Title: EMBARK Initiative investing in people and ideas.
1EMBARK Initiative investing in people
and ideas.
- Postgraduate Formation the beginning of the
Research Career? - IUQB Conference 5th May 2006
- Martin Hynes
- info_at_ircset.ie www.ircset.ie
2Title and outline
- What is meant by PG research degrees? Career
prospects and stepping stones, reforms necessary.
- Original title 4th Level Education and Training
reason for change - Should we encourage and support research careers?
- Career paths?
- Speculate as to implications for the traditional
model of PhD formation
3European setting
- Traversed by differing structures German, Latin,
Nordic, Anglo-Saxon, in Ireland arguably
especially US and now- - Emerging Eastern European/ Academies of Science
traditions - Different beasts rooted in different assumptions
- Apprentice, Colleague, Employee or indeed
- Vassal
4Engineers of a certain age--
- PhD alien to culture, decent MEngSc the proper
aspiration for those more gifted - Happy days in the real economy of weight
- Remarkable progress in Ireland in 30 years
- Looking back further as to origins of PhD as
Doctor Philosophiae, DPhil was originally a
recognition- an honour
5Origins of PhD
- Granted by a University to learned individuals
who had - The approval of their peers
- A long and productive career in philosophy
- Achieved a successful middle age after
substantial achievement - Later Friederich Wilhelm in Berlin in 1800s
popularised as a degree to be granted for
original research in sciences or humanities
6Evolution 2
- Yale University in 1861
- UK in 1921
- From this genesis is it surprising that one still
thinks of the PhD as one designed for the career
academic? - How have we come to think of the generation of
PhD and research degrees as key for success in
knowledge economy?
7Reform and HE not new
- Professor Sir Ron Dearing Chairman, National
Committee of Inquiry into Higher Education (UK). - The TIMES Educational Supplement October 1997
But let us look at the current backdrop, the
environment for change--
8Lisbon Agenda, March 2000
- In particular, it was agreed that to achieve this
goal, an overall strategy should be applied,
aimed at - preparing the transition to a knowledge-based
economy and society by better policies for the
information society and RD, as well as by
stepping up the process of structural reform for
competitiveness and innovation and by completing
the internal market - modernising the European social model, investing
in people and combating social exclusion - sustaining the healthy economic outlook and
favourable growth prospects by applying an
appropriate macro-economic policy mix. -
- Controversy about researcher numbers,
particularly PhDs projected
9Postgraduate in Irish context
- Rapid acceleration of research investment from
1.4 to 2.5 of GNP by 2010. - Explicit recognition of shortage of Ph.D s
research professionals - Many new funding sources now available
- Scientific excellence is the common denominator
- IRCSET Unique niche, supporting researchers in
early career stages across the SET disciplines
10Building Irelands Knowledge Economy, July 2004
- Analysis for this Action Plan projects that it
will be possible to achieve more than a doubling
of performance in the higher education and public
research sector to reach at least 1.1 billion by
2010. This will require a serious commitment by
government to continue the current investment in
RD. It will also require the research performers
(higher education and public sector) to continue
to access international sources of funding,
especially the European Framework Programmes.
This funding will help produce the necessary
number of researchers for the higher education,
public and enterprise sectors to achieve the
overall target for 2010.
11BIKE Specifics on researcher
- 3.14. Investing in research by the public and
private sectors is contingent upon Ireland
becoming an attractive location for industry RD
and having an international reputation for
research excellence. This will attract people in
Ireland to research careers and attract those
from abroad. - From a competitiveness perspective, the presence
of leading researchers and the supply of the
highest quality graduates is becoming a
differentiating factor between countries.
Businesses are making decisions about the
location of their global RD activities based on
the presence of leading researchers and the
quality of graduate output. - 3.15. Ireland currently has 10,200 researchers in
enterprise, the higher education and public
research sectors, 10 of which are at doctorate
level, 50 degree and postgraduate level and 40
technical support. - 3.16. As indicated in Table 8, it is projected
that Ireland will require, approximately, an
additional 8,000 researchers over the period to
2010 in order to achieve the targets set out
above for RD
12Ireland
- While NRP and details of SIF much anticipated,
make no mistake that the context of this planning
is national competitiveness and employment - Ireland was seen to have been exceptionally well
served by the educational system and the special
focus on graduate numbers throughout the 1990s
it is seen that the challenge to 2013 and beyond
lies in the availability of leading researchers
and a continuing flow of those with advanced
research degrees as well as in the environment
for innovation and entrepreneurship. - Fully 2/3 will find employment outside the
traditional academic career - Implications for the incentive schemes?
