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Faculty Planned Effort

Effectively estimating and planning Faculty effort is a critical component of the sustainability and efficiency of the Eshelman School of Pharmacy. Carefully tracking and analyzing planned effort data at the School, Division and individual Faculty member level provides a deeper understanding of planned effort and helps to ensure the School is staffed appropriately to achieve its core mission.

as of Mar. 13, 2023

Each year as part of the Faculty Annual Review (FAR) process, Faculty and their Division Chairs agree on a planned level of effort across 5 mutually exclusive categories for each Faculty member. The planning process is intended to align planned faculty effort with the divisions strategic plan, the individual Faculty members professional development goals and the overall needs of the Eshelman School of Pharmacy. Through analysis of these data, the School can assess and monitor planned effort to ensure that that the level of effort across each category is optimized to deliver on its intended outcomes.

Calendar YearResearch / Scholarship % (1)Teaching % (2)Service % (3)Patient Care % (4)Administration % (5)
202248.220.313.12.116.3
202156.716.910.42.213.8
202055.416.610.02.515.4
201954.816.810.42.515.4
201855.617.210.52.214.5

Note: Planned effort is for employees classified as EHRA Faculty with any employment status so that leadership can assess year over year trends in planned focus.

(1) Research / Scholarship – inclusive of internal and externally funded research, scholarship and translation / commercialization efforts.

(2) Teaching – inclusive of effort spent in the delivery and improvement of our degree bearing programs.

(3) Service – inclusive of service to the School, University, State, Nation and Globe in advancing the excellence and interests of Pharmacy.

(4) Patient Care – inclusive of effort in the direct service of patients and aligned to the advancement of excellence in Pharmacy.

(5) Administration – inclusive of effort as outlined in a formal additional HR appointment.

Authoritative Data SourceReport Catalog


Research (Externally Funded)

Externally funded research is core to the mission of the University of North Carolina and the Eshelman School of Pharmacy. The following measures are analyzed and trended in terms of externally funded research proposals, awards and award dollars.

as of Mar. 13, 2023

The data below includes all accepted external research proposals where an Eshelman School of Pharmacy Faculty member is the PI or where the proposal is being administered by our School’s research administration team. All accepted external research proposals are provided a unique ID / accepted date and are classified into one of the unique type categories listed below in RAMSeS. Through analysis of these data, the School can assess and monitor the flow of opportunities to ensure that support is optimized to deliver on the goals of the research enterprise and align to the priorities of the School’s strategic plan.

Calendar YearNewNon-Competing ContinuationResubmission or AmendmentOther (1)Total Proposals
2022181442617268
2021227353313308
2020250365014350
2019220363310299
2018215292113278
2017227261720290
2016165291517226

(1) Other includes Recurring Contract, Renewal (competitive), Revision (competitive) and Supplement.

(2) The total proposals represent the number of unique proposals based on the proposal approved date in RAMSeS.

Authoritative Data SourceReport Catalog

as of Mar. 13, 2023

The data below includes all accepted external research proposals where an Eshelman School of Pharmacy Faculty member is the PI or where the proposal is being administered by our School’s research administration team.  All accepted external research proposals are provided a unique ID / accepted date and are classified into one of the categories listed below in RAMSeS. Through analysis of these data, the School can assess and monitor the flow of opportunities to ensure that support is optimized to deliver on the goals of the research enterprise and align to the priorities of the School’s strategic plan.

Calendar YearFederalBusiness and IndustryEducation and Research InstitutionsOther (1)Total Proposals (2)
2022111594850268
2021135596747308
2020162407771350
2019145416350299
2018128396447278
2017105735656290
201698354746226

(1) Other includes sponsor type of Association, Federal non-US, Foundation, Local Government, Nonprofit Organization, State Government (NC) and Not Identified.

(2) The total proposals represent the number of unique proposals of any type based on the proposal approved date in RAMSeS.

Authoritative Data SourceReport Catalog

as of Mar. 13, 2023

The data below includes all external research awards where an Eshelman School of Pharmacy Faculty member is the PI or where the award is being administered by our School’s research administration team. Through analysis of these data, the School can assess and monitor the flow of awards by sponsor type to ensure that support is optimized to deliver on the goals of the research enterprise.

