Title: Professoriat Dinner Discussion
1Professoriat Dinner Discussion
- How to cope with likely government funding
retrenchment? - Link with large caches of finance other than
Government - Top-level industry partnerships joint research,
CPD, Manchester Consultancy - China for international students
- Alumni usually for specific projects
- Etc. etc. etc.
- Cut areas where impact is too low?
- Promoting excellence is the sine qua non
- What gets more brilliant people to come to
Manchester? - What is Manchester special for?
- Must invest in excellent people even/especially
if money is tight
2Professoriat Dinner Discussion
- New university has a much more centralised/top-dow
n style than its predecessors - More of a corporate structure less a community
of scholars - University?Faculty?School?Group
- More managerial hurdles to jump
- Group/school silo mentality?
3Professoriat Dinner Discussion
- Manchester United why is it so successful?
- Did not start as one of best-known teams in world
- In a relatively unprepossessing city
- In a rather unattractive area
- But achieved a virtuous circle where success
breeds success and generated resources - excellent talent spotters
- active youth policy in addition to recruitment of
big stars - known for attractive style of play
- excellent club atmosphere players want to play
for the team - Differences in any one premier league match may
not be huge but become so when integrated over
time!
4Manchester present cf. Manchester past
- 50 years ago Manchester Physics Astronomy was
in the international premier league - the named lecture theatres
- Rochester Butler
- Lovell
- RAE rating tells us we are now, on average, in
with the UK pack - If there has been a relative decline - how has it
happened?
5What are great academic departments like?
- Tradition of great scientists who have made
significant contributions to their field - Currently full of scientists of international
standing - who are happy to stay !
- Tradition of excellence at all costs
- never settling for less
- Recognise that excellence needs incentives
academic freedom and personal space - - not too much teaching
- - not too much administration
- - not too rigid a structure in which to
operate
- Successful researchers are often mavericks !
6Types of laboratories1
- Type A all discoveries made here !
- Cognitive High scientific diversity
- Social Well-connected to external
networks in diverse fields - Resources Access to new instrumentation and
funding for high risk - research
- Leadership High cognitive complexity
confidence and motivation - Excellent grasp of ways in which different
fields may - be integrated and ability to move research
in that - direction
- 1 J.R. Hollingsworth in Knowledge, Communication
and Creativity, ed. A. Sales M. Fournier, Sage
Publications, London Thousand Oaks California,
2007
7Types of laboratories1
- Type B no discoveries made here !
- Cognitive Moderately low scientific diversity
- Social Well connected to external
networks in a single - discipline
- Resources Limited funding for high risk
research - Leadership Low cognitive complexity limited
inclination for high - risk research
- Not greatly concerned with
integrating different fields - 1 J.R. Hollingsworth in Knowledge,
Communication and Creativity, ed. A. Sales M.
Fournier, Sage Publications, London Thousand
Oaks California, 2007
8Innovation and Cognitive Complexity
- Innovation is associated with cognitive
complexity rather than formal measures of
intelligence - Cognitive complexity is the ability to
understand the world in complex ways a capacity
to observe and understand the connectivity among
phenomena in multiple fields. - Need to encourage this in ourselves and recruit
those who display it.
J.R. Hollingsworth in Knowledge, Communication
and Creativity, ed. A. Sales M. Fournier, Sage
Publications, London Thousand Oaks California,
2007
9Caltech
- Research and graduate students are the core
businesses and excellence is everything - - only 284 faculty, 1200 grad. students but
100s - millions turnover
- - and 31 Nobel Prizes
- Research condensations are more personal
- - internal competition between PI academics
- Teaching load is seriously less (graduate
students as TAs !) - Well funded programme of visiting professors with
congenial conditions of stay - Access to private sources of funds from Alumni
10So. a few thoughts
- How can we make Manchester, and PA in
particular, a first choice in the world for an
outstanding scientist - Build a culture of excellence and a reputation as
a hot-bed of new ideas - Allow excellent people space to maximise their
research creativity - Direct financial reward for grant-winning, for
further pump-priming activities on their own
initiative (overhead return) - But seek to square the circle of personal freedom
with collegial culture
11A few more ideas
- The School Research Lunches and Away Days and
post Away-Days are a good innovation - lead to intellectual collegiality and possibly
serendipitous new ideas - Where are the future Nobel Prizes going to come
from? - Fundamental physics/astronomy (74)
- Physics with a wide range of applications (26)
- Related recruitment strategies
- Fields in which an international community is
interested (for citations) - Fields with wider economy applications
12N.B. an era of focussed funding
- Recent government changes
- Lord Drayson will oversee UK (2B) military
research spending in addition to his civil
science responsibilities. - The recent changes also merged science and
business in the new Department for Business
Innovation and Skills. - Sir Martin Rees With the right steering, the
two roles have great potential to complement one
another and boost science in the UK."
- BBC Science Web-site 9 June 09
13A few further ideas
- A new international post-doctoral Fellowship
programme - Manchester Fellowships - Why not generate our own international
competition ? - Perhaps start with one Fellow per School
- An internationally-known visiting scholar
programme Manchester Scholar - Make us the most congenial place in the world for
a scientific visit for international leaders
14Summary
- No one route need to create a virtuous circle
where success feeds on itself like Man U. - Must make Manchester special cf. our
competition - Culture of only excellence in recruitment and
retention - Clearly lower teaching load for successful
researchers - Direct overhead return to successful researchers
- Encourage cognitive complexity community of
scholars - lunchtime seminars and post-away days are good
- Attract our own outstanding talent via
Manchester Fellowships - Attract visiting scholars via Manchester
Scholarships - Is the present administrative structure optimum ?
- Is the current mix of research topics optimum ?
15END
16Some Unity Questions
- How do you plan to increase the number of
research students and research income, in
particular industrial funding? - How will you encourage enterprise and develop
IP? - What are the plans for the encouragement and
development of cross-school and cross-Faculty
research initiatives? - How will the School review and develop research
centres within and across schools, including the
winding down of centres that no longer produce
high quality research? - In last 5 years strived to answer and/or add
cognitive complexity/cross-school
interdisciplinarity via proposals for - Manchester Institute for Astronomy and Particle
Physics - Jodrell Bank Institute
- Centre for Radio Terahertz Technology
- MSc. in Technologies for Imaging Radio
Astronomy, Earth Observation, Defence and
Security
None of these were successful prescience or
risk-averse conservatism ?
17Other points
- key to development is inspiring the next
generation that research is the lifeblood of
both creativity and real learning. - Ridiculous to appoint Nobel Prize winners. They
have achieved all that they can. UoM has not
been good over many years at recognising stars in
its own firmament always looking for stars
independently - Need to bump into people regularly to get
interactions - 2006/7 Caltech received grant, contract, and
subcontract awards valued at 268 million. - The Endowment Pool supports approximately 18 of
the Institutes operating budget.