13RD the new Manufacturing?
14Techno-economic logic
- Demands change- substantial rewards for wider
range of measurements - Research indicators for areas perceived as
being of economic importance - Cooperation with enterprise rewarded
- Research may leave Dept and move to Research
Centre as interface www.utc.fr
15In 2004, 71.6 per cent of total exports came from
two sectors, Pharmachem (chemicals and
pharmaceuticals) and ICT/machinery. Pharmachem
exports expanded 4.8 per cent in 2004, and have
witnessed dramatic growth since 1999, expanding
in aggregate by 77.6 per cent. Machinery, which
includes ICT products, continued its decline in
2004 with exports falling by 2.8 per cent. This
is in line with the trend in recent years, with
the value of exports falling by 12.7 per cent
between 1999 and 2004. The foreign-owned
sector accounted for 87.6 per cent of Irish
exports in 2004 with the indigenously owned
sector accounting for the remainder. The
indigenously owned sector is much less export
orientated, exporting less than 40 per cent of
its output. Much of the increased output from the
indigenous sector over the last decade has been
destined for the growing domestic market rather
than export markets. However, in terms of their
direct expenditure in the Irish economy, the
contribution of indigenous exporters is similar
to that of foreign-owned exporters. Foreign firms
spent 17.8 billion on payroll and Irish goods and
services in 2004, while Enterprise Ireland
supported indigenous firms spent 16.2 billion.
16Third Level Qualification Nationality
17(No Transcript)
18(No Transcript)
19Dr. Woodrow Wilson was the only American
President to have earned the PhD award he
studied political science.
- There is an ideal at the heart of everything
American, and the ideal at heart of the American
university is intellectual training, the
awakening of the whole person, the thorough
introduction of the student to the life of
America and of the modern world, the completion
of the task undertaken by the grammar and high
schools of equipping that student for the full
duties of citizenship. . . . 1909
20Ethos of IRCSET Council
- Do not diminish education and researcher
formation to utility - Support the best candidates based on academic
achieves and preparation - Support mobility across national boundaries and
sectors - Support programmatic Graduate Education, referred
to in some quarters as Graduate Schools.
21Dont forget strengths
- What we dont haverigidities, Prof-driven,
academy and prof. societies in appropriate roles - Current graduates are mobile, no evidence of
adaptation problems internationally - Attractive location for young researchers
- Demographics strong cohort of younger,
relatively new, PIs, completion age expectation - Strong environments in PRTLI and SFI PI areas
- Leverage structuring effect of additional funds
22Graduate School?
- Ask not what is a Graduate School
- Rather
- Ask what drives graduate education and how should
it be structured for the decades ahead. - gt structured graduate formation involving but
depth and breadth
23Environmental analysis
- Every nation region needs to attract ( retain)
the best scholars - Recognition of global competition focus has
moved from USA to fear of Asia - More Postgrads needed, but with the right skills
and exposed to different attitudes - Mobility between sectors of the economy needs to
radically change - While few expect Scientific civil service, the
stepping stones to research career need to be
articulated and plotted
24Environment 2
- Structural reforms in EU
- Framework programmes
- Frontier Research The Euro Challenge
- Marie Curie probability of co-funding
- Lisbon agenda gone slow?
- Differential advantage for Ireland
- Linkage in to American corporate culture
- European Institute of Technology?
