistic Benefits Working Group. The proposed options will eventually be public in aย Pension & Benefits Committeeย agenda, at which point members can read and send feedback to FAUW and/or the faculty representatives on the Pension & Benefits Committee.ย
- We are finishing assembling ourย negotiating team. We will be pollingย allย our members about negotiation priorities over the next term, so start thinking about what you’d like to see. Section 10 of the Memorandum of Agreement has all the details about negotiations.
- We heard that administrators are starting to reach out to members regardingย reduced workload to retirement, early retirement, and unpaid leaves of absence. If you are considering any of these options, we strongly encourage you toย talk to our AF&T teamย first so they can help you identify the most appropriate solution for your situation (which could be an alternate to those being offered). This way, you can be as informed as possible when you speak to your Chair/Dean.ย
8 myths about UW lecturers
A post from the FAUW Lecturers Committee.
FAUW first started holding events specifically for Waterloo lecturers in 2014, but there have been lecturers on campus since at least the early โ90s. With a distinct uptick in lecturer hiring over the last decade or two, there are now lecturers in every one of the University’s six faculties and they make up 18% of the FAUW membership. For many chairs, directors, deansโor just faculty colleaguesโwho are new to dealing with lecturer-rank faculty, there may be some uncertainty about who these people are and how they fit into their departments and schools. To help explain what lecturer faculty areโand aren’tโhere are (in no particular order) eight myths about lecturers at Waterloo.

Myth #1: A lecturer is a lecturer is a lecturer
Fact: The term “lecturer” is often indiscriminately applied to everyone from sessional instructors hired by the course or term to permanent teaching faculty. At Waterloo, “lecturer” is one of the four faculty hiring ranks (the others are assistant professor, associate professor, and professor; see Policy 76 โ Faculty Appointments). While sessional instructors are also hired at the rank of lecturer, theyโre more correctly called adjunct or special lecturers and are administratively very different from the lecturer-rank regular faculty members (just โlecturersโ from here on) that weโre talking about in this post.
Lecturers can have “definite term” or “continuing” appointments. Most lecturer-rank faculty are initially hired on definite-term contracts, which can be repeatedly renewed when they expire, although there is never any guarantee of renewal (see myth #7). Continuing lecturers have permanent, ongoing appointments that donโt have expiry dates. FAUW represents both definite-term and continuing lecturers (but not sessional instructors). About 40% of UWโs lecturers have continuing appointments.
Getting the terminology straight is just half the battle. The specifics of lecturer positionsโhow teaching loads are defined, what kinds of service and administrative tasks they doโcan vary widely between faculties, and even between departments in the same faculty. According to our 2015 lecturers survey, about half of UWโs lecturers have an 80/20 teaching/service ratio; the other half reported a broad variety of teaching/research/service weightings.
Continue reading “8 myths about UW lecturers”Notes from our April 23 Board meeting + takeaways from CAUT COVID-19 town halls
Here are the highlights from last week’s FAUW Board meeting. Feel free to reach out to a Board member or comment below if you have questions! This post also includes some takeaways from the two CAUT town hall meetings on COVID-19 and the Academic Job that have happened so far.
Non-COVID-19 related items
- The Federal Court of Appeal releasedย theirย decision on the York Access Copyright case. Overturning the decision of the previous court, the decision protects universitiesโ ability to opt out of the Access Copyright licence; however, it also suggests that our current interpretation of โfair dealingโ may be too liberal.ย
- We filed an association grievance last week about access to post-retirement benefits, mostly affecting lecturers.ย Ifย this grievance canโt be resolved internally,ย the next stage in the process is to go to an external Arbitrator.ย
- We reviewed anย update to the Universityโs employee accommodation guidelines.ย We have some concerns about both theย processย leading to this updateย andย theย contentย we sawย and willย discuss this atย the nextย Faculty Relations Committeeย meeting.ย
- Something we missed inย ourย last update:ย We passed a rather normal-looking FAUW budget at the general meeting on April 7. The budget accounts for both normal functioning come fallย and some work-from-home expenditures for staff and executive membersย so that weโve got our bases covered.ย
What UWaterloo instructors need to know about copyright
Usually when we talk about intellectual property at the University of Waterloo we are talking about Policy 73 (Intellectual Property Rights) which provides that inventors own much of the IP they create. Today, however, weโre talking specifically about your use of copyright-protected materials in class (or on LEARN) as an instructor and the risks of violating copyright.
