The Executive Order Ushering in Tenure Reform
Governor Kevin Stitt of Oklahoma signed Executive Order 2026-06 on February 5, 2026, marking a significant shift in the state's higher education landscape. This order establishes new accountability measures within the tenure system at public institutions. Specifically, it instructs regional universities and community colleges to cease granting new lifetime tenure appointments, transitioning instead to renewable contracts based on performance metrics. These metrics include teaching effectiveness, student completion rates, job placement outcomes, and alignment with Oklahoma's economic priorities.
While the change targets future hires, existing tenured faculty at these institutions retain their status, subject to periodic reviews. The order reflects a broader push for performance-driven higher education, aiming to ensure that public funds support measurable student success and workforce readiness.
Defining Academic Tenure in Higher Education
Academic tenure, often referred to as lifetime job security in higher education, is a status granted to faculty after a probationary period—typically five to seven years—of rigorous evaluation. It protects professors from arbitrary dismissal, safeguarding academic freedom: the ability to teach, research, and speak on topics without fear of reprisal from administrators, politicians, or donors. In the United States, tenure originated in the early 20th century, formalized by the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) in 1940 as the 1940 Statement of Principles on Academic Freedom and Tenure.
In practice, tenure-track faculty undergo annual reviews, culminating in a comprehensive tenure decision involving peer evaluations, teaching assessments, research output, and service contributions. Once awarded, tenured professors still face post-tenure reviews in most states, though these rarely lead to termination. Nationally, tenure density has declined sharply; a 2023 AAUP study found only 23% of faculty hold full-time tenured or tenure-track positions, down from 39% in 1987, amid a rise in contingent adjunct roles.
Institutions Impacted: Regional Universities and Community Colleges
The order affects approximately two dozen regional four-year universities and 13 community colleges overseen by the Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education. Examples include the University of Central Oklahoma, Northeastern State University, Southwestern Oklahoma State University, East Central University, and Cameron University. In 2024, these regional colleges employed 761 tenured faculty and 412 on the tenure track.
Exemptions apply to flagship research institutions: the University of Oklahoma (OU), Oklahoma State University (OSU), and their health sciences centers. Tribal colleges are also unaffected. This distinction recognizes the research-intensive nature of OU and OSU, where tenure remains a key tool for attracting top scholars in fields like engineering and medicine.
Adjustments for Research Universities: Post-Tenure Reviews
Even at OU and OSU, the executive order mandates stricter oversight. Faculty must now undergo post-tenure reviews every five years—or more frequently if needed—with clear performance standards. Sustained failure to meet these can result in termination, reassignment, or non-renewal. Governor Stitt emphasized, “No job funded by taxpayers should be exempt from regular, meaningful performance reviews.”
This builds on existing post-tenure review systems but heightens accountability, potentially requiring detailed documentation of teaching loads, research grants, and student outcomes. Experts note this could increase administrative burdens, as faculty prepare extensive portfolios for each cycle.
Governor Stitt's Vision: Accountability and Performance-Based Reforms
Governor Stitt framed the orders as fulfilling Oklahoma's “constitutional and statutory responsibility to steward taxpayer dollars wisely.” A companion Executive Order 2026-07 advances performance-based funding, directing regents to tie appropriations to graduation rates, affordability, and economic alignment by October 2026. It also calls for a 90-day study on 90-credit-hour accelerated bachelor's degrees to reduce time-to-degree and costs.
Stitt argued that tenure can shield underperformers, stating, “Don’t let someone teach no classes and bring no research dollars in.” The reforms aim to foster innovation, accelerate workforce entry, and prioritize outcomes over “privilege.” Oklahoma's higher education system serves over 300,000 students annually, with regional campuses providing accessible education in rural areas.
Read the full announcement from the Governor's OfficeStakeholder Reactions: Faculty Concerns and Union Opposition
The AAUP swiftly condemned the order, with President Todd Wolfson stating, “By eliminating tenure... the State of Oklahoma has proclaimed... that they do not view academic freedom as important for public higher education.” He warned of devastating effects on recruitment, retention, educational quality, and brain drain from institutions serving affordable pathways.
- Undermines academic freedom, enabling political or ideological retaliation.
- Hinders hiring top talent amid national faculty shortages.
- Already accountable via reviews, per AAUP data.
Faculty at affected campuses expressed fears over job insecurity limiting controversial teaching. Legal scholar Deepa Das Acevedo noted misconceptions: “Tenure does not measurably impact productivity.”
Potential Impacts on Faculty Careers and Mobility
Renewable contracts—typically 3-5 years—tie renewals to metrics like student success and economic fit, introducing uncertainty. Oklahoma faculty salaries already lag nationally (average professor ~$90,000 vs. $110,000 U.S.), exacerbating recruitment challenges. Studies show job security boosts research output and retention.
For job seekers, this signals a shift to performance portfolios. Explore opportunities at stable institutions via higher-ed faculty positions or professor jobs on AcademicJobs.com.
Inside Higher Ed analysisImplications for Students and Educational Quality
Proponents argue performance ties will improve teaching and completions—Oklahoma's six-year graduation rate hovers at 45%. Critics fear turnover disrupts mentoring; stable faculty correlate with higher retention per national data.
Rural regional campuses, vital for local economies, may struggle attracting diverse expertise, potentially narrowing curricula. Accelerated degrees could help affordability, as in-state tuition averages $8,000/year.
National Trends: Tenure Under Scrutiny Across States
Oklahoma joins a wave: Iowa (2023) mandates post-tenure reviews with termination paths; Texas limits new tenure at some publics; Florida ties reviews to ideology-neutral teaching. No state has fully eliminated tenure, but proposals proliferate in red states amid debates on accountability vs. freedom.
AAUP tracks declining tenure amid adjunct growth (65% rise 2002-2023). Tim Cain, higher ed expert, predicts emboldened reforms elsewhere.
Implementation Challenges and Legal Considerations
Institutions must certify compliance soon; contracts need defining metrics to avoid disputes. Legal challenges may invoke academic freedom under the First Amendment or state constitutions. Existing tenure protections likely hold, but reviews could test courts.
Administrators face workload spikes; faculty unions push bargaining.
Future Outlook and Adaptation Strategies
By 2030, renewable models may normalize if outcomes improve, or spark reversals if quality dips. Oklahoma could pioneer hybrid systems balancing security and performance.
For faculty: Build strong portfolios, diversify skills. Students: Seek programs with high ROI. Institutions: Invest in support.
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Photo by Yarenci Hdz on Unsplash
Navigating Opportunities in a Changing Landscape
As reforms unfold, AcademicJobs.com connects talent with roles nationwide. Check higher ed jobs, university jobs, or rate your professors. Postdocs and lecturers: postdoc positions.
Whether adapting to contracts or seeking tenure-track stability, proactive career planning is key.