25Driving forces
- Quality only one level- global best group by
discipline - Growing international mobility-drives local
culture of attainment, energises community - Minimum scale must be achieved if bipolar system
maintained gt? - Transferable skills and disciplinary specialist
skills can be centre based - Need to cluster around top PIs as part of
supervisory team
26Graduate Education Programmespart of the
solution--
- Focus more on the needs of the researcher in
formation-secondly the dynamics of the research
field and finally the institution (response to
needs) - More transparency in setting expectations and
encouraging progress - More opportunities for experience prior to
commitment to research area
27On choosing a supervisor--
- Questions to help select a Supervisor
http//www.phd-survey.org/advice/Advice20-20sect
ion20three.htm - Others that go close to addressing the issue are
- http//nextwave.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/20
04/09/09/19 - http//nextwave.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/20
03/08/21/6 - http//www.grad.ac.uk/cms/ShowPage/Home_page/Onlin
e_resources/What_Do_PhDs_Do_/Getting_the_most_from
_a_PhD/p!eXeccpL
28One view of research career--
- Main stagesnot training, but a preparation
- Scissors diagram, the whole population
- Torsten Wiesels tree and rich variety of
experience - Reject pipeline approach-skills needs analysis
incomplete--- - Cries for selectivity without selection mechanism
for priorities?
29Do not expect career to be linear
30However, we need to select our metaphor
carefully (with thanks to http//www.michael-bus
selle.com/ViewPic.asp?ID2322)
31Let one thousand flowers bloom--
32Selection-far from natural!
- Scientists know from experience that important
things are rarely found by deliberately looking
for them and that science often takes unexpected
turns. Politicians and the public do not know
that - How to cope with scientific élites and excellence
in a democratic societyJohannes R.
RandeggerPresident of the Swiss Parliamentary
Committeefor Science, Education and Culture
33Topic for Postgrad Research
- Have you a strong interest in a particular field
of research? - What experiences have you of actually working in
that discipline examples might include summer
work, tutorials or any exposure to postgraduates
already working in it. - Will the requirements of developing a career in
that field suit your desired behaviour office
work, laboratory environment, field work,
intensive work on computers? - Look at some current papers related to the PhD
topic of interest how dynamic is the field, how
available are the data, are you interested in
reading the material even if it stretches your
comprehension at this point?
34Possibility Research focus
- But two types of Postdoc
- Fellowships and rights
- Research contract and outputs
- Both have PhDs with contracts but are different
- Elitist world-only the best survive
- For unto every one that hath shall be given ,
and he shall have abundance , but from him that
hath not shall be taken away even that which he
hath St Matthew
35Research training agenda?
- Marie Curie Fellowships, Charter, Bologna process
are enabling - No prescription of one true and indivisible way
to training excellence - Welcome conference opening up discussion
INSERM/MRC/the Weizmann/ EPFL/ Scottish
Universities models - Researchers Charter and portal-http//www.research
careersireland.com - Opportunity to better imagine the future
36Graduate School Programme
- There is a need to recognise the fundamental
importance of - The relationship between the supervisor(s) or
Principal Investigator and the trainee researcher - The undertaking of novel scientific and
technological research of the highest quality - The traditional forms of doctoral training must
be augmented and supported by new structures and
procedures if Ireland is to achieve our objective
of being an acknowledged leader in training
researchers in the formative phase of their
careers1 1 From IRCSET Vision 2015
Ireland will be an acknowledged leader in
training researchers in the formative phase of
their careers to ensure that they develop
adaptable and enquiring minds in their specialist
research disciplines and interdisciplinary work
in order to underpin the knowledge based economy.
37United Kingdom
- Response of the Institutes to Quality dynamic
- 1994 24 GS, discipline based, UKCGE
- 2004 95 GS in 125 HEIs, 46 institution wide
- 2004
- 31 of HEIS have single GS
- 34 have multiple GS at Faculty/School level
- Beginnings of regional coordination
- Bristol, Oxford, Manchester-preferred partner
University for pharma-chem sector - Scottish example seen as real opportunity
38Vision of SUPA
- Area currently strong with 5 active FRS
professors - SUPA will place Scotland at the forefront of
research in physics - Promotion and coordinated pursuit of excellence
through -
- Agreed national strategy
- Inter-institutional management structure
- Coherent approach to staffing strategy
- Highest quality research training
- Enhanced funding opportunities
39Physics Research in Scotland
RGU
Aberdeen
Abertay
Dundee
GCU
St Andrews
Glasgow
Edinburgh
Strathclyde
Heriot Watt
Paisley
Napier
Physics research is located in geographically
close HEIs
40Achieving impact
SUPA aspires to the success of Stanford, MIT, etc.
