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Professionalising Research Management

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Title: Professionalising Research Management


1
Professionalising Research Management
  • Post-project conference
  • 30 March 2009
  • Imperial College London

2
Housekeeping
  • Toilets located on each floor and clearly
    marked
  • Entry to Imperial College Business School is
    restricted by swipecard if you need to leave
    and re-enter the building during proceedings,
    please contact one of the organisers/stewards
  • If the fire alarm sounds evacuate the building
    through the front doors if exit through the
    front doors is impossible, fire exits are clearly
    signed on all levels

3
Professionalising Research Management
  • Post-project conference
  • 30 March 2009
  • Imperial College London

4
Introduction
  • Professor Sir Peter Knight FRS
  • Senior Principal
  • Imperial College London

5
UK science and research spending
  • Budget 2004
  • UK expenditure on RD to 2.5 of GDP by 2010
  • America and Japan spend 3 of GDP on research
    and development
  • Spending on science and innovation to increase by
    5.7 a year from 2006/07
  • Comprehensive Spending Review 2007
  • 2.2 annual average real growth for DIUS
  • Spending on public science increasing by annual
    average of 2.5 to 6.3bn by 2010-11
  • Gordon Brown University of Oxford speech 27 Feb.
    2009
  • Importance of research and innovation to help
    navigate economic challenges
  • Science protected from spending cuts during
    downturn
  • Science budget ringfenced until 2014
  • Focus on science as element of economic recovery

6
Changing research environment
  • Global change
  • Scope and scale of funded programmes
  • Bigger, bolder
  • Collaborative
  • Framework arrangements
  • Partnerships
  • Greater emphasis on need to demonstrate impact
    (a.k.a. value for money)

7
Changing research environment
  • Leads to a diverse funding framework
  • EU, international, industry, business funding,
    NGOs
  • Complex legal environment for research
  • Global, competitive market for research funding

8
Why research support matters
  • Increasing demands on staff in research support
  • Help academics bid for and manage funding
  • Add value to academic mission
  • Develop strategic alliances
  • Minimise risks
  • Demonstrate benefits
  • Efficient delivery of quality research is
    critical
  • for universities and their funders
  • for UK plc (Government)
  • for society
  • UK behind other countries in recognising research
    management as a profession
  • Important for funders that their investment
    (financial etc.) is well administered

9
Current picture
  • Huge variation in structures in place to support
    research in English universities
  • Huge variation in the roles undertaken by staff
    who support huge continuum of research and
    innovation
  • No agreement on what qualifications may be
    necessary or advantageous
  • No formally recognised professional training or
    qualifications
  • Some respected courses available but they are ad
    hoc
  • Almost impossible to define what is meant by
    research support
  • Good practice not shared, inefficiencies for the
    sector must be significant

10
Thank you
11
Presentation of findings
  • John Green
  • David Langley

12
Why did we decide to do this?
  • Research, part of a universitys core business,
    is increasingly complex in nature
  • Greater competition, scope and complexity of
    research awards, regulation, audit, governance
  • Complexity of research management has increased
    along with the complexity of research programmes
  • This has resulted in a huge range of functions
    within research management

13
Functions of Research Management
  • Research strategy, planning and policy
    development
  • Horizon scanning for opportunities
  • External environment and drivers, e.g. impact
  • RAE, REF and other metrics
  • HEFCE and HESA reporting
  • Research development and facilitation
  • Pre-award and costing methodologies
  • Bid preparation and applications
  • Specialist knowledge about academic disciplines
  • Research themes
  • Networking with funders, Government, industry, EU
  • Relationship management

14
More functions of Research management
  • Internal peer review
  • Contract negotiation
  • Project management of large contracts, bids and
    awards
  • Post-award management
  • Research budgets and claims
  • Adherence to funder and statutory terms and
    conditions
  • Audit and compliance (HEFCE, EU, RCUK, MHRA, HTA)
  • Portfolio management and reporting
  • Trend analysis
  • Research governance, misconduct, and ethics
  • European funded research
  • Knowledge Transfer, IP, and commercialisation

