Pointless or profound? A bureaucratic monster that entrenches research inequalities or a rich, narrative-led document that offers an insight into every university department in the UK?
Of all the thousands of documents entered into the Research Excellence Framework聽(REF), environment statements 鈥 of which about 2,000 unit- and institutional-level versions were submitted for the 2021 exercise 鈥 tend to polarise opinion more than anything else. For some, these detailed accounts of how research is supported within different disciplines 鈥撀犅爋n research infrastructure expenditure, PhD completions and funding success 鈥 are the future of the REF; in their eyes, they represent a bold break from the harmful fixation on 鈥渟tar professors鈥 and individual outputs and the chance to move to a team-science-led culture, in which all research colleagues are valued.
For its critics, however, such statements are little more than a glorified creative-writing exercise, sometimes relying on 鈥溌爐ext about inclusion (as one REF sub-panel suggested). Moreover, they involve huge amounts of administrative effort, given that many universities will submit one for each of the 34 units of assessment, each of which is read and discussed by between three and five panellists.
With much of the content already covered by other schemes 鈥 notably Advance HE鈥檚聽Athena Swan听补苍诲听Race Equality Charter聽schemes, and various sector-level concordats on聽and researcher development, plus institutional commitments on responsible metrics use 鈥 the statements also repeat existing work on research culture, others add.
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Colette Fagan, vice-president for research at the University of Manchester, who leads the Russell Group鈥檚 group of research pro vice-chancellors, cited them as one of the biggest burdens of the REF, suggesting the unit-level statements should be abolished in favour of institutional-level documents.
鈥淓nvironment statements can be very time-consuming for the proportion of weighting that they get,鈥 Professor Fagan told a聽探花视频聽webinar, referring to the 15 per cent of overall REF scores they account for.
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However, it may be Russell Group universities 鈥 whose metrics for doctoral degrees, research grant funding and infrastructure spend naturally give them an edge聽over smaller institutions 鈥 who benefit most from such statements. Given that both research impact and environment scores聽track fairly closely to output scores聽鈥 on which larger institutions generally fare better 鈥 awarding funding on the basis of environment essentially rewards these institutions three times for their excellent outputs, with this 鈥淢atthew effect鈥 compounding inequality across the sector, some argue.
Mehmet Pinar, professor of economics at Edge Hill University, said the correlation between outputs, impact and environment meant the latter two may be 鈥溾 for the purpose of resource allocation, at least.
He also questioned whether environment really assessed the strength of departments. 鈥淓ven though the environment evaluates the team effort, it is still an individual-level assessment in many aspects,鈥 explained Professor Pinar, pointing to the data collected on external income generation and PhD completions. 鈥淢ost of these metrics are not satisfied by all team members 鈥 not everyone generates a large sum of income or supervises the same number of postgraduate students.鈥
Submission size also plays a major role in the environment template outcomes as 鈥渆ven though smaller institutes tend to perform relatively well in outputs, their relative performance tends to be lower in environment scores鈥, he said, which means that 鈥渞emoving the environment template would relatively benefit smaller submissions鈥.
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Others take a different view, however. John Senior, pro vice-chancellor (research and enterprise) at the University of Hertfordshire, said he would not favour a move to institutional-level statements only, stating the unit-level approach helped to 鈥渆mpower each unit of assessment to develop a bespoke research delivery plan, which aligned with the university鈥檚 overall research strategy鈥.
That led to important ambitions being achieved in this year鈥檚 REF, with Hertfordshire improving its research impact standing more than any other university and ranking the highest聽of any post-92 university, he added.
Rachel Norman, dean for research engagement and performance at the University of Stirling, agreed that the loss聽of unit-level statements on environment would be a mistake.
鈥淭he vast majority of research interactions come at a local level 鈥 even having statements at faculty or school level may be too broad to 鈥媡ruly reflect how people experience research culture,鈥 said Professor Norman.
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If the statements are to rely more heavily on metrics, more 鈥渃reative鈥 ones should be used, she suggested. 鈥淲e should have something focused on career pathways and precarious contracts, so maybe something about how many people have been on short-term contracts for several years 鈥 that might encourage more longer-term contracts or those that allow people to move between projects but provide some stability,鈥 said Professor Norman.
Though the environment section may have its doubters, it could also be an opportunity to fix some of UK academia鈥檚 biggest problems, she added. 鈥淯niversities have to change fundamentally at the moment 鈥 the traditional model in place now is not properly inclusive and only some people can succeed,鈥 reflected Professor Norman.
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If the international review panel聽examining the future聽of the REF is keen to make changes, scrapping these statements is not the way to go, she advised. 鈥淚f we are to have a REF, let鈥檚 make it a force for good.鈥
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