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MnSCU-IFO Master Agreement 1999-2001
ARTICLE 12
Overload Pay and Non-Instructional Activities
Section A. Definition.
An overload shall be defined as a specific assignment, acceptable to the faculty
member and approved by the President/designee, occurring within a faculty member's
period of appointment, which is in excess of the faculty member's workload as
defined in Article 10 and in Article
13, Section A.
Section B. Compensation.
Subd. 1. Instruction.
Overload compensation shall be granted to faculty
members for approved assignments involving the teaching of courses, workshops,
seminars, and institutes in addition to the workload as defined in Article
10 and in Article 13, Section A. Such overload compensation
shall be at the rate of two and one quarter percent (2.25%) of the faculty member's
nine- (9) month base salary, but not less than the minimum adjunct rate set
forth in Article 11 for each semester credit hour. However,
pro rata reductions in this rate of compensation may be implemented by the President/designee
when there is less than full student enrollment in a self-supporting course,
workshop, seminar, or institute.
Subd. 2. Metropolitan State University Resident Faculty Instruction.
Overload compensation for teaching courses shall be granted to resident
faculty consistent with the provisions of Subd.
1. above. A resident faculty member who accepts other overload assignments,
including, but not limited to, theory seminars and faculty designed
independent studies, with prior approval of the President/designee,
shall be compensated at the rate established for community faculty in
Article 10, Section J, Subd. 3.c. With
the consent of the President/designee, a course or alternative teaching
strategy may be considered overload: (1) if the course or alternative
teaching strategy is above and beyond the teaching responsibilities
described in Article 10, Workload, Section
A., Subd. 1.e.; or 2. if the President/designee finds it appropriate.
Subd. 3. Non-instructional Activities.
For non-instructional activities, overload compensation shall be computed
on the basis of the faculty member's base duty day rate for a specified
number of duty days. The nature of the assignment and the number of days
shall be subject to mutual agreement between the faculty member and the
President/designee.
Section C. Application.
This Article shall apply to Article 10,
Section A, Subd. 1., and to Article 13, Section
A, only where the regularly scheduled and assigned classroom teaching
workload of a teaching faculty member exceeds fourteen (14) semester credit
hours per academic semester or twenty-four (24) semester credit hours
per academic year. Examples of activities excluded from overload pay include
but are not limited to the following: internship, independent studies,
student teacher supervision, graduate thesis supervision, tutoring, studios
and related kinds of individualized instruction, the pyramiding of multi-level
courses, and substitution for an absent faculty member on a short-term
basis.
Section D. Limitation.
Normally, total workload including overload shall not exceed sixteen
(16) credits per semester and total overload shall not exceed five (5)
credits per academic year.
Section E. Information.
Annually, upon request, the Employer shall provide to the Association
the names of faculty members teaching overload, the number of credits
of overload taught, the amount paid to each faculty member for overload,
and the courses taught.
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