Title: Towards Good Practice in Research Capacity Building
1Towards Good Practice in (Research) Capacity
Building Mike Wallace, Round 1 RDI
Project Building Management Research
Capacity Training Researchers as Trainers
Chris Taylor, Round 2 RDI Project BERA/ESRC
2007 Residential Summer School
2Session Aims
- Introduce the thinking behind our RDI projects,
share issues and dilemmas, and raise questions of
good practice - Explore these questions in relation to
participants contribution to research capacity
building
3Management and Education Research in Context
- Lowest rate of securing ESRC grants
- Eclectic and applied fields with strong normative
practical focus - Contestation within the field (challenge of
rigour plus relevance) - Demography - ageing profile
- Multiple career entry points (including
experienced practitioners)
4Contrasts between Management and Education
- Salaries higher in business schools
- But recruitment and retention compete with even
higher business salaries - Greater value contestation in field of education
over ends and means - Pro-capitalism values tend to frame management,
public service values tend to frame education
5Research Council Initiative Learned Society
6 Dialogue and Analysis
- Conception of academic lifecourse stages
- Research and training roles at different stages
- Demography numbers at different stages now and
in future - Existing training provision and identified gaps
in relation to roles and stages - Priority development needs linked to tasks for
roles at particular stages, and to demography - Range of learning support activities to meet
priority needs and their potential impact - Resourcing parameters set by RDI and the
institutional contribution
7 AIM-BAM Joint Plan
- Meet development needs for different roles
- Train management researchers in their secondary
role as trainers of research students and other
researchers(AIM RDI project) - Build capacity of all management researchers in
their primary role as researchers across academic
life course(BAM RDI project, other AIM and BAM
activities)
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9Informed by Model of Learning Stages and Learning
Support
- Wallace, M (1999) When is experiential learning
not experiential learning? - in Murphy, P (ed) Learners, Learning and
Assessment London Paul Chapman in association
with the Open University
10Stages in learning
Existing performance of management research tasks
Challenge to existing performance
Increased awareness, and justification for
development
Rationale for development
Practical ideas on how to develop
Practice in developing performance
Improved performance of management research tasks
11Stages in learning Components of
Learning Support
Existing performance of management research tasks
Diagnosis
Challenge to existing performance
Increased awareness, and justification for
development
Critical understanding
Rationale for development
Practical information
Practical ideas on how to develop
Skills
Practice in developing performance
Integration into skilful performance
Improved performance of management research tasks
12Stages in learning Components of
Learning Support
Previous experience
Existing performance of management research tasks
Task performance
Diagnosis
From research, professional knowledge, theory,
policy
Challenge to existing performance
From personal theories of action
Increased awareness, and justification for
development
Critical understanding
General principles
Specific information necessary for tasks
Rationale for development
Practical information
General research and personal development
Practical ideas on how to develop
Specific for research tasks
Skills
Practice in developing performance
Specific for learning activity
Integration into skilful performance
Range of tasks
Improved performance of management research tasks
Specific tasks
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16AIM RDI Project
17Attempt to Maximise Impact
- strategic - train trainers (cascade)
- inclusive - open to all business schools
- fill key gap - logic of enquiry materials
- regional provision - access, networking
- workshop series - depth of learning and impact on
practice - informal learning agreement - participants commit
to series, dean endorses - levy modest fee for series at outset
18Modular Learning Support Sequence
Preparatory Work Diagnose issues through
reviewing practice, present knowledge Problematise
practice, stimulate thinking through reading
Workshop Sessions Link participants experience
and knowledge to present activity Expert input on
a new research training topic Plan follow-up work
to integrate ideas from input into practice
Follow-up Work Activity to support integration
into practice Prepare for next workshop report
back, diagnose etc
19Problems and Promising Developments
- Modest recruitment to workshop series so far -
not universally high priority for deans/HoSs or
potential participants - Significant number of no-shows, often without
notice (even though charged) - patchy response from experts in the management
field - reliant on goodwill - but
- participants appreciate inputs and networking
opportunity - early evidence of impact on practice
20What is the best balance between
- Superficial practical information giving for wide
coverage vs sustained guidance for a few on real
job tasks with feedback? - Centralised projects which risk dependence vs
regional or local projects which risk
unacceptable diversity? - Open invitation which mainly attracts enthusiasts
vs mandating which mainly generates
unenthusiastic compliance?
21BERA / ESRC 2007 Residential Summer School
- Four day residential summer school for education
research students in Cardiff - Joint funding with British Educational Research
Association (BERA) - Annual event in BERA calendar
- In the past funded under the ESRC Training and
Development Activities - Lots of demand from research students
- BUT difficulty in encouraging someone or HEI to
organise high quality summer school
22Rationale for Summer School
- Political economy of research and funding in UK
education - Demographic crisis in education research a
new cohort of education researchers - Limited research infrastructure (experiential and
training) in individual education departments
exposure to ideas and methods normally unfamiliar
to students - Key role for the Learned Society and its
membership (British Educational Research
Association)
23Foreseen Problems
- Diverse group of participants
- range of experiences, ages, and approaches to
empirical research - Some (many?) not career researchers
- Cost-benefits of capacity-building investments
- Practitioner research issues
- contribution to knowledge in the field, personal
expertise, apprenticeships to something more - HE Institutional responsibilites?
- Research supervision and training
- ESRC Recognition
24What is the best balance (2) between
- Life-stage/cycle of the academic researcher vs
Demographics of (new) education researchers - (short-term) Practitioner-based research skills
vs (long-term) Social science skills of education
research - The role of HEIs and employers vs Externally
coordinated/funded activities