探花视频

More farce then fair

Last updated
五月 22, 2015
Published on
十二月 16, 2005

Is University College London really planning to leave half of its staff out of the next research assessment exercise ("UCL memo 'expects'

3*s", December 9)? In the 2001 RAE roughly half the research UCL submitted was graded "national". That equates to 1* in the new system, and would not be submitted under their new policy.

Leaving people out of a submission may move you up a badly constructed league table, but how far up you move depends on how many people other universities leave out. JI've heard a rumour that one institution is going to try to submit only 4* researchers. How many universities can play that game before the next RAE becomes a farce?

How could we prevent such a disaster? The Higher Education Funding Council for England could guarantee that the funding formula will not include thresholds based on the proportion of staff in particular categories - it can still be selective by giving 3* or 4* research more weight. Other funding bodies could also forswear proportional thresholds - if they want to ensure critical mass, they should base this on the absolute amount of high-quality research in a unit.

The Times Higher could promise to calculate its institution-level league table by including all eligible staff and giving zero to those not submitted. Universities would then have a clear incentive to submit all active researchers. We would save all the time and heartache of deciding which people to leave out of selective submissions. And the RAE would give a less distorted picture of the state of the UK's university research.

Richard Green
Birmingham University

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