AHRC Strategy, Programmes and Future Directions - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 40
About This Presentation
Title:

AHRC Strategy, Programmes and Future Directions

Description:

AHRC receives 2.8% of the science and research budget. AHRC in these Contexts. Quality: ... Launch of British Museum review. Impact Workshops. What Economic' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:41
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 41
Provided by: lau19
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: AHRC Strategy, Programmes and Future Directions


1
AHRC Strategy, Programmes and Future Directions
Professor Shearer West Director of Research
2
  • Political Contexts Department of Innovation,
    Universities and Skills
  • Gordon Browns formation of the Department of
    Innovation, Universities and Skills (DIUS) in
    autumn 2007 (combining OST and university and
    skills sectors of Department for Education and
    Skills)
  • Scrutiny of dual support (85 of a h funding
    from QR)

3
  • Political Contexts Recession
  • Higher Education Funding Council for England
    (HEFCE) announcement about science ring-fence
    (STEM also ring-fenced in other parts of the UK)
  • Brown April budget very tight for higher
    education but Research Council ring-fence
    retained
  • Will put greater demand on Research Council
    resources

4
  • Political Contexts Recession
  • Higher Education Funding Council for England
    (HEFCE) announcement about science ring-fence
    (STEM also ring-fenced in other parts of the UK
  • Brown April budget very tight for higher
    education but Research Council ring-fence
    retained
  • HEFCE agreed that, as a contribution to the
    overall efficiency saving of 180 million
    required in the 2010-11 financial year, a 65
    million saving would be applied to teaching grant
    in the 2009-10 academic year.
  • Research allocations will be unaffected in
    2009-10.
  • The HEFCE Board has provisionally agreed that 16
    million of efficiency savings will be sought from
    the quality-related (QR) element of research
    funding in 2010-11.

5
  • Contexts Academic Perspective
  • Arts and humanities had 5 RAEs before they had
    a research council
  • RAE apparently pulling in different direction
    than Research Councils
  • REF to bridge the gap through impact assessment

6
AHRC in these Contexts
  • History
  • AHRB (splinter of British Academy) formed 1998
  • AHRC Royal Charter April 2005
  • Over the last four years the AHRC has benefited
    from a 35 uplift in funding, from 80.5 million
    in 2005/06 to 109 million announced for 2010/11

7
AHRC in these Contexts
  • Scope
  • 27 of research-active academic community within
    AHRC remit
  • Over 14,000 academics
  • Approximately 50 disciplines/sub-disciplines
  • AHRC receives 2.8 of the science and research
    budget

8
AHRC in these Contexts
  • Quality
  • Arts and humanities research received the
    highest percentage of 4 ratings in the 2008 RAE

9
Principal Schemes
  • Research Grants
  • Fellowships
  • Networks
  • Studentships

10
  • Changes to funding schemes in January 2009
  • Open deadlines for RGs in place
  • First awards being processed under new peer
    review structure
  • Research Networks and Workshops changed to
    Research Networking Scheme, with greater support
    for international collaboration

11
  • Research Careers Fellowships
  • Plans for the new Fellowships scheme were
    announced in January 2009
  • Following Future Directions consultation, further
    consideration will be given to the support
    offered to early career researchers
  • Development of Impact Fellowships for Strategic
    Programme Directors for follow-on activities

12
  • Studentships
  • Through BGP 199 million investment to create
    over six thousand new MA and PhD places over the
    next five years
  • BGPs have stimulated HEIs to generate integrated
    research and PG strategies and encouraged further
    investment in PGs
  • Open studentship scheme in process
  • Collaborative doctoral awards fostering new
    partnerships with non-HEI sector

13
  • Strategic Programmes
  • Digital Economy 6 Doctoral Training Centres
    supported, 3 include arts and humanities
  • 7 multi-disciplinary Large Grants funded under
    Beyond Text programme, call for Small Grants
    launched

14
  • Global Uncertainties
  • Ideas and Beliefs 14 awards made, 6 in arts
    and humanities
  • 3 Networking, 7 Small Grants funded under RS
    Youth Call

15
  • LWEC workshop
  • Workshop jointly organised by Landscape
    Environment and Science Heritage programmes to
    consider what the arts and humanities can
    contribute to the LWEC programme
  • As part of our contribution to LWEC, we are
    developing a supplementary call under the LE
    programme for Networks and/or small exploratory
    awards

16
  • Digital Economy/British Library Sandpit
  • AHRC initiative led to scoping workshop held 18
    March 2009
  • Three-day sandpit to be held in July looking at
    interactions between digital technologies,
    research and physical environments
  • Development of new digital research centre for BL

17
  • Connected Communities
  • Analysis of outcomes of AHRC Future Directions
    consultation for Connected Communities
  • Consultation to be held with Local Authority
    Cross-Council Institute, 1st June 2009
  • Consultation with key cross-Council stakeholders,
    2nd June
  • International links are being developed, as this
    is a priority area for other countries as well
    (Australia, USA)

18
  • International
  • Humanities in European Research Area call for
    Cultural Dynamics and Creativity and
    Innovation has received approximately 250
    applications 2/3 have UK partners
  • AHRC co-funding awards under ESFs Eurobabel
    programme to address Endangered Languages
  • Net-Heritage project progressing well. A new MoU
    has been signed with the Italian Research Council
  • International Strategy agreed
  • 40 applications for Library of Congress
    studentships 35 AHRC, 5 ESRC

19
  • Knowledge Transfer
  • KT Strategy launched February 2009
  • 7 KT Fellowships awards made in fifth round
  • 31 KT Partnerships currently funded, 27 in
    partnership with TSB/EPSRC
  • BT Network scheme announced
  • 4 co-funded awards agreed under TSB Creative
    Industiries call Creative Economy programme

20
  • BBC/KT Launch Event
  • AHRC evaluation to inform future co-funding calls
    approaches to partnership working
  • AHRC/BBC event on 27 April 2009 to showcase
    innovative outcomes and impacts of projects
  • High profile academics, BBC policymakers
    production staff, leaders in creative industries,
    Government figures will attend the event.

