Title: August 2004
1RATING WORKSHOP
2This presentation
- What is an NRF rating?
- Why should I get rated?
- What are the rating categories?
- When should I submit for rating?
- How do I apply for rating?
- What happens to my application?
- Is there any thing else I must know?
3What is an NRF rating?
- Outcome of an assessment of the recent track
record, - through an international peer review process,
using the - quality of research outputs of the last seven
years as the basis
4This presentation
- What is an NRF rating?
- Why should I get rated?
- What are the rating categories?
- When should I submit for rating?
- How do I apply for rating?
- What happens to my application?
- Is there any thing else I must know?
5Why should I get rated?
- Benchmarking
- Against international standards
- Personal dimension
- Institutional dimension
- Programme dimension
- National dimension
- Access to NRF funding for five years (NB
conditional, depending on the approval of project
proposal) -
6Example of national benchmarking
- Institutions
- All technikons
- All universities
- Natural history museums
- 1998 2003
- 20 46
- 910 1260
- 37 18
7Example of national benchmarking (cont)
- Number of persons in academic/research positions
in HEI - Number of rated researchers
- Rated researchers
8This presentation
- What is an NRF rating?
- Why should I get rated?
- What are the rating categories?
- When should I submit for rating?
- How do I apply for rating?
- What happens to my application?
- Is there any thing else I must know?
9Rating categories
Young high-flier with exceptional potential
P
Y
Promising young researcher
L
- Late entrant with potential
A
Leading international scholar
Researcher with considerable international
recognition
B
Established researcher
C
10Rating categories - definitions
- P
- Young researchers (normally younger than 35
years of age), who have held the doctorate or
equivalent qualification for less than five years
at the time of application and who, on the basis
of exceptional potential demonstrated in their
published doctoral work and/or their research
outputs in their early post-doctoral careers are
considered likely to become future leaders in
their field.
11Rating categories - definitions
- Y
- Young researchers (normally younger than 35
years of age), who have held the doctorate or
equivalent qualification for less than five years
at the time of application, and who are
recognised as having the potential to establish
themselves as researchers within a five-year
period after evaluation, based on their
performance and productivity as researchers
during their doctoral studies and/or early
post-doctoral careers.
12Rating categories - definitions
- L
- Persons (normally younger than 55 years) who
were previously established as researchers or who
previously demonstrated potential through their
own research products, and who are considered
capable of fully establishing or re-establishing
themselves as researchers within a five-year
period after evaluation. Candidates should be
South African citizens or foreign nationals who
have been resident in South Africa for five years
during
13Rating categories - definitions
- L
- which time they have been unable for practical
reasons to realise their potential as
researchers. - Candidates who are eligible in this category
include black researchers, female researchers,
those employed in a higher education institution
that lacked a research environment as well as
those who were previously established as
researchers and have returned to a research
environment.
14Rating categories - definitions
- A
- Researchers who are unequivocally recognised by
their peers as leading international scholars in
their field for the high quality and impact of
their recent research outputs. - B
- Researchers who enjoy considerable international
recognition by their peers for the high quality
and impact of their recent research outputs.
15Rating categories - definitions
- C
- Established researchers with a sustained recent
record of productivity in the field who are
recognised by their peers as having - produced a body of quality work, the core of
which has coherence and attests to ongoing
engagement with the field - demonstrated the ability to conceptualise
problems and apply research methods to
investigating them.
16Rating sub-categories
- A1, A2
- B1, B2, B3
- C1, C2, C3
- Y1, Y2
17Definition of research
- For purposes of the NRF, research is original
investigation undertaken to gain knowledge and/or
enhance understanding. - Research specifically includes
- the creation and development of the intellectual
infrastructure of subjects and disciplines (e.g.
through dictionaries, scholarly editions,
catalogues and contributions to major research
databases) - the invention or generation of ideas, images,
performances and artefacts where these manifestly
embody new or substantially developed insights - building on existing knowledge to produce new or
substantially improved materials, devices,
products, policies or processes.
18Definition of research
- It specifically excludes
- routine testing and analysis of materials,
components, instruments and processes, as
distinct from the development of new analytical
techniques - the development of teaching materials and
teaching practices that do not embody substantial
original enquiry.
19This presentation
- What is an NRF rating?
- Why should I get rated?
- What are the rating categories?
- When should I submit for rating?
- How do I apply for rating?
- What happens to my application?
- Is there any thing else I must know?
20When should I submit for rating?
- There is no universal answer. It will depend
on the research profile of the person asking the
question. However, there are some commonalities - Doctoral degree should be completed and articles
from the PhD study should have appeared in the
public literature (a must for the Y and P
categories, ideally also for the other
categories). - There must be research outputs in the public
domain. If these outputs are in written form they
must be published (not in press etc).
21When should I submit for rating?(cont)
- In the rating system quality is supreme. It is
therefore not a question of the quantity of
outputs but a question of the quality of outputs.
