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Title: Kemal Hanjalic


1
DRUGI KONGRES BH NAUCNIKA IZ ZEMLJE I
SVIJETA Sarajevo 28-31 august 2008
Towards Research and Education Excellence
Values and Evaluations
Kemal Hanjalic Marie Curie Chair La Sapienza
University of Rome, Italy Emeritus Professor
Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands
and University of Sarajevo, BH
2
Contents
Science, education and technological development

Challenges for developing countries
Aiming at the top Some
experience from a European technological
university
Research quality assessment Criteria and practice
Individual evaluation of scientists Criteria and
relativization
Some new trends Joining the forces
Popularisation and public image of science
3
Some folklore
Industrial and economic development and
prosperity of a nation
Achievements in science and investment in
research
?
Science and research
A major driving force for progress
?
The Linear model Research ? Development ?
Production ? Marketing
The widening gap in Economics and Influence
between the nations of the South and North is
basically the Science Gap (Abdus Salam)
Only few nations in the world, which are leading
in science, are drawing enormous capital gain
through selling high-tech goods, BUT..,
4
Questions
  • Does it really mean that catching up with the
    top science is the only
  • way to reduce the development gap? (Japan,
    South Korea, Taiwan,..?)
  • Can developing countries afford to match the
    investment into research
  • of leading countries? What is the minimum
    threshold?
  • How about the manpower?
  • Would the industry of those countries be able
    to absorb all scientific
  • and innovative achievements, and convert them
    into commercial
  • products competitive at the world market?
  • CRUCIAL ISSUE the choice of priorities
    appropriate science and
  • technology policy to utilize comparative
    advantages

5
Correlation between the science and economy
effectiveness
(Science impact of nations, David King, Nature
430, 2004)
6
Recommendation by the InterAcademy Council, IAC,
in response to the appeal of Kofi Annan
7
Practice (in some countries)
  • Smaller, less developed countries, tend to
    imitate the leading
  • industrial nations
  • Engineers tend to advocate technologically most
    advanced options
  • Economists often go along with these ambitions
    (lack of accountability!)

But,
  • Technological progress in the economic sense
    does not always
  • coincide with the technological progress in
    the technical sense!
  • Even smaller communities can concentrate
    manpower and resources
  • and achieve technological breakthroughs and
    independence from import
  • but this would hold the developments in other
    industrial sectors!

8
TK vs SK (Technological vs Scientific Knowledge)
There is a category of information which can be
called Technological Knowledge, (TK) more
important (than SK) for the success in
commercial market through the entire period of
industrial era. (S. Kline)
  • Science usually does not finish the task of
    innovation
  • Manufacturing skill and operative knowledge
    lead countries like Japan to
  • become a leading economic power, despite a
    shortage of Nobel laureates.

This does not mean that Science should be left
only to the rich! But,
  • Selection of priorities and a balanced
    commitment on both, own basic
  • research and acquisition of knowledge from
    any source and with all
  • means at our disposal (Emperor, Japan, 1870)
  • Seeking, acquiring and transferring knowledge
    is a complex technology
  • on its own,
  • the Knowledge Technology ? top priority of
    the Educational System!

9
Some dilemmas (in not-so-developed countries)
  • How to use best the modest scientific
    potential, established
  • internationally, but isolated in their home
    environment)
  • How to motivate those pin heads on a pin
    cushion to employ
  • their knowledge and skill to the benefits
    and goals of the society?
  • The responsibility and duty of the
    establishment
  • to recognize that such a potential exists at
    home,
  • to secure minimum research infrastructure
  • to stimulate and direct it to the carefully
    selected priority goals
  • Equally important is that Industry
  • recognizes and accepts such a potential as an
    opportunity for
  • its innovative undertaking,
  • delegates a portion of its research and
    development to this
  • community (usually concentrated at
    universities)

10
Technological Development and Higher Education
  • Applied and development research ?
  • sublimation of knowledge and
    innovation and transformation
  • into a new value, product and
    quality, but
  • Basic research generates new knowledge and new
    skills
  • Universities sue generis generators and
    disseminators of
  • new knowledge
  • Only the scientists who contribute steadily to
    the world science
  • treasure are capable of drawing the top
    knowledge
  • Major weaknesses in the technological development
    loop
  • Science and Education
    systems
  • (especially in
    developing countries)

11
Technological Development Loop
Cannot function if at any level the critical
threshold is not achieved!
12
Aiming at the Top Some experience from TU Delft
  • Ambition to belong to the world top league ?
    motivation for recent
  • major transformations and reforms in
    technological universities
  • Knowledge-based economy ? Search for new
    identity, concept, role