First, a (very brief!) primer on copyright. A copyright is fundamentally the right to restrict distribution of a creative work. Letโs say I take some pictures of cats. I am the copyright holder of these pictures, and other people cannot legally make copies of, or distribute, these photos without my permission, unless under the so-called fair dealing provision. Fair dealing allows others to use portions of my work for educational purposes.
How do you know what you can use?
As an instructor, you will often be using othersโ copyrighted materials for legitimate reasons, and our copyright law permits you to do this without seeking permission from the copyright holder under certain circumstances:
Continue reading “What UWaterloo instructors need to know about copyright”Veronica Kitchen’s April 2020 Senate Report
Veronica Kitchen is an Associate Professor of Political Science and an elected Arts Senator who produces a great summary after each University Senate meeting and has agreed to share them here. Her reports understandably focus on items relevant to Arts faculty and are not intended to be a comprehensive summary of all the agenda items, nor should they be viewed as a substitute for the official minutes on the University Secretariat’s website.
University of Waterloo Senate Meeting, 20 April, 2020
This was our second pandemic Senate meeting. It proceeded with many technical difficulties that we are assured will be resolved by the May meeting; there was even some discussion of whether we ought to continue, or had the requisite quorum of people who werenโt having technical difficulties to continue. We motioned, verified quorum, voted, and continued.
First things first: the April meeting marks the end of the Senate year, and so it is time to thank the [Arts] Senators who are ending their terms:
Outgoing Arts Senators: Tara Collington (French) & Maya Venters (student representative)
Outgoing Senators at large who come from Arts: Shannon Dea (Philosophy) (who is also to be congratulated on her appointment as Dean of Arts at the University of Regina; they are lucky to be getting her and we are sad to be losing her!)
Items of interest on the regular agenda
- We approved language for the course calendar on procedures and guidelines for terminating relationships between a graduate student and their supervisor. [See page 79 of the agenda posted on the Secretariat’s website.]
- Report from the Appointments Review Committee; there were lots of technical difficulties during this presentation so I donโt have a lot to add to the slides that are in the agenda [page 82], but it sounded to me as if over 10 years Math and Engineering in particular are doing better at appointing women, which: Great If True.
Presidentโs report
I know that at the moment this is what most people want to hear about! Again, I captured what I could, but Iโd encourage you to refer to the minutes when they are published for the most correct and comprehensive updates.
Continue reading “Veronica Kitchen’s April 2020 Senate Report”An update about things that arenโt COVID-19
โBryan Tolson, FAUW president
Our regular updates about FAUW Board activities have been supplanted by our COVID-19 messages recently, but now that those have slowed, here’s an overdue update on some other things weโve been working on (and also more pandemic developments). I hope you can all find a few minutes to read this and get up to date on FAUW’s activities and efforts on your behalf.
Thank you to everyone who attended our Spring General Meeting on April 7 and to those who asked questions. I think it went well under the circumstances and attendance was great, with over 100 people tuning in. Much of the content of this post is from my president’s report at that meeting, but there are a few new points as well.
New FAUW Board members
We welcomed some new Board members this term. Jordan Hale replaced Sarah Brown as our liaison from the Librarians and Archivists Association, and we have two short-term replacements for members on leave: Brian Kendall (taking Vivian Choh’s Science seat) and Alfred Yu (replacing Pat Lam as a director-at-large).
Congratulations to our newly elected Board members starting their term on July 1: Joel Dubin (AHS), Kate Lawson (Arts), Alfred Yu (Engineering), Peter Johnson (Environment), Nomair Naeem (Math), Heidi Engelhardt (Science), and Narveen Jandu (at-large). We were pleased to see high voter turnout this year: up to 65% of eligible members voted for these positions. Thanks again to everyone who ran in this election.
Policy drafting
Policy drafting committees have had no support from the Secretariat since March 12 (their office, like most, has had to triage). FAUWโs position is that if a drafting committee deems it appropriate to continue their work, then they should do so. Some committees have been working and it seems support from the Secretariat is now starting to come back.
Continue reading “An update about things that arenโt COVID-19”COVID Coping Strategies: Avoiding communications snafus in the era of COVID-19
As our members adjust to working remotely, we’ll be featuring strategies thatย departments and faculty members are using to manage the transition. If you have something to share or want to suggest a person or department to feature,ย send a brief pitch toย laura.mcdonald@uwaterloo.ca.
This is a guest post from Shannon Dea, FAUW vice president and professor in the Department of Philosophy. It was originally published in her regular University Affairs column.
โIs this thing muted? Can you hear me? Sorry, I forgot to unmute.โ
As thousands of academics worldwide shift to virtual meetings and technology-mediated learning, these phrases have become ubiquitous. While many of us need to do a better job of remembering to unmute before we speak in our new Zoom and Teams reality, we also need to learn when to mute โ or at least modulate โ some of our communications.