Calendar YearFederalBusiness and IndustryEducation and Research InstitutionsOther (1)Total Awards (2)
202279603734210
202173363434177
202061304028159
201957283523143
201858312819136
201748352725135
201643253018116

(1) Other includes sponsor type of Association, Federal non-US, Foundation, Local Government, Nonprofit Organization, State Government (NC) and Not Identified.

(2) The total awards represent the number of unique awards based on the Official Award Date in RAMSeS.

Authoritative Data SourceReport Catalog

as of Mar. 13, 2023

The data below includes all external research awards dollars where an Eshelman School of Pharmacy Faculty member is the PI or where the award is being administered by our School’s research administration team. Through analysis of these data, the School can assess and monitor the flow of award funding by sponsor type to ensure that support is optimized to deliver on the goals of the research enterprise.

Calendar YearFederalBusiness and IndustryEducation and Research InstitutionsOther*Total Awards Dollars
2022$29,843,783$5,346,513$9,640,801$5,777,199$50,608,296
2021$27,535,079$4,249,181$5,814,955$3,799,921$41,399,136
2020$23,929,101$4,881,058$7,234,022$3,190,695$39,234,876
2019$21,940,934$2,538,826$3,137,219$3,834,930$31,451,909
2018$21,809,064$1,996,421$3,512,255$1,570,774$28,888,514
2017$16,417,572$2,375,036$3,488,281$2,535,195$24,816,084
2016$16,040,552$2,583,843$4,841,450$3,357,302$26,823,147

(1) Other includes sponsor type of Association, Federal non-US, Foundation, Local Government, Nonprofit Organization, State Government (NC) and Not Identified.

Authoritative Data SourceReport Catalog

as of Mar. 13, 2023

The amount of Faculty Salary offset that is generated from external research funding is closely monitored to ensure that Faculty compensation is appropriately offset as a result of success in the research enterprise.  Through analysis of these data, the School can assess and monitor the flow of Faculty salary offset to ensure that support is optimized to deliver on the goals of the research enterprise, each Division and the School.

Calendar YearOverallCBMCDPETDPMPDPOPPACEEII
202233.7%59%29.8%46.9%30.8%11.8%3.3%
202131.6%52.2%30.1%51.2%25.9%8.8%2.5%
202029.4%48.6%25.7%52.7%26.7%6.6%0%
201928.7%40.8%29.6%55%31.4%4.6%0%
201829.1%37.8%33%51.2%42.5%5.2%N/A
201727.6%32.3%34.4%40.9%49%7.4%N/A

Authoritative Data SourceReport Catalog


Research (Internally Funded)

Internally funded research is core to the mission of the University of North Carolina, the Eshelman School of Pharmacy and the Eshelman Institute for Innovation (EII). Output is analyzed in terms of internally funded research awards, award dollars and cumulative awards since launch. Through analysis of these data, the School can assess and monitor award funding to ensure that support is optimized to deliver on the goals of the research enterprise.

as of Mar. 13, 2023

Calendar YearNew AwardsCumulative AwardsNew Dollars AwardedCumulative Awards
20226156$2,695,784$32,808,623
202113150$2,616,879$30,112,839
202011137$1,517,943$27,495,960
201926126$4,140,108$25,978,017
201833100$4,389,623$21,837,909
20172574$4,097,000$17,448,286
20162549$3,976,920$13,351,286
20152424$9,374,366$9,374,366

(1) 2022 data is current as of 9/30/2022

Authoritative Data Source – Eshelman Institute of Innovation

  • Internally (EII) Funded Awards Report – (Tableau Report in Development)


Research (Translation and Commercialization)

Research translation and commercialization is core to the mission of the University of North Carolina and the Eshelman School of Pharmacy.

as of Mar. 13, 2023

Translation and commercialization output is analyzed in terms of new invention disclosures (ROIs), new provisional patent applications, new U.S. patents issued and new IP-based startups that have been recorded by the UNC Office of Technology Commercialization (OTC). Through analysis of these data, the School can assess and monitor the flow of translation and commercialization activity occurring to ensure that support is optimized to deliver on the goals of the research enterprise.