  • and niche in the society
  • Paradoxically
  • a continuous decline in student enrolment ?
    loss of interest in science
  • Re-establishing respect and social status of the
    profession
  • ? reverse the negative trend in student
    enrolment

13
TU Delft ID
  • One of (only 3) technical universities in Nl (
    Eindhoven and Twente)
  • (Nl total 16
    universities, 16.5 million inhabitants)
  • 1842 founded as Royal Academy for Education of
    Civil Engineers
  • 1863 ? Polytechnische Hooghschool (Polytechnic
    High School)
  • 1905 ? Technische Hoogschool (Technical High
    School)
  • 1986 ? Technische Universitait (University of
    Technology)
  • Students 13500 (yearly enrolment about 2400),
    700 PhDs
  • Staff 4600 (820 academics of which 200 full
    professors)
  • Yearly output
  • 1500 graduate engineers (MSc), 180 PhDs, 40
    Design diplomas
  • 6000 scientific publications (2006)
  • 2300 professional publications
  • 40-60 patents
  • Annual budget about 400 M (1/3 external)
  • World ranking 17th among techn. universities
    (2005 The Times HES)
  • Aim to belong to the top 5 in the world!

14
TU Delft Major transformation from 1999
.. to adjust to global trends and to prepare for
the social and academic demands of the 21st
century in the new, internationally oriented
world of education and research
research-driven university
  • 13 faculties ? re-clustered into 7
  • new educational strategy, menus and
    curricula
  • research-inspired teaching, thinking above
    knowing , learn to learn,
  • new vocabulary and nomenclature
    (sound-bait, name-game
  • e.g. Departments of Multi-scale
    Physics, Mediamatica, Haptics,
  • adopting Bologna Bachelor-Master (Ba-Ma)
    system (2002)
  • (all MSc courses and some BSc (e.g.
    Aero-space) in English
  • systematic popularization of the university
    in media
  • campaigns in high-schools
  • students macro and mega -projects at the
    university level
  • Some effects student enrolment increased in
    2003 by 14!

15
Student (Mega) Projects
Nuna II, the solar powered car TUD Two
successive winners of Solar Challenge (3010 km
race across Australia)
Wind Turbine in the Faculty Building Aero-space
Engineering
16
TU Delft in Public Media 1481 times in one year
17
New University Structure and Organization
Key changes and emphasis
  • multi-disciplinary and
  • inter-faculty long-term
  • projects and activities
  • concentration of manpower
  • and resources, synergy

18
Delft Research Centres ? Technology Programmes
  • Computational science and technology
  • Earth observation, utilization, environment and
    engineering
  • Energy sources, sustainability, conversion and
    use
  • Information and communication technology
  • Life science and technology
  • Management and design of multi-functional
    infrastructures
  • Material science
  • Mechatronics and micro-systems
  • Mobility of persons and transportation of goods
  • Nanotechnology
  • Sustainable industrial processes
  • Sustainable environment in urban areas
  • Water environment, cycles, infrastructure and
    management

If demands in the past have brought us this
far, where will demands in the future take us?
Curiosity is our drive, knowledge is our core
business and society is our partner!
19
TUD Research Centres some projects
Self-healing materials
CO2 Washing is safer
20
Quality Assessment
  • Systematic, since 1993, under the aegis of
    VSNU (Association of
  • Universities in Nl) and KNAW (Royal Dutch
    Academy of Arts and
  • Sciences)
  • Guiding principles stipulated by
  • 1994 Protocol for the Quality Assessment of
    Research
  • (reviewed and amended in 1998)
  • The Standard Evaluation Protocol for Public
    Research
  • Organizations 2003-2009 (novelty public
    accountability!)
  • Primary objectives
  • Improvement of the research quality ..by
    international standards
  • Improvement of research management and
    leadership
  • accountability to higher management, funding
    agencies,
  • government and society at large
  • Combined retrospective and prospective analysis

21
Quality Assessment, cont.
The unit of evaluation
  • Research program a group of researchers
    with an articulated shared
  • mission, operating under the same management
    (chair, section)

The basis for evaluation
  • Programme description, research portfolio,
    publications (5 key publ.,
  • full list of articles, books, design and
    software, patents, invited lectures,
  • contracts with industry, international
    network, other products)
  • Self-assessment with SWOT analysis
  • (Strengths Weaknesses Opportunities
    Threats)
  • Bibliographic- bibliometric (citation) analysis
  • (provided by the Centre for Science and
    Technology Studies of the
  • Leiden University)
  • Analysis of age distribution per programme
  • Any other relevant information