Critical mass is needed to address the big
scientific problems of this new century
41Graduate School
- The key components
- New advanced courses pooling expertise across
Scotland - an attractor for the best staff and students
- High-prestige prize studentships open to all
nationalities - block advertising to achieve maximum
international visibility - International Summer Schools attracting top
physicists from around the world - 40-year track-record and proven international
reputation of the Scottish Universities Summer
Schools in Physics (SUSSP) - Pan-Scotland relay of research seminars and
colloquia - dedicated AccessGrid facilities in each physics
department
42Supporting structures, UK
- Roberts money-skills training, 850 pa
- Framework
- Capacity building UK Grad 1.8m 50 to students
to attend courses and Hubs - Sharing of best practice, policy for a
- HEFCE actions full economic costing
- Remember RAE, major allocation, provide
- 26k over 3 years
- 30k through grants and other measures
- So shaping actions as opposed to major policy
shift
43Finland vis a vis US Closely linked, but
independent
- GS independent academic orgs. not formally
attached to University - admin umbrella - Directors, board members, teachers, supvs are not
employed by GS but are part of University faculty - GS do not award PhD and not directly involved in
approving dissertations - GS funding covers salary of doctoral students and
some of coordinators through host institutions - Research not done at GS, but at host and sector
- Courses, seminars, guest lectures open to all
students, and GS students participate in other
courses
44Finland
- 124 Graduate schools and 1,459 doctoral students
- Biosciences and Environment 15
- 15 Graduate schools
- 220 doctoral students
- Health Sciences 17
- 17 Graduate Schools
- 249 doctoral students
- Humanities and Social Sciences
- 45 Graduate schools
- 371 doctoral students
- Natural Sciences and Engineering
- 47 Graduate Schools
- 618 doctoral students
45Strategic issues
- Not just supply and demand need systems of
innovation approach - Govt, industry and University triple Helix
- Need to re-emphasise the Tree as a model, not the
pipeline (Torsten Wiesel) - Globally competitive Postdoc competitions
consistent with reasonable retention
46Tactical Issues
- Formal commitment to research profession with
rules of association - Across disciplinary boundaries and institutional
boundaries - Professional society? www.nationalpostdoc.org
www.eurodoc.com - Explicit career path with clear indicators and
quality goals
47Johns Hopkins Medical - Guidelines for
Postdoctoral Training Programs
- An initial appointment period of up to three
years with reappointment on an annual basis. Six
years would be the total time allowed for
appointment as a fellow. - In some circumstances, the six year total time
may be exceeded. Guidelines should be in place in
each department in order to justify extending the
training period. Exceptions would be recommended
by the preceptor to the Department Director and
reviewed by the Associate Dean for Postdoctoral
Programs - A time frame for notification of
non-reappointment should be established. This
should occur at least six months prior to the end
of the current appointment period. - All fellowship programs should have documentation
regarding educational goals and objectives. - A postdoctoral training committee should be
established in each department. The committee
would meet with all fellows at least once a year
during the fellowship to provide evaluation,
counseling and career assessment. - Fellows should be informed that a postdoctoral
fellowship appointment is not tantamount to a
faculty appointment at the conclusion of the
program.
48Dr. Woodrow Wilson was the only American
President to have earned the PhD award, in his
case for political science.
- There is an ideal at the heart of everything
American, and the ideal at heart of the American
university is intellectual training, the
awakening of the whole person, the thorough
introduction of the student to the life of
America and of the modern world, the completion
of the task undertaken by the grammar and high
schools of equipping that student for the full
duties of citizenship. . . . - We have misconceived and misused the college as
an instrument of American life when we have
organized it and used it as a place of special
preparation for particular tasks and callings. It
is for liberal training, for general discipline,
for that preliminary general enlightenment which
everyone should have who enters modern life
with any intelligent hope or purpose of
leadership and achievement. 1909
49In Summary
- Formation is certainly the start of the working
life-- - The career, as ever, depends on the
individualHow much research in that career an
open question - Some additional breadth during formation
experience is indicated - Stage in research system maturity can work for
us.
50In conclusion, another American association---
- Mendels concept of the laws of genetics was lost
to the world for a generation because his
publication did not reach the few who were
capable of grasping and extending it - Vannevar Bush, The Atlantic Monthly, July 1945 As
we may think - A plea to energise the many, to be inclusive in
design of Graduate Education Programmes in some
ways similar to Romers observation. - Note electrical engineer and administrator,
foresaw hypertext (Memex) and new learning
paradigms