Calendar YearInvention Disclosures (ROIs) (1)Licensed Inventions (2)Provisional Patent Applications (3)U.S. Patents Issued (4)Intellectual Property (IP) Based Start-Ups (5)
2022TBDTBDTBDTBDTBD
2021TBDTBDTBDTBDTBD
2020TBDTBDTBDTBDTBD
2019TBDTBDTBDTBDTBD
2018TBDTBDTBDTBDTBD
2017TBDTBDTBDTBDTBD
2016TBDTBDTBDTBDTBD
2015TBDTBDTBDTBDTBD

Note: All data represents new occurrences where at least one Eshelman School current or former employee is recorded within the UNC Office of Technology Commercialization (OTC) – https://otc.unc.edu/ and the Blue recording database.

(1) Invention Disclosures are based on unique ROIs and date of submission.

(2) Provisional patent applications are counted based on “date filed” and tie back to an ROI.

(3) U.S. Patent Awards are based on the date issued and tie back to an ROI.

(4) IP Based Start-Up Data ties back to an ROI is provided annually by the UNC Office of Technology Commercialization.

Authoritative Data Source – Report Catalog


Scholarship

Publishing peer reviewed scholarly works is core to the mission of the University of North Carolina and the Eshelman School of Pharmacy. The importance of that work can be evaluated by the citations this work garners. Careful analysis of both peer reviewed publications and citations helps the School better understand the impact of their work.

as of Mar. 13, 2023

New peer reviewed published works and citations for those works are reported in Scopus. Through analysis of these data, the School can assess and monitor these measures to ensure that scholarly work output is optimally supported and is growing based on strategic intent.

Calendar YearArticleBook ChapterConference PaperOther (1)Total Publications
20223342284422
20213159798429
20202872878375
201937814574471
20183449575433

Note – The scope of the data includes the employee type of EHRA Faculty in any employment status that have a home school of the Eshelman School of Pharmacy and a valid SCOPUS ID used for indexing.  This list of EHRA Faculty is refreshed and made current annually in mid-December.  Any publications before the UNC official hire data are not included in the counts.

(1) Other includes Data Paper, Editorial, Erratum, Letter, Note, Review, Short Survey and Not Applicable as categorized by SCOPUS. For a description of content type definitions please click here.

Authoritative Data SourceReport Catalog

as of Mar. 13, 2023

Citations occur when scholars cite published works that were authored when an employee was affiliated with UNC and at the Eshelman School of Pharmacy. The numbers included below continue to grow based on the relevance / importance of the material published.

Calendar YearArticleBook ChapterConference PaperOther (1)Total Publications
2022670107441,415
20212,9965293,2206,250
20209,0990351,89311,027
201914,04651181,93616,051
201813,46628383,23816,770

Note – The scope of the data includes the employee type of EHRA Faculty in any employment status that have a home school of the Eshelman School of Pharmacy and a valid SCOPUS ID used for indexing.  This list of EHRA Faculty is refreshed and made current annually in mid-December. Citations before the UNC official hire date are not included in the counts.

* Note: Other includes Data Paper, Editorial, Erratum, Letter, Note, Review, Short Survey and Not Applicable as categorized by SCOPUS. For a description of content type definitions please click here.

Authoritative Data SourceReport Catalog


Teaching

Instructional excellence is at that core of the mission of the Eshelman School of Pharmacy. The following section provides a longitudinal assessment of the instructional activity of our Faculty by degree bearing program.

as of Mar. 14, 2023

Immediately following the Spring and Fall academic terms, all educators involved in the instructional delivery of credit-bearing courses are asked to report their estimated instructional hours per course and activity performed. The resulting level of effort is aggregated and analyzed for trends to ensure strategic alignment, resource optimization and sustainability at the School and Program level.