Marshall McLuhan famously declared that the medium is the message. It is a good lesson to remember in the era of COVID-19. Whether we are teaching, participating in a meeting, or just grousing about stuff with our friends and colleagues, online modes of communication affect who we are communicating with, how they understand what weโre saying, and the downstream consequences of what we say. Combine this with some colleaguesโ unfamiliarity with how online platforms work and you have a perfect storm.
Consider the good-hearted U.S. prof who last week tweeted out a compassionate thread detailing the hardships her students were experiencing because of COVID-19 and pleading for colleagues to be compassionate with their students. The overall message was a good one, but Twitter was the wrong place for the private details about studentsโ poverty, mental health and family deaths that she included in the thread. When the thread went viral, she realized her mistake and deleted the thread, but not before several people had screen-capped it. Now, that version is all over the internet, despite the original posterโs efforts to pull the thread.
While physical distancing might tempt us to talk on social media in the same way that we would at the water cooler, your social media remarks can attract a much larger and much different audience than you predict, and once your comments are public, there is no way to reel them back in.
Continue reading “COVID Coping Strategies: Avoiding communications snafus in the era of COVID-19”Veronica Kitchen’s March 2020 Senate Report
Veronica Kitchen is an Associate Professor of Political Science and an elected Arts Senator who produces a great summary after each University Senate meeting and has agreed to share them here. Her reports understandably focus on items relevant to Arts faculty and are not intended to be a comprehensive summary of all the agenda items, nor should they be viewed as a substitute for the official minutes on the University Secretariat’s website.
University of Waterloo Senate Meeting, 30 March 2020
Well, colleagues, this was different. The February Senate meeting was cancelled (not enough material). We had an extra-ordinary (but in hindsight rather ordinary) confidential Senate meeting on March 9, and thenโwell. You know.
Kudos to Karen Jack, Emily Schroeder, the President & VP Academic, the IT folks in the background and everyone else who managed to pull off a 90-ish person Senate meeting on Microsoft Teams having never done it before. Now that was extra-ordinary.ย
Items of interest (to Arts) on the consent agenda
Much of the Senateโs business was moved to the consent agenda in order to make it easier to vote on everything at once. There was an opportunity for Senators to ask to move any individual item onto the regular agenda, but this was not necessary.
- The Clinical Research Ethics and Human Research Ethics Committees have been renamed Boards, in alignment with common practice at other universities.
- The MASc in Applied Psychology is to be renamed the MASc in Industrial and Organizational Psychology.
- Final Assessments for English Language and Literature and Italian Studies were approved.
- For reference, the consent agenda includes the two motions passed earlier this month: to change the academic year dates for the Spring 2020 term, and to allow students to convert a received numerical mark for the Winter 2020 term to CR/NCR easily.
- A call for nominations for honorary degrees.
- An interesting report from Johanna Wandel re: the December meeting of the Council of Ontario Universitiesโ Academic Colleagues meetings.
As always, you can find all of these in further description in the minutes.
Presidentโs Report
As you can imagine, the Presidentโs report was about the universityโs response to COVID-19. I captured as much as I could of the discussion and here are (some of) the important bits. There is fuller information on most of this on the University website:
The President and senior response team are in 2x a day phone meetings. Key strategic issues are:
- ย Continuity for Canadian students (ie incoming first year class, graduates)
- Loss of international students and recruitment
- Impacts on research
- Securing research from cyber threats (phishing)
COVID Coping Strategies: Triaging Spring Term
As our members adjust to working remotely, we’ll be featuring strategies thatย departments and faculty members are using to manage the transition. If you have something to share or want to suggest a person or department to feature,ย send a brief pitch toย laura.mcdonald@uwaterloo.ca.
This is a guest post from Johanna Wandel, FAUW Board member and Associate Professor in Geography and Environmental Management.
The past couple of weeks have challenged us in ways most of us never anticipated. Weโre dealing with moving teaching online, fielding questions from students when we donโt have the answers yet, or bothโon top of the other stressors and disruptions brought about by the pandemic. Academic units are making tough decisions on very short timelines, with limited information. Iโm an associate chair (undergraduate) in a medium-sized unit, and want to share how weโre making some of our decisions.
