Improbable research: academics assist lions in their roaring contests

Posted in Research on January 31st, 2011 by steve

“Lion-roaring competitions used to be private affairs, organised entirely by lions, without spectators. That changed in the early 1990s …” (more)

[Marc Abrahams, Guardian, 31 January]

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Scientists Fault Universities as Favoring Research Over Teaching

Posted in Research, Teaching on January 14th, 2011 by steve

“The United States’ educational and research pre-eminence is being undermined, and some of the chief underminers are universities themselves, according to articles this week in Science and Nature magazines …” (more)

[Paul Basken, Chronicle of Higher Education, 13 January]

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Is research a waste of taxpayers’ money?

Posted in Research on January 5th, 2011 by steve

“The answer to the question is ‘no’, by the way, but there is no shortage of people who will claim otherwise. There appears to be a particular tendency for Irish economists (or at least some of them) to play down the economic impact of research …” (more)

[Ferdinand on Prondzynski, University Blog, 5 January]

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Israel should be Ireland’s science & research model

Posted in Research on January 4th, 2011 by steve

“Since the late 1990s Ireland has pumped billions into science and research, and completely transformed the landscape for science in Ireland – for the better. This money was spent on supporting research talent and building facilities for them to work in. That’s all good, but the strategy for moving Irish science onto the next level is flawed on many levels. The Government would do well to take a look at a highly successful model – Israel …” (more)

[Science Spinning, 4 January]

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Cash and metrics

Posted in Governance and administration on December 29th, 2010 by steve

“@brianmlucey @vonprond Make everything about cash and metrics and the university is finished, except as a commercial research house.” (tweet)

[Norman Wyse, Twitter, 28 December]

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Assessing business schools and scholars (4)

Posted in Governance and administration on December 22nd, 2010 by steve

“… The research performance of business scholars on the island of Ireland is evaluated based on their number of publication, number of citations, h-index and the same divided by the numbers of years since the first publication …” (more)

[Richard Toll, Irish Economy, 21 December]

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Rendering unto the taxpayer

Posted in Governance and administration, Research on December 21st, 2010 by steve

“What is funded by the taxpayer should be available on an open access basis to the taxpayer. So the current practice, whereby academics are paid salaries and then large tranches of research funding only to conceal the research from their paymaster in very expensive journals, must be stopped …” (more)

[University Blog on Academic Tenure in Ireland, 20 December]

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What is a postdoctoral fellow?

Posted in Research on November 8th, 2010 by steve

“… the past few years have made me increasingly question the point of what I do. Will anything I write change anything or am I maintaining the paint on the Golden Gate Bridge? It seems to me that this is a crisis of navel gazing which is almost unique to the postdoctoral fellow, although feel free to tell me that I am wrong …” (more)

[Juliana Adelman, Pue’s Occurrences, 8 November]

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‘The Commodification of Academic Research’

Posted in Research on October 25th, 2010 by steve

“With universities facing pressure to show the value of their research, to promote economic development and to find new sources of revenue, links between academic researchers and business are being encouraged and scrutinized intensely. The essays in a new book – The Commodification of Academic Research: Science and the Modern University (University of Pittsburgh Press) – explore these issues …” (more)

[Scott Jaschik, Inside Higher Ed, 25 October]

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Science safe from major cuts?

Posted in Research on October 20th, 2010 by steve

“The news broke yesterday evening that the UK’s £4.6 billion science budget would be protected from cuts in today’s comprehensive spending review. The Times, The Guardian, the BBC and the Financial Times all carried various versions of the story …” (more)

[Brian Owens, Exquisite Life, 20 October]

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Euroscience Statement on the threat of budget cuts in science in Europe

Posted in Research on October 20th, 2010 by steve

“Across the European Union and the wider Europe, governments are engaged in cutting public expenditure and we are entering an unprecedented period of austerity. Thus, public support for research is now at risk in a manner not seen before …” (more)

[AlphaGalileo, 20 October]

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Ireland defends research from cuts

Posted in Research on October 20th, 2010 by steve

“In a world in which research budgets are plunging in step with other public spending, the Republic of Ireland is a rare exception. Even as the government prepares for an austerity budget that will try to plug a €50-billion (US$70.4-billion) hole in its coffers, researchers are expected to be spared savage cuts …” (more)

[Natasha Gilbert, Nature, 19 October]

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Research is nothing without integrity – it needs protection

Posted in Research on September 23rd, 2010 by steve

“Science is based on trust, in that one assumes that researchers are in the pursuit of knowledge and truth. However, scientists do not always act to these noble standards. The term ‘research integrity’ has evolved to cover a wide range of less than acceptable practices …” (more)

[Conor O’Carroll, Irish Times, 23 September]

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Absence of pupil tracking ‘hinders research’

Posted in Research on September 4th, 2010 by steve

“The absence of a tracking system to follow the progress of pupils from the start of primary school is hampering work that could help improve education policies, according to a leading researcher …” (more)

[Niall Murray, Irish Examiner, 4 September]

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Protection against research fraud urged by academy

Posted in Research on September 3rd, 2010 by steve

“Ireland must introduce procedures to protect against falsification and plagiarism of research findings, according to a discussion document produced by the Royal Irish Academy. Introducing such safeguards would protect Ireland’s international reputation as a source of quality research, the academy says …” (more)

[Dick Ahlstrom, Irish Times, 3 September]

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The future of higher education: who does what kind of research?

Posted in Research on August 24th, 2010 by steve

“Today’s Irish Times newspaper contains more on the anticipated report of the strategic review group on higher education. One of the recommendations, apparently, will be that research should have a ‘much sharper commercial focus’, meaning that there should be a greater financial return for the taxpayer …” (more)

[Ferdinand von Prondzynski, University Blog, 24 August]

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Research and jobs

Posted in Research on August 13th, 2010 by steve

“Conor Lenihan, Ireland’s Minister for Science, Technology and Innovation, was recently reported as explaining the link between the funding of university research and job creation. I confess I am always nervous whenever a politician links research expenditure with job creation …” (more)

[Ferdinand von Prondzynski, University Blog, 13 August]

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How our current reward structures have distorted and damaged science

Posted in Research on August 6th, 2010 by steve

“Two things almost everyone would agree with: 1. Good scientists do research and publish their results, which then have impact on other scientists and the broader community. 2. Science is a competitive business: there is not enough research funding for everyone …” (more)

[BishopBlog, 6 August]

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Who Pays the Hidden Cost of University Research?

Posted in Research on August 5th, 2010 by steve

“Higher education in America is in financial crisis. In constant dollars, the average cost of tuition and fees at public colleges has risen almost 300 percent since 1980. Our best public research universities, like my own University of California (UC), are wracked with doubt: will they be able to continue their historic role as institutions with a vital public mission …” (more)

[Charles Schwartz, Minding the Campus, 5 August]

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Higher Education?

Posted in Life on August 1st, 2010 by steve

“In an otherwise confused and incomprehensible discussion about academic life in the NY Times, Mark C Taylor made one comment that I actually agree with: ‘Nothing represses the free expression of ideas more than the long and usually fruitless quest for tenure’ …” (more)

[Shahar Ozeri, Perverse Egalitarianism, 1 August]

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