-
- The research outputs should include a meaningful
number of those outputs which are considered to
be among the most important in that research
field. - The research outputs should have appeared in the
public domain for public scrutiny over a number
of years. -
22When should I submit for rating? (cont)
- The outputs should reflect engagement in the
international arena. -
- If you are aiming for the Y and P category the
application must be submitted before five years
have elapsed since obtaining the doctoral degree. - If you are tempted to list your unpublished PhD
thesis as one of your research outputs you are
not yet ready to submit for evaluation and
rating! -
-
23When should I submit for rating? (cont)
Research outputs and their importance may
differ considerably from discipline to
discipline. It is therefore not possible to say
exactly how many and which research outputs are
necessary before applying for rating.
24This presentation
- What is an NRF rating?
- Why should I get rated?
- What are the rating categories?
- When should I submit for rating?
- How do I apply for rating?
- What happens to my application?
- Is there any thing else I must know?
25How do I apply for rating?
- Electronic application - application form
http//nrfonline.nrf.ac.za - Must be submitted by applicant to the institution
- Must be submitted by institution to the NRF
26Information required from applicant
- Personal details
- Career profile
- Qualifications obtained
- Other biographic information
- Assessment panel(s) to consider application
- Nominated reviewers
- Application for L category?
- All research outputs of last seven years
- Five best recent research outputs published
during the last seven years - Ten best research outputs before that
- Description of completed research
- Self-assessment
- Postgraduate students
- Other research-based contributions
- Future research
27Research outputs of the last seven years
- Publications in peer-reviewed journals
- Books/chapters in books
- Peer-reviewed published conference proceedings
- Other significant conference outputs
- Patents, artefacts and products
- Technical reports
- Keynote/Plenary addresses
- Other recognised research outputs
28Nomination of reviewers
Applicants are given the opportunity to nominate
their own reviewers. They are also given the
opportunity to indicate who should not be
approached. A mix of national and international
reviewers is appropriate.
29Sources of information
- Evaluation Centre website (http//www.nrf.ac.za/ev
aluation/) - Brochure on the NRFs evaluation and rating of
the research performance of researchers in SA
(http//www.nrf.ac.za/evaluation/Content/Documents
/Rating/Evaluation_Brochure_2004_July.doc) - Application form (http//nrfonline.nrf.ac.za)
30This presentation
- What is an NRF rating?
- Why should I get rated?
- What are the rating categories?
- When should I submit for rating?
- How do I apply for rating?
- What happens to my application?
- Is there any thing else I must know?
31 What happens to my application?
32Evaluation and Rating Process
Submission of scholarly achievements
Not accepted
Specialist Committee
Selection of 6 peers (reviewers)
Reviewers Reports
Assessor
Specialist Committee
Joint meeting Rating
33Evaluation and Rating Process
Joint meeting Rating
No Consensus
Consensus
B, C, Y, L
A, P recommendation
Inform Candidate
Executive Evaluation Committee
Appeal
Appeals Committee
34Assessment Panels
- Anthropology, Development Studies, Geography,
Sociology and Social Work - Animal and Veterinary Sciences
- Biochemistry
- Chemistry
- Communication, Media Studies Library and
Information Sciences
- Earth Sciences
- Economics, Management, Administration and
Accounting - Education
- Engineering
- Forestry and Agricultural Sciences
- Health Sciences
- Historical Studies
35Assessment Panels (cont)
- Law
- Literary Studies, Languages and Linguistics
- Mathematical Sciences
- Microbiology and Plant Pathology
- Performing and Creative Arts, and Design
- Physics
- Plant Sciences
- Psychology
- Political Sciences, Policy Studies and Philosophy
- Religious Studies and Theology
36Tasks of Specialist Committees
- Selecting reviewers
- Assessing reviewers reports
- Recommending a rating for each applicant based on
the comments by reviewers - Identifying feedback
- Rating reports by reviewers
- Advising NRF
37Selection of reviewers by Specialist Committees
Committees are provided with detailed
guidelines Committees select three names from
the applicants list and select three other
names A mix of national and international
reviewers is appropriate.
38Guidelines to reviewers
- Comment on
- Quality of research outputs over the last seven
years - Standing as a researcher both nationally and
internationally
39This presentation
- What is an NRF rating?
- Why should I get rated?
- What are the rating categories?
- When should I submit for rating?
- How do I apply for rating?
- What happens to my application?
- Is there any thing else I must know?
40Is there anything else I must know?
41Critical success factors for the evaluation and
rating system
- Quality of documents submitted by applicant
- Selection of appropriate peers
- Composition of specialist panels
- Quality of reports by peers
- Clear definition of categories
- Fair and equitable procedures
- Goodwill of academic community, locally and abroad
42Further clarification on
- Timing of first submission
- Policy on feedback
- Appeals process
- Alignment of rating and funding proposal
processes - Re-evaluation and special re-evaluations
43Questions