21
  • Technology Strategy Board
  • AHRC-led workshop with co-funding from TSB in
    June 2009, bringing together leading
    technologists and AHRC Strategic Programme
    Directors researchers
  • TSB is publishing a new strategy for the CI
    sector. The Head of KT will be a member of the
    TSB steering board to implement the strategy
  • AHRC will sponsor the next collaborative call for
    CIs Accessing and commercialising content in a
    digitally networked world

22
  • Impact
  • Impact Task Force report completed
  • Innovation report launched and policy briefing
    developed
  • Launch of British Museum review
  • Impact Workshops

23
  • What Economic Impact Encompasses
  • monetary impacts
  • improvement of public services
  • contribution to public policy
  • human capital
  • contribution to quality of life

24
  • How Arts and Humanities Research Demonstrates
    Impact
  • monetary impacts
  • e.g. creation of new products involving fine
    artists and designers, such as Design against
    Crime, used by pubs and coffee shops

25
  • How Arts and Humanities Research Demonstrates
    Impact
  • improvement of public services
  • e.g. research feeding into museums, galleries,
    and other public sector organisations through CDA
    awards the Shah Abbas exhibition at the British
    Museum Cambridge philosophers working with BT on
    trust in public life, etc.

26
How Arts and Humanities Research Demonstrates
Impact
  • contribution to public policy
  • e.g. House of Commons Select Committee use of
    findings from Edinburgh Centre for Intellectual
    Property Home Office use of research from
    Religion and
  • Society programme

27
  • Increasing policy influence
  • Developing evidence base of awards with policy
    influence
  • Raising profile of arts and humanities research
    with policymakers
  • Brokering connections between researchers and
    policymakers
  • Developing Policy Fellowships in partnership with
    ESRC

28
How Arts and Humanities Research Demonstrates
Impact
  • human capital
  • 535,000 undergraduates and postgraduates studying
    arts and humanities subjects at any one time
  • 145,000 arts and humanities graduates per year
  • 75 of AHRC-funded Ph.D.s are in academic posts
  • Overseas research students bring in 2 billion
    per annum to the UK economy

29
  • How Arts and Humanities Research Demonstrates
    Impact
  • Quality of life
  • indirect economic impact
  • enhancing intellectual life, divergent thinking
    and tolerance building on centuries of heritage,
    maintenance and growth of UK cultural richness
  • Encourages inward investment and tourism

30
Ways of Achieving Impact Knowledge Transfer
  • The processes by which new knowledge is
    co-produced through interactions between academic
    and non-academic individuals and communities.
  • Recognition that this is often a process of
    exchange

31
Ways of Achieving Impact Dissemination
  • The processes by which knowledge that is
    generated through academic research is made
    available to audiences beyond the immediate peer
    community.

32
  • New Section of Grants Forms
  • Impact summaries and statements introduced in all
    applications as of March 2009
  • Training of Peer Reviewers in progress
  • FAQ document and Guide for applicants on AHRC
    website
  • Letter sent to 2,000 contacts
  • Currently developing supplementary guidance and
    examples of potential impact for applicants,
    supported by case studies of good practice

33
Impact Beneficiaries and Impact section of grants
  • Recognition that impacts cannot always be
    predicted
  • Opportunity to engage with community to grow
    capacity for non-academic benefits
  • Intended to boost the profile of arts and
    humanities research with other stakeholders and
    the public
  • Not intended to be used as a sanction but to
    encourage academics to engage with others outside
    the academic community
  • World-class research without non-academic impact
    not to be disadvantaged

34
  • Future Directions
  • Consultation launched February 2009
  • Closing date 11 May
  • Advisory Board and Council to discuss outcomes in
    June

35
Future Directions Areas open for consultation
  • What broad research themes do you consider
    should attract specific funding from the AHRC,
    both those lying within the arts and humanities
    research domain, and those that extend beyond it?
     

36
Future Directions Consultation
  • What more could the AHRC do to ensure arts and
    humanities research and researchers are more
    central and influential in cross-Council
    programmes?
  • What types of national capital facilities do you
    consider the AHRC should support?

37
Future Directions Consultation
  • How should the AHRC develop its brokerage role to
    support academics in realising the full range of
    the impact of their research?
  • Do you have specific proposals for how Knowledge
    Transfer could be embedded more fully in
    AHRC-funded research?

38
Future Directions Consultation
  • In what ways can the AHRC use its new Fellowship
    scheme more effectively to support early career
    researchers?
  • What do you see as the key training needs of
    postgraduate students in your field, and by what
    mechanisms could the AHRC help meet these?

39
Future Directions Consultation
  • What do you see as potentially vulnerable
    subject areas or areas of national importance in
    which the AHRC should be supporting postgraduate
    research and training?

40
Future Directions Consultation
  • With which organisations do you consider the AHRC
    should have partnerships and why?
  • What else could the AHRC be doing to facilitate
    international research cooperation in the arts
    and humanities?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com