Course scheduling as of two weeks ago
Undergraduate course offerings are firmed up almost six months before the start of a given term. Once students pre-enroll, the registrarโs office projects demand for courses based on previous yearsโ data and units decide if they need to add or remove lab sections, increase or decrease course caps, and so on. Once scheduling runs (around the middle of the previous term) rooms and times are added, at which point it becomes much more difficult to change class sizes or eliminate/add a lab section. So thatโs where we all were for Spring 2020 as of early March.
Enter COVID-19
In a very short time, weโve all been asked not only for a plan for finishing our current courses remotely, but to move the entire Spring term online. This week, all the admin teams are asked to indicate, for every course on the Spring schedule: Will it go ahead? If yes, synchronously or asynchronously? Is there a change to the cap? It was clear to my unit that weโd have to triage: Which courses can effectively meet their learning outcomes in an alternate delivery format, and which canโt? The decisions we all have to make must balance the need for a meaningful learning experience for our students with what we can realistically do. Those of us in admin roles also need to consider students who need specific courses to graduate, prerequisite sequencing, and course capsโsome courses can handle larger class sizes if we go online, but others cannot.
Continue reading “COVID Coping Strategies: Triaging Spring Term”February at FAUW
Maybe it was the Valentine’s Day candy, or maybe it was the coming long weekend, but we got through the February 13 Board meeting in good time. Here are some of the highlights:
- We debriefed the recent Council of Representatives meeting. One topic at that meeting was the importance of Faculty Performance Evaluation Guidelines and departmental addenda. These documents are the place to look for information about what’s a “normal” workload in your department, how service is evaluated, or what counts as teaching. Right now is a good time to start working on updating those documents if they need it (new versions must be approved by October 15). Talk to your Council member for more information. Here are some suggestions for things to include:
- An explicitly defined normal teaching load
- The expected/normal supervision load
- A statement acknowledging different types of teaching and teaching responsibilities
- The ability to submit peer reviews of teaching and solicited comments or letters
- That participation in CTE and other workshops counts toward teaching
- The ability to use evidence not just from the classroom and qualitative evidence
- Direction that student surveys should be considered with caution
- We noted some confusion among members about how benefits plan decisions are made. The Pension & Benefits Committee decides what’s covered in our health and dental plans, and that committee is made up of members from all the represented employee groups (FAUW, the Staff Association, and CUPE) and the Retirees Association, plus representatives from the University administration and Board of Governors. FAUW has three out of 13 votes on the committee.
- We heard updates from our rep on the Copyright Advisory Committee. If you have questions about copyright in your classes or your own work, read this interview with Lauren Byl, Copyright and Licensing Librarian, to find out how to get answers!
- We cleared up an issue about travel to Cuba. University Finance sent a memo last July stating that “international financial sanctions prevent the University from making or receiving payment for products or services related, either directly or indirectly” to certain countries including Cuba and Iran. We had serious concerns about how this might limit opportunities for research collaboration and questions about why the University was implementing American sanctions (Canada doesn’t have sanctions against Cuba).ย
We now have confirmation that the Universityย canย “reimburse an employee for travel expenses related to countries subject to sanctions, provided that the employee’s travel reimbursement is to a Canadian bank account and assuming that the travel to that particular country has not otherwise been prohibited under University of Waterloo Policy.” If you encounter any difficulties with claims for travel to countries subject to sanctions, let a FAUW Board or staffย member so that we can follow up.” - After hearing that definite term lecturers did not receive an email about nominations for University Senate, we reaffirmed, again, that, lecturers are regular faculty (and eligible to sit on Senate). “Regular faculty” almost exactly overlaps with “faculty represented by FAUW.” Here’s the short version: Regular faculty = lecturers and professors hired for at least one year, except research profs and adjuncts.
- The slightly more complicated version, as defined in Policy 76 (Faculty Appointments) is that regular faculty means all lecturer and professorial rank faculty with appointments one year or longer, including clinical faculty (e.g. a clinical lecturer or clinical associate professor), but not including any faculty who have some other qualifier in their title to designate a non-regular appointment, such as “research,” “adjunct,” “visiting,” or “special.” (Sessional instructors are not regular faculty; they aren’t defined anywhere, but they all have special or adjunct appointments and are hired on contracts shorter than one year.) We’ll have more on this in a blog post from the Lecturers Committee soon.
- As we reported in the fall, the Media Resources office and preview room closed when the person staffing the office retired. The resources are now available through the IST Service Desk located in theย Davis Centre Library. We brought concerns about this to the University, and have now heard that things are staying essentially the same. There is a new viewing room available at the DC library. To request new materials, email media.loans@uwaterloo.ca. The Associate Vice President, Academic has promised to keep an eye on this, and we will too. Let us know if the office closure creates problems for you.