Calendar YearNumber of Courses (1)Number of Enrollments (2)Number of Educators (3)*Student Credit Hours Produced (SCH) (4)Instructional Hours (5)*SCH delivered per Instructional Hour (6)
2022816,739211 (33%)19,61525,923 (71%)0.76
2021756,712197 (32%)20,01023,710 (65%)0.84

(1) Number of courses includes any course code available for student enrollment in the Spring, Summer I, Summer II or Fall term during the calendar year. The course count only includes courses where the course was selected at least once for instructional time entry.

(2) Number of enrollments includes the number of unique student IDs enrolled in the term as of the end of term (post-grades snapshot).

(3) Number of educators is inclusive of all educator types except external (non-employee) Preceptors. The educator type include: EHRA Faculty, EHRA Non-Faculty, SHRA, NPE, Former Employee, Adjunct/External Faculty (no-pay), and Teaching Assistant.

* Faculty saturation % indicates the percentage of educators that are employed by the School as EHRA Faculty.

(4) Student Credit Hours (SCH) is defined as the number of students enrolled in the course at the end of the term (post-grades snapshot) multiplied by the defined amount of credit hours earned for course completion as recorded in the registration system.

(5) Instructional hours is the sum of all self-reported instructional hours across all educator types.

* Faculty saturation % indicates the percentage of educator hours that are delivered by EHRA Faculty employed by the School.

(6) SCH delivered per Instructional Hour divides the time spent in instruction into the number of student credit hours produced. This is a normalized metric of relative course delivery efficiency.

Authoritative Data SourceReport Catalog

as of Mar. 14, 2023

Immediately following the Spring and Fall academic terms, all educators involved in the instructional delivery of credit-bearing courses are asked to report their estimated instructional hours per course and activity performed. The resulting level of effort is aggregated and analyzed for trends to ensure strategic alignment, resource optimization and sustainability at the School and Program level.

Calendar YearAdvising / Mentoring (1)Coordination (2)Course Prep (3)Facilitation (4)Grading (5)Lecture (6)Precepting (7)
20223,462 (13%)6,665 (26%)5,104 (20%)2,706 (10%)3,255 (13%)2,101 (8%)2,669 (10%)
20212,873 (12%)5,879 (25%)5,309 (22%)2,609 (11%)3,435 (15%)2,128 (9%)1,476 (6%)

(1) Advising / Mentoring – time spent advising, mentoring, coaching in courses such as RASP and in graduate courses such as dissertation oversight.  Typically, this is time set aside for meeting individually with students or time set aside in Office Hours.  Assigned Teaching Assistants (TAs) will record their time in this activity category.  Note: Advising and mentoring does NOT include serving as a student advisor or an advisor for a student organization.  This is ONLY for advising and mentoring that is linked to a credit-bearing course.

(2) Course Coordination / Directing – time spent performing course related administrative activities to support course delivery.  Assigned Course Directors will typically record most of their time in this category.

(3) Course Prep – time spent preparing for the instructional aspects of the course such as preparing to lecture, preparing exams and assignments, or creating / updating materials specifically for the course such as cases or slide materials.

(4) Lecture / Active Learning – time spent lecturing or engaging in active learning/teaching students enrolled in the course.

(5) Grading – time spent setting expectations, grading exams, assessments, assignments, and/or evaluating the work of graduate students including dissertation review, editing and instructions.

(6) Facilitation – time spent guiding students through assigned course or seminar activities such as group work, exercises, or labs.

(7) Precepting – time spent precepting students on experiential rotations by an Eshelman School of Pharmacy Faculty member.  Note: Residents and individuals not employed by the School have already been accounted for as it relates to the responsibility of precepting and therefore do not need to record hours in this category.

Authoritative Data SourceReport Catalog

 

as of Mar. 14, 2023

Immediately following the Spring and Fall academic terms, all educators involved in the instructional delivery of credit-bearing courses are asked to report their estimated instructional hours per course and activity performed. The resulting level of effort is aggregated and analyzed for trends to ensure strategic alignment, resource optimization and sustainability at the School and Program level.

