Appendix 1: Suggestions for Faculty CVs for Promotion and/or Appointment to Long-Term Contract
General Suggestions
- Dated entries should be in reverse chronological order in each section.
- Non-dated entries should generally be in alphabetical or alpha-numeric order.
- Short narrative passages are acceptable (and even encouraged) to contextualize contributions in a particular area.
- Your area of excellence should be the first section after Section 3 below.
Format
- Include page numbers!
- Use 1-inch margins on all four sides.
- Use the same 12-point font throughout the document. (The only exception may be some larger headings.)
- Headings should be bolded.
- Use the tab bar to create indented content (rather than individual spaces or tables).
- Single-space each section but leave enough white space so text can be read easily.
- Use of a pre-formatted CV template is not recommended.
Order
1. Personal information
- name in larger font, bolded
- school address, phone, e-mail
- home address, phone, if desired
2. Education
- Degrees, diplomas (name of degree/diploma)
- Major (minors if desired)
- School, date
- Dissertation title/research advisor or major teachers
- Other certificates/kinds of study
3. Academic and other employment
- Indiana University positions (titles, dates)
- Other university positions
- (tenure CVs could include graduate school teaching and adjunct positions, if desired)
- Other kinds of teaching
- Summer camps/festivals/music programs
- Invited short-term teaching at other schools/musical organizations
- Summer camps/festivals/music programs
- Other kinds of educational employment
For sections 4, 5, and 6:
Include all activities prior to date of hire, including work at other schools or musical organizations.
4. Teaching
- List of courses taught Sample format: MUS T151, Music Theory and Literature I (3 cr.)
- Curriculum development (courses you have developed or significantly revised and/or development or revision of degrees, minors, certificates, etc.)
- Pedagogical publications, compositions, and arrangements, including instructional materials of any sort
- Guest master classes/clinics/lectures (if long-term or recurring, could go under Teaching Experience). Format should be consistent within each category.
- Doctoral advisory/research committees
- Names of students and their degrees; position on the committee (chair, research director, minor field representative, etc.)
- If relevant, include titles of dissertations/documents
- Teaching awards/grants
- Student awards and accomplishments
- Independent studies
5. Research/Creative activity in Support of Teaching
- Publications (books, book chapters, articles, compositions, etc.)
- Performances (including performances of compositions, choreography, conducting, etc.)
- Work in progress/under editorial review
- Invited papers/presentations
- Discography: CDs/video or other media
- Research grants/awards
- Reviews/citations of research/creative activity
Entries should be consistent within each category. For example for a performance:
Title of Work, Composer
Role
Venue
City, State
6. Service in Support of Teaching
- Service to the Profession
- Service to the University/Campus
- Service to the School
- Service to the Department
- Service to the Community
Entries within each of the above categories may include:
- Adjudication
- Panels/conferences organized and coordinated
- Editorial work, including reviewing
- Service publications/performances
In each listing, include role, especially if chair of committee, chair of a department, officer in an organization, etc.
7. Additional categories, if desired: memberships in professional organizations, special awards/honors, etc.
Further Suggestions:
For Research and Creative Activity listings, masterclasses/clinics, and pedagogical publications:
- Make sure citation is complete (article name, journal title, date, page numbers, etc. or book title, publisher, date or CD/video citation, etc.).
- Indicate importance of activity: refereed/invited articles, conference presentations, etc. should be starred or listed separately.
- Avoid repetition (listing several times separately the same paper presentation, performance, master class at the same place) by grouping together all instances of the same/similar activity and indicating a series of dates.
- Do not list chronologically by year a series of ungrouped activities; group research/performances/compositions/masterclasses/pedagogical publications in some logical way:
- Work in progress, published books/compositions, published articles….
- Invited papers, refereed papers, etc.
- Performances/masterclasses internationally, nationally, regional/state, local (all IU activities grouped together)
- Performances could also be grouped by type of ensemble (e.g. solo, chamber, orchestral) or by repertoire (listed by composer)
- Consider moving a lengthy list of performances to a separate appendix.
- Look at all of your listings to see if the most important items are immediately apparent to a new reader.
- Include citations and reviews of your work, if relevant, either with specific citations or electronic links. If there are extensive reviews, consider moving to a separate appendix.