15
Even more functions of Research Management
  • Spin outs/spin in, business support, social
    enterprise
  • Student enterprise activities
  • Regional agenda
  • Business development and corporate alliances
  • Customer care
  • KTPs
  • Event management
  • Consultancy
  • Research business systems
  • Management information and reporting
  • Postgraduate, fellowships, research staff
  • Training (academics, departmental admin, research
    office staff)

16
Our perception was that ...
  • ... the sector is typified by
  • Lack of consistency, sharing of good practice and
    stability in research office structures
  • Many HEIs restructuring research support
  • Component parts differ across HEIs but are almost
    always fragmented
  • An unrecognised profession
  • Lack of holistic training and appropriate
    qualifications true for departmental
    administrative staff too
  • Poor or ill-defined opportunities for career
    progression
  • Recruitment and retention problems
  • Contrast with US and, maybe, other countries

17
Why is it important?
  • Critical for funders and universities that
  • Resources properly costed, priced, negotiated and
    managed
  • Researchers supported by skilled, high-quality
    professional colleagues throughout
  • Risks well managed
  • Research has the greatest potential to deliver
    key milestones, achievements and impact
  • To achieve this, should the emphasis be on staff
    development as opposed to the increasing emphasis
    on audit with post-hoc penalisation?

18
European funder perspective
  • Without excellent research management, Europes
    research and technological development (RTD) will
    simply not deliver the benefits expected and
    needed.
  • Excellence in research management is also an
    essential enabler of the ambitions of the
    European Commission
  • Expert Group Report, European Commission DG RTD,
    2008

19
Project objectives
  • Identify demand in English universities for the
    development of a professional framework of
    training for Research Management
  • Explore approaches to addressing any identified
    demand

20
Project methodology
  • Representative sample of universities selected
    on
  • Total turnover
  • Amount of externally sponsored Research Income
  • Age of institution
  • Geographic location
  • Total number of students
  • Data collection
  • Broad ranging, semi-structured interviews
  • Two interviewers plus Research Office staff and
    PVCR
  • this has been something akin to organisational
    therapy

21
Research findings strategy
  • Research strategy deemed important but virtually
    all HEIs visited are refreshing it
  • Many research strategies do not translate into
    tangible actions or plans not all are backed
    with resources or joined up with other
    institutional strategies
  • Strategic research budgets vary in existence,
    size and gift
  • Involvement of university research committees in
    setting strategy varies hugely

22
Research findings leadership
  • Academic and administrative leadership of
    research management always in place but variation
    in leadership responsibilities
  • Research Offices led by Registrars, PVC Research,
    PVC Enterprise, PVC External Relations, Directors
    of Finance, but commonly multiple reporting lines
  • Diverse structures in place some common
    components but fragmentation prevails
  • Research Committee remit and composition varies
    considerably Director of Research Services not
    always involved
  • Research Office not always regarded as a standard
    support unit, so has fuzzier reporting lines that
    mix academic with administrative

23
Research findings size
  • Significant variations in size of staff and what
    they do

24
Research findings perceptions
  • Research Management not always understood by
    other parts of university administration
  • Directors of Research Services rarely included at
    top table or high level strategic committees
    (unlike Finance or HR)
  • Few universities realise that Research Office has
    a key role to play in increasing Research Income
    or managing the portfolio
  • Staff within Research Management do not always
    find it easy to identify themselves with a
    professional grouping or activity (unlike Finance
    or HR)
  • Research activity a key indicator of performance
    but few universities realise that Research Office
    could monitor this

25
Research findings recruitment
  • Recruitment often difficult, particularly at
    senior level
  • Varied backgrounds
  • Most people fall into the career