Calendar YearNumber of Courses (1)Number of Enrollments (2)Number of Educators (3)*Student Credit Hours Produced (SCH) (4)Instructional Hours (5)SCH delivered per Instructional Hour (6)
2022920815 (47%)6381,627 (64%)0.39
2021817215 (47%)5411,441 (54%)0.38

(1) Number of courses includes any course code available for student enrollment in the Spring, Summer I, Summer II or Fall term during the calendar year.  The course count only includes courses where the course was selected at least once for instructional time entry.

(2) Number of enrollments includes the number of unique student IDs enrolled in the term as of the end

(3) Number of educators is inclusive of all educator types except external (non-employee) Preceptors.  The educator type include: EHRA Faculty, EHRA Non-Faculty, SHRA, NPE, Former Employee, Adjunct/External Faculty (no-pay), and Teaching Assistant.

* Faculty saturation % indicated the percentage of educators that are employed by the School as EHRA Faculty.

(4) Student Credit Hours (SCH) is defined as the number of students enrolled in the course at the end of the term (post-grades snapshot) multiplied by the defined amount of credit hours earned for course completion as recorded in the registration system.

(5) Instructional hours is the sum of all self-reported instructional hours across all educator types.

* Faculty saturation % indicates the percentage of educator hours that are delivered by EHRA Faculty employed by the School.

(6) SCH delivered per Instructional Hour divides the time spent in instruction into the number of student credit hours produced.  This is a normalized metric of relative course delivery efficiency.

Authoritative Data SourceReport Catalog

as of Mar. 14, 2023

Immediately following the Spring and Fall academic terms, all educators involved in the instructional delivery of credit-bearing courses are asked to report their estimated instructional hours per course and activity performed. The resulting level of effort is aggregated and analyzed for trends to ensure strategic alignment, resource optimization and sustainability at the School and Program level.

Calendar YearAdvising / Mentoring (1)Coordination (2)Course Prep (3)Facilitation (4)Grading (5)Lecture (6)Precepting (7)
2022118 (7%)461 (28%)201 (13%)239 (15%)347 (21%)261 (16%)0 (0%)
202161 (4%)376 (26%)392 (27%)148 (10%)238 (17%)226 (16%)0 (0%)

(1) Advising / Mentoring – time spent advising, mentoring, coaching in courses such as RASP and in graduate courses such as dissertation oversight.  Typically, this is time set aside for meeting individually with students or time set aside in Office Hours.  Assigned Teaching Assistants (TAs) will record their time in this activity category.  Note: Advising and mentoring does NOT include serving as a student advisor or an advisor for a student organization.  This is ONLY for advising and mentoring that is linked to a credit-bearing course.

(2) Course Coordination / Directing – time spent performing course related administrative activities to support course delivery.  Assigned Course Directors will typically record most of their time in this category.

(3) Course Prep – time spent preparing for the instructional aspects of the course such as preparing to lecture, preparing exams and assignments, or creating / updating materials specifically for the course such as cases or slide materials.

(4) Lecture / Active Learning – time spent lecturing or engaging in active learning/teaching students enrolled in the course.

(5) Grading – time spent setting expectations, grading exams, assessments, assignments, and/or evaluating the work of graduate students including dissertation review, editing and instructions.

(6) Facilitation – time spent guiding students through assigned course or seminar activities such as group work, exercises, or labs.

(7) Precepting – time spent precepting students on experiential rotations by an Eshelman School of Pharmacy Faculty member.  Note: Residents and individuals not employed by the School have already been accounted for as it relates to the responsibility of precepting and therefore do not need to record hours in this category.

Authoritative Data SourceReport Catalog

 

as of Mar. 14, 2023

Immediately following the Spring and Fall academic terms, all educators involved in the instructional delivery of credit-bearing courses are asked to report their estimated instructional hours per course and activity performed. The resulting level of effort is aggregated and analyzed for trends to ensure strategic alignment, resource optimization and sustainability at the School and Program level.

Calendar YearNumber of Courses (1)Number of Enrollments (2)Number of Educators (3)*Student Credit Hours Produced (SCH) (4)Instructional Hours (5)SCH delivered per Instructional Hour (6)
20222472576 (71%)1,45613,862 (93%)0.10
20212471371 (75%)1,4258,597 (78%)0.17

(1) Number of courses includes any course code available for student enrollment in the Spring, Summer I, Summer II or Fall term during the calendar year.  The course count only includes courses where the course was selected at least once for instructional time entry.

