糖心Vlog

Academic Hunger Games

Published on
May 1, 2014
Last updated
May 22, 2015

With hindsight, perhaps the legacy of the research excellence framework on all researchers has been distilled in the tribunal judgement 鈥渞esponsibility for allowing their own vanity and self-interest to draw them into an utterly destructive conflict which could yield no winner鈥 (鈥No winner in 鈥榙estructive conflict鈥 that led to researcher鈥檚 dismissal鈥, News, 17聽April).

In the fictional Hunger Games, most competitors fall in the mutual blood-letting. I聽cannot imagine many scholars would volunteer to initiate a system such as the REF unless they were caught up in a national momentum for comparing each academic status against all others. While Rowan Williams (鈥No fooling about impact鈥, Opinion, 17 April) was primarily concerned with individual 鈥渋ntelligent citizens鈥, at least he realised that scholars need to be challenged to recognise the 鈥渜uality of a different sort of skill from their own鈥.

Recently I gained fresh hope from a meeting at the Royal Society. The title of that event, which was organised by the Centre for Science and Policy, was 鈥淓vidence, networks and policy: translating new ideas into better outcomes鈥. A vital theme was making better policy through collaboration. Learning to collaborate with people with different skills is a good antidote to vanity and self-interest.

Rather than research policy mimicking the adolescent Hunger Games, perhaps out of the mouths of babes and sucklings comes advice for the 糖心Vlog Funding Council for England, in a song that refers to a Nobel prize. I am amazed at how many children know the 鈥淟ego鈥 song from The Lego Movie; 鈥淓verything is awesome, everything is cool when you鈥檙e part of a team鈥.

Perhaps, instead of funding conflict, Hefce should fund cool connections?

Woody Caan
Editor, Journal of Public Mental Health

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