22
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Quality Assessment Criteria
Quality a measure of excellence and excitement,
the eminence of a group's research activities,
its abilities to perform at the highest level and
its achievements in the international scientific
community. Productivity the total (reviewed)
output of the group Relevance scientific,
technical and socio-economic impact of the work
(importance to developments or questions in
society at large). Vitality and feasibility
internal and external dynamics of the group, its
flexibility, ability to close research lines that
have no future, to initiate new venture projects

24
Quality Assessment Rating (five-point scale)
Excellent (5) work at the forefront
internationally, most likely to have an
important and substantial impact in the field
Institute considered as an international leader.
Very good (4) work internationally
competitive, expected to make a significant
contribution nationally at the forefront
Institute is an international player, national
leader Good (3) work competitive at the
national level, will probably make a valuable
contribution in the international field
Institute considered as internationally visible
and a national player Satisfactory (2) work
is solid but not exciting will add to
understanding and is in principle worthy of
support Institute is nationally visible
Unsatisfactory (1) work that is neither solid
nor exciting, flawed in the scientific/technical
approach, repetition of other work, not worthy of
support
25
Quality Assessment Some results and consequences
1996 Assessment of Research Quality in Physics in
Nl
  • 101 groups evaluated, typical size 20-40
    people (1-3 full profs.,
  • 3-5 assoc/assistant profs, 3-5 technical
    staff rest PhDs and postdocs)
  • Peer Committee findings More than 10
    excellent, over 50 above
  • (still acceptable) satisfactory level
  • The TU Delft Executive Board decided in 1996 to
    close the last-ranked
  • section (of total 16), as a warning and
    demonstration of importance
  • to the peer evaluation/ enhance dynamics in
    university restructuring!

2002 Assessment of Research Quality TU Delft
Leiden Univ.
  • We should not measure ourselves with the
    domestic yardstick and
  • compete among ourselves, but to enter the
    international scene
  • Results in general congruent with those from
    1996 (some exceptions)

26
Evaluation of individual scientists multiple
criteria
1. Bibliometric Indicators, (relative citation
impact)
  • Different publication and citation cultures in
    different areas of science,
  • The role of the cited author in the team
    initiator/ leader and just a member

2. Keynote and plenary lectures at international
events
Recongition of forefront, actual, comprehensive,
original research
3. Citations and elaboration in books,
textbooks, monographs,..
Recognition of permanent archival value of
research results, broader popularity
4. Popular recognition in news media
ScienceNews, ScienceDaily, ScienceGuide,
EurekaAlert, Innovation Report,..
5. International Awards, Memberships and
Fellowships in learned and professional
organizations and associations
6. Editorship of international journals,
initiation and organization of
international conferences and other scientific
events..
7. .
27
Bibliometric Indicators and Citation Statistics
  • Citation index a treasure of quantitaive
    information most scientists
  • are keenly interested in how often their work
    is cited!
  • Can be used to identify influential research,
    new trends, connections
  • across fields, .., but
  • Absolute citation number can be misleading
    (different cultures, number
  • of authors, negative/dubious citations,..)
  • More objective and relevant are different
    relative citation impact and
  • other criteria such as
  • h factor the number of papers cited at least
    as many times as
  • that number
  • Cumulative advantage how probable is that a
    publication continues
  • to be cited at a monotonically increasing rate
  • Others

28
220 authors!
29
Bibliometric Indicators
Basic Indicators
Crown Indicators
Auxiliary Indicators
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Some New Trends Joining the Forces
  • Severe competition on the global scale
  • ? joint missions,
    alliance, integration, amalgamation,..
  • Long-term cooperative programmes, projects,
    exchange of students
  • and personnel,.. with universities worldwide
  • Earlier initiative IDEA League
  • Imperial College, Delft University, ETH
    Zurich, Aachen University
  • More recent initiative Dutch Institute of
    Technology - 3TU
  • (Delft, Eindhoven and Twente Universities of
    Technology)
  • Still more recent European Institute of
    Technology - EIT
  • (an initiative from the EU Research
    Commissioner, Brussels)

37
Example of Joint Research Ventures
- National University of Singapore - Eindhoven
Univ. Technology (Nl) - MIT (USA)
38
Public Image of Science in Nl
Ranking, counting, comparing,..
39
Public Image of Science in Nl
Most cited scientist
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National Science Quiz, 25 December, 22.00 hr.
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