Title: Professional practice and scholarly research
1Professional practice and scholarly research
- Professor Judith Mottram, Nottingham Trent
University
2Addressing the question
- Recent history
- Characteristics
- Definitions
- Motivations
- Is there a difference between an art question and
a research question?
3Some history
- 1984 CNAA Statement of Research Related
Activities - 1988 Matrix conference
- 1992 RAE and Incorporation of the new
universities - 1993 Research for, into and through art
(Frayling) - 1996 RAE definition
- 1999 HEFCE Importance of practice for research
- 2001 Art and Value (Dickie)
- 2003 AHRB criteria for research outcomes
- 2004 Applied research
- 2005 RAE definition
4Characteristics of the field output types
Art Design Engineering Built
Environment
RAE 2001
5Art Design text and practice outputs
6Comparing fields by output types
7Output types and art design disciplines
8RAE 2008 research definition
- Research for the purpose of the RAE is to
be understood as original investigation
undertaken in order to gain knowledge and
understanding. It includes work of direct
relevance to the needs of commerce, industry, and
to the public and voluntary sectors
scholarship the invention and generation of
ideas, images, performances, artefacts including
design, where these lead to new or substantially
improved insights and the use of existing
knowledge in experimental development to produce
new or substantially improved materials, devices,
products and processes, including design and
construction. It excludes routine testing and
routine analysis of materials, components and
processes such as for the maintenance of national
standards, as distinct from the development of
new analytical techniques. It also excludes the
development of teaching materials that do not
embody original research.
9RAE 2008 quality measures
- For outputs
- Significance. The degree to which the work has
enhanced, or is likely to enhance, knowledge,
thinking, understanding and/or practice in its
field. - Originality. The degree to which the work has
developed new formulations or data and/or
initiated new methods and/or forms of expression. - Rigour. The degree of intellectual precision,
systematic method and/or integrity embodied in
the research. - For esteem
- Recognition. The degree to which, individually
and collectively, the work of researchers has
been recognised externally. - Influence. The degree of influence and/or
contribution made to research practices and their
debates in the wider context. - Benefit. The degree to which researchers and the
research environment have benefited through the
esteem in which the research is held.
10AHRC definition of research section 52, p.13
- Define research processes, rather than
outputs - Specify research questions or problems
- Define objectives for enhancing knowledge
and understanding - Specify research context for the questions
or problems to be addressed - Specify why it is important that these
particular questions are addressed - Specify what other research is being or has been
conducted in this area - Specify contribution project will make to
advancement of creativity, insights, knowledge
and understanding in the specific field - Specify the research methods for addressing and
answering the research questions or problems - Explain the rationale for your chosen research
methods and why appropriate -
11AHRC distinction between research
practicesection 53, p.13
- Creative output can be produced, or practice
undertaken - as an integral part of a research process
- Practice must be accompanied by
- documentation of the research process,
- some form of textual analysis or explanation,
- demonstration of critical reflection
- Creativity or practice involving no such
processes is - ineligible for funding from the Council
12Motivations matrix
13Motivation scales
- The researchers question .... the
artists intention - Contributing to understanding......
challenging orthodoxy - Precision .. ambiguity
- Filling gaps in body of knowledge. rejecting
body of knowledge - Exact labels ...expedient labels
- Finding new questions finding new
problems - Answering the question ..answering the
brief - Using explicit methods ....protecting
your process - Justified true belief accepting no
fixed belief
14Closing questions
- Why do research?
- Why differentiate between the artist/designer and
the academic? - Who gets money for what?
- Does the work speaks for itself?
- Is visual evidence the same as visual knowledge?
- What are the established means of deposit and
exchange? - Which is most important, intentionality or
ambiguity? - Can we raise the quality of evidence, records and
archives?
15art as a form of knowledge in which purposeful
execution is guided by genuine understanding of
the principle underlying that activity(Harris,
2003, The Necessity of Artspeak)the aim of
academic research is the production of expert
knowledge the aim of art is the expression of
understanding as an account of experience
(Buchler, 2000, in The Artist as
Researcher)History would seem to indicate that
artists have been consistently misguided about
what they do (Elkins, 2001, Why Art Cannot be
Taught)
Closing thoughts