Dean Jones says,

"Good!  We've agreed on all of the terms:

 

**TWO guaranteed trip to a conference each year for two years

**$1,000 for software to analyze data

**$10,000 for hardware (i.e., special computer processor and other equipment)

**A nine-month salary at the 53rd percentile

**Required to teach two summer sessions, none of which count toward your teaching load

**Two-days-a-week teaching schedule.

**Regarding graduate research assistance for THREE calendar years;  We agree to the following:

Year 1:  One graduate research assistant and no undergraduate research projects.

Year 2:  One graduate research assistant and two undergraduate research projects.

Year 3:  Two graduate research assistants and four undergraduate research projects

 

**You can use multiple-choice tests to better accommodate your heavy teaching schedule.

 

Welcome to our university faculty!"

 

Critique:

You seemed to try hard to meet Dean Jones' underlying concerns and you worked with him on these matters.

This was a good deal for you.  You negotiated for two guaranteed trips per year (instead of one).  Your salary is above average, and your teaching load is reasonable -- it will not risk interfering with your research program in the future.  Although you never negotiated an upper limit on the total number of students you will teach, you did negotiate limits on how many days per week you will teach and how many summer sessions. Of course, agreeing to let you use multiple-choice tests didn't cost the Dean anything financially. You might want to try again to see if you can get an even better deal.