(2) Number of enrollments includes the number of unique student IDs enrolled in the term as of the end

(3) Number of educators is inclusive of all educator types except external (non-employee) Preceptors.  The educator type include: EHRA Faculty, EHRA Non-Faculty, SHRA, NPE, Former Employee, Adjunct/External Faculty (no-pay), and Teaching Assistant.

* Faculty saturation % indicated the percentage of educators that are employed by the School as EHRA Faculty.

(4) Student Credit Hours (SCH) is defined as the number of students enrolled in the course at the end of the term (post-grades snapshot) multiplied by the defined amount of credit hours earned for course completion as recorded in the registration system.

(5) Instructional hours is the sum of all self-reported instructional hours across all educator types.

* Faculty saturation % indicates the percentage of educator hours that are delivered by EHRA Faculty employed by the School.

(6) SCH delivered per Instructional Hour divides the time spent in instruction into the number of student credit hours produced.  This is a normalized metric of relative course delivery efficiency.

Authoritative Data SourceReport Catalog

as of Mar. 14, 2023

Immediately following the Spring and Fall academic terms, all educators involved in the instructional delivery of credit-bearing courses are asked to report their estimated instructional hours per course and activity performed. The resulting level of effort is aggregated and analyzed for trends to ensure strategic alignment, resource optimization and sustainability at the School and Program level.

Calendar YearAdvising / Mentoring (1)Coordination (2)Course Prep (3)Facilitation (4)Grading (5)Lecture (6)Precepting (7)
20223,462 (13%)6,665 (26%)5,104 (20%)2,706 (10%)3,255 (13%)2,101 (8%)2,669 (10%)
20212,873 (12%)5,879 (25%)5,309 (22%)2,609 (11%)3,435 (15%)2,128 (9%)1,476 (6%)

(1) Advising / Mentoring – time spent advising, mentoring, coaching in courses such as RASP and in graduate courses such as dissertation oversight.  Typically, this is time set aside for meeting individually with students or time set aside in Office Hours.  Assigned Teaching Assistants (TAs) will record their time in this activity category.  Note: Advising and mentoring does NOT include serving as a PharmD student advisor or an advisor for a student organization.  This is ONLY for advising and mentoring that is linked to a credit-bearing course.

(2) Course Coordination / Directing – time spent performing course related administrative activities to support course delivery.  Assigned Course Directors will typically record most of their time in this category.

(3) Course Prep – time spent preparing for the instructional aspects of the course such as preparing to lecture, preparing exams and assignments, or creating / updating materials specifically for the course such as cases or slide materials.

(4) Lecture / Active Learning – time spent lecturing or engaging in active learning/teaching students enrolled in the course.

(5) Grading – time spent setting expectations, grading exams, assessments, assignments, and/or evaluating the work of graduate students including dissertation review, editing and instructions.

(6) Facilitation – time spent guiding students through assigned course or seminar activities such as group work, exercises, or labs.

(7) Precepting – time spent precepting students on experiential rotations by an Eshelman School of Pharmacy Faculty member.  Note: Residents and individuals not employed by the School have already been accounted for as it relates to the responsibility of precepting and therefore do not need to record hours in this category.

Authoritative Data SourceReport Catalog

 

as of Mar. 14, 2023

Course and Instructor evaluations are coordinated by Course Directors at the completion of each academic term.  Instructor evaluations provide insight into our ability to serve the learning and professional needs of our students.  Tracking instructor evaluations over time is an important component to assess overall student well-being, alignment of our educators with student needs, compliance with university and accreditation compliance standards and overall adherence to our School values.