26
Research findings recruitment
  • Preferred qualifications of recruits varies
  • Most appointments external...
  • but given that the role of a research manager
    is so complex and varied, is it any wonder that
    people outside the sector do not understand it,
    and that therefore we might not attract best
    talent?
  • Lack of identity to the activity of Research
    Management

27
Research findings training
  • A number of providers but little co-ordination
    between them
  • No professional framework and few modular
    components to training
  • Most providers highly regarded
  • Universities have budget for training
  • but most rely on internal training

28
Research findings training
  • Existing training patchy across the sector
  • Lack of opportunities for recognised specialist
    training, e.g. research misconduct, governance
  • Lack of training in core skills of Research
    Management most current training provision
    aimed at Knowledge Transfer
  • But, lack of agreement on what core skills
    constitute

29
Implications of the context within which research
is currently managed
  • Research Management in a state of dynamic change
    (people, process and systems)
  • Range of structures, reporting, nomenclature
  • Recruitment, development and career progression
    methodologies not clear
  • Broad range of roles for staff in Research
    Management as a result of its complexity and
    the number of stakeholders involved in research

30
Implications of the context within which research
is currently managed
  • Survey of this size cannot definitively answer
    some issues
  • What is the ideal structure for managing
    research?
  • What is the correct number of staff for given
    profiles?
  • How is Research Management best involved in
    strategic decisions making?
  • How should Research Management be led?
  • Correlation of structure to function will need
    more work

31
Implications of the context within which research
is currently managed
  • Not surprising that
  • Little sharing of practice across sector
  • In-house training dominates and embeds
    differences in approach
  • With inconsistency in structures and behaviours
    it is no wonder that current training provision
    is patchy
  • Is it possible to address training issues in
    this context before identifying and spreading
    good practice across the sector and thereby
    creating more uniformity in the way research is
    managed?

32
Demand for a professional framework
  • Strong sense that there is a need for some kind
    of professional framework for training and
    development
  • Budget holders prepared to pay for training that
    is
  • High quality
  • Modular, flexible
  • Caters for local needs
  • Broad in content but with opportunities to
    specialise
  • Builds to something tangible for staff
  • Becomes recognised and hence valued

33
Demand for a professional framework
  • But concerns about professionalising Research
    Management
  • If you call Research Management a profession
    then you create barriers for potential recruits
    it has grown out of university administration
  • The trouble with making it a professional
    qualification is that research administrators
    have to wear so many hats

34
Current training provision
  • AMRC
  • ARMA
  • AUA
  • AURIL
  • Bluebell Research
  • CHEMPaS, Southampton
  • EARMA (Europe)
  • Hyperion (Ireland)
  • ICR
  • IKT
  • LFHE
  • Missenden Centre, Oxford
  • NCURA (USA)
  • Praxis
  • SRA (USA)
  • UKRO
  • UNICO

35
Current training issues
  • Gaps in provision across the spectrum of research
    management
  • Ad hoc delivery little coordination or
    confederation by various players
  • Suitable time, suitable price, suitable level
  • Lack of coherence, consistency and common purpose
    in provision
  • Lack of transparency in quality control in terms
    of content, delivery and usefulness

36
Accreditation
  • Mixed views
  • Any accreditation must be high quality and
    clearly recognised as such by employers
  • Postgraduate qualification modular approach
  • But would accreditation be a barrier to
    encouraging people into Research Management?
  • Would it be better first to ensure that Research
    Management was an identifiable career?
  • ... Or do the two go hand in hand?