Calendar YearProfessional Program (PharmD) – Required CoursesProfessional Program (PharmD) – Elective CoursesMS ProgramPhD Program
20224.80 (7,326)4.90 (963)4.88 (223)4.63 (498)
20214.75 (9,625)4.91 (1,092)5.0 (171)4.81 (553)
20204.72 (11,447)4.87 (1,539)4.94 (83)4.67 (479)
20194.58 (12,780)4.76 (1,419)4.82 (136)4.48 (435)
20184.54 (6,298)4.75 (387)4.61 (93)4.80 (211)

Note: The number in ( ) after the score is the number of student responses.  The instructor evaluation scale is from 1 – 5 with 5 being the highest rating possible. The score reported is the average of the median overall student satisfaction score across all for-credit courses evaluated within the Explorance Blue evaluation system.  Course evaluations are administered at the end of each academic term or course block.

Authoritative Data SourceReport Catalog

as of Mar. 14, 2023

Course and Instructor evaluations are coordinated by Course Directors at the completion of each academic term.  Course evaluations provide insight into our ability to serve the learning and professional needs of our students.  Tracking course evaluations over time is an important component to assess overall student well-being, alignment of our educators with student needs, compliance with university and accreditation compliance standards and overall adherence to our School values.

Calendar YearProfessional Program (PharmD) – Required CoursesProfessional Program (PharmD) – Elective CoursesMS ProgramPhD Program
20223.85 (1,613)4.54 (345)4.50 (132)4.18 (203)
20213.88 (2,057)4.42 (396)4.60 (156)4.04 (221)
20203.87 (2,432)4.53 (450)4.59 (131)4.00 (256)
20193.81 (2,482)4.65 (466)3.94 (87)3.74 (216)
20183.67 (1,192)4.14 (129)4.17 (20)3.70 (69)

Note: The number in ( ) after the score is the number of student responses.  The course evaluation scale is from 1 – 5 with 5 being the highest rating possible. The score reported is the average of the median overall student satisfaction score across all for-credit courses evaluated within the Explorance Blue evaluation system.  Course evaluations are administered at the end of each academic term or course block.

Authoritative Data SourceReport Catalog


Service

Service is an essential part of the role of a Faculty member. Service helps connect the research and teaching mission of the School to the larger community and directly aligns to our WE CARE values and the core objectives of the University of North Carolina.

as of Mar. 14, 2023

Starting in 2025, service effort will be assessed after the completion of each academic term as an extension to the Teaching Activity Survey. Service in the following categories will be expressed as hours of effort and additional data will be captured around the nature of the participation and resulting impact. These data will be used to inform the Faculty Annual Review process and select data will be reported in the School’s annual Impact Report.

Calendar YearService to SchoolService to UNCService to StateService to NationService to WorldTotal Hours
2025Not AvailableNot AvailableNot AvailableNot AvailableNot AvailableNot Available


Patient Care

Patient Care helps connect the research and teaching mission of the School to the larger community and directly aligns to our WE CARE values and the core objectives of the University of North Carolina.

as of Mar. 14, 2023

Starting in 2025, Patient Care effort will be assessed after the completion of each academic term as an extension to the Teaching Activity Survey (TAS).  Patient care in the following categories will be expressed as hours of effort and data will be captured around the nature of the participation and resulting impact.

Calendar YearPatient Care to SchoolPatient Care to UNCPatient Care to StatePatient Care to NationPatient Care to WorldTotal Hours
2025Not AvailableNot AvailableNot AvailableNot AvailableNot AvailableNot Available


Administration

Faculty with additional formal roles in administration are a critical success factor to the effective operation of the Eshelman School of Pharmacy. Faculty with administrative roles ensure a diversity of perspective that brings alignment to the academic and administrative functions of the School. Optimizing this participation can help the School operate in the most effective and efficient way possible.

as of Mar. 14, 2023

Faculty administrative appointments are analyzed each year to ensure alignment with School, individual professional development, and on-going succession planning needs in the following categories.

Calendar YearExecutive LeadershipDivision LeadershipProgram or Office LeadershipLab, Center or Institute LeadershipTotal
202231217840

Note: The counts are determined by employees coded as EHRA-Faculty in our HR systems that have an additional administrative appointment recorded within the School that includes a formal title, detailed job description and compensation. If an individual holds more than one administrative role we only record a single designation.

Authoritative Data Source – UNC HR Data

  • Faculty Administrative Appointments Report (coming soon)