37
Conclusions
  • Research Management is evolving organically
  • Inconsistency in structures and roles
  • Uncertainty among staff as to whether they work
    in an identifiable community
  • Confused perceptions of research support
  • Huge inefficiencies across the sector but
    significant appetite to improve and develop
  • Few dedicated networking opportunities for
    Directors of Research Service so difficult to
    share experience, good practice, and issues or to
    get a sector view of things
  • Current training providers respected but not
    working together some perception rivalry exists
    between them
  • All of which points to the need to address the
    problems

38
Acknowledgements
  • This study was commissioned and jointly funded by
    HEFCE and the MRC
  • We are grateful to the staff at twenty HEIs who
    gave their time and shared their views and
    opinions freely

39
Thank youwww.professionalisingresearchmanagement
.com
40
Working groups
  • Each group to address these questions
  • Should we work together and achieve greater
    consistency across the sector and if so how?
  • Should an accredited qualification system be
    established?
  • Should a more formal professional organisation be
    created?
  • Who is best placed to provide training?
  • Should current training providers work together?
  • Report back at 12.30

41
Working groups
  • Red Ian Carter LT1, level 1
  • Blue John Kirkland LT2, level 2
  • Green Catherine Quinn LTG, ground
  • Yellow Ewart Wooldridge LGS, lower gr.

42
The significance of the findings for
Leadership in higher education Ewart Wooldridge
CBE Chief ExecutiveLeadership Foundation for
Higher Education
43
Why we were interested in this project?
  • HE sector as a whole becoming more professional
  • Across the sector and in Research Management
    there is a need to
  • attract and retain high calibre people
  • develop skills of those working in the sector
  • develop leaders of future
  • share good practice

44
Professional careers in HE
  • Major project on career journey in HE
  • Research into professional leadership (Celia
    Whitchurch)
  • New categories of professional models bounded,
    cross boundary, unbounded and blended
  • Perceptions of professionals
  • Perceptions of their institutions

45
What does this project reveal?
  • Issues in identifying skill set and experience
    needed to recruit staff into Research Management
  • Problems developing and promoting existing staff,
    particularly at senior and top-level management
  • Many staff come into Research Management by
    accident
  • Staff, particularly at junior level, see little
    opportunity for career development no clear
    pathway
  • Few vacancies for staff to achieve promotion or
    broaden experience
  • Research Management not always understood or
    perceived as a profession by others in HE sector

46
What does this project reveal?
  • Fragmented structures prevail
  • A wide range of skills are needed to work in
    Research Management
  • Current training provision in the area is patchy
  • Reliance on internal training and the knowledge
    of existing staff is high
  • Lack of consistency
  • No cross-sector qualifications
  • Identified need to strengthen training in many
    key areas
  • Market for high quality, recognised and possibly
    accredited postgraduate training
  • Should be modular, work based, broad enough to
    encompass the varied roles but allow specialism

47
Who should be interested in this?
  • Universities
  • Government and research councils
  • Charitable foundations and professional
    organisations
  • Funding Councils
  • Business
  • Anyone else funding research
  • Anyone who does research..........................
    ......

48
Problems of the current context
  • Complexity and inconsistency in Research Office
    functions across the HE sector
  • Contrasts with other functions such as Finance,
    Human Resources, Estates or Student Services
  • Standardisation of function, structure, job roles
    and responsibilities make it
  • easier to identify and transfer skills
  • easier to make comparisons and identify good
    practice
  • Is there a need for an organisation to provide an
    holistic strategic perspective and provide
    training and development for research managers?
  • Is there a need to develop greater consistency in
    Research Management functions across the sector?

49
  • Thank you
  • www.lfhe.ac.uk

50
Feedback from working groups, questions and panel
discussion
51
Panel discussion and possible next steps
  • How do we bring this all together?
  • Who should lead?
  • Ian Carter ARMA
  • Dr John Kirkland ACU
  • Catherine Quinn Wellcome Trust
  • Scott Rutherford Imperial College London
  • Ewart Wooldridge Leadership Foundation

52
Possible future objectives
  • Ensure Research Management is recognised as a
    professional activity
  • Improve brand and communication about what we do
  • Develop networks to share good practice
  • Improve training opportunities in Research
    Management
  • Develop a more holistic training environment
  • Work with existing training and qualification
    providers
  • Explore leadership needs
  • Ensure funders recognise they have a stake

53
Thank youwww.professionalisingresearchmanagement
.com
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