Impact and the REF Tweet #rfringe17

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Presentation transcript:

Impact and the REF Tweet #rfringe17 Catriona Firth REF Deputy Manager Repository Fringe Edinburgh, 3 August 2017

Impact in REF 2014 Assessed for the first time in REF 2014. ‘Impact is any effect on, change or benefit to the economy, society, culture, public policy or services, health, the environment or quality of life, beyond academia’. Reflected policy aims to maintain and improve the achievements of the HE sector in undertaking ground- breaking research and building on this research to achieve demonstrable benefits to the wider economy and society.

Impact in REF 2014 – assessment Impact Case Studies Four-page documents describing impacts that had occurred between January 2008 and July 2013. The submitting university must have produced high-quality research since 1993 that contributed to the impacts. Each submitting unit returned one case study, plus an additional case study for every 10 staff. Impact Template This document explained how the submitted unit had enabled impact from its research during the period from 2008 to 2013, and its future strategy for impact. Assessment Criteria Impact case studies were assessed in terms of their ‘reach and significance’ Impact templates were assessed in terms of how far the approach and strategy were conducive to achieving impacts.

Impact in REF 2014 – outcomes 6,975 case studies were submitted On average across all submissions, 44% of impacts were judged outstanding (4*) by over 250 external users of research, working jointly with the academic panel members. A further 40% were judged very considerable (3*). Cost estimated at £550m

Impact in REF 2014 – outcomes The nature, scale and beneficiaries of research impact. An initial analysis of Research Excellence Framework (REF) 2014 impact case studies. King’s College London and Digital Science. March 2015

The Stern Review Key principles In November 2015, Lord Nicholas Stern was commissioned by the Minister of Universities and Science to conduct an independent review of the REF. Key principles Lower burden Less game-playing Less personalisation, more institutionally focused Recognition for investment Making space for long-term research More rounded view of research activity Interdisciplinary emphasis Broaden impact

The Stern Review - Key points Staff and outputs Submission of all ‘research-active’ staff Outputs to be determined at unit of assessment level Outputs should not be ‘portable’ Could impact on number of case studies required for each unit Feedback Broad support to include ‘all staff with significant responsibility to carry out research’ but questions on how to define ‘significant responsibility’ Support for weakening link between staff and submitted outputs. Concerns about effects of non-portability, its timing in cycle and practical issues of implementation Initial proposal Institutions to identify staff in scope or opt for 100% submission Allow outputs to be counted twice or implement more complex hybrid model

The Stern Review - Key points Impact Broaden and deepen the definition of impact and provide additional guidance Public engagement Impact on curricula and/or pedagogy Move the impact template to the assessment of environment Reduce number of required case studies to min. of one Include impact arising from research, research activity or a ‘body of work’ Quality threshold for underpinning research & standards of rigour Resubmission of REF 2014 case studies

The Stern Review - Key points Feedback on impact proposals Support for alignment with Research Council definitions Support for broader basis of research, but challenges in drawing boundaries Some concerns about sub-profile based on one case study Difficult to separate out rigour from originality and significance Support for resubmission of 2014 case studies but questions around ‘additionality’

The Stern Review - Key points Institutional-level assessment Impact: case studies arising from multi and interdisciplinary and collaborative work 10-20% of total impact case studies; minimum of one Environment: statement to avoid duplication of content across UOAs; give recognition to institutional support Feedback Impact: unsure of problem to be solved; unclear if right mechanism; questions about relationship between institution and unit of assessment Environment: support for principle; concerns about small & specialist; questions about best way to assess; needs to enable sector diversity Suggestions Impact strategy + flagging case studies (incl. interdisciplinary examples) Institutional-level environment section within UOA template No separate / lower weighting (5%) for institutional-level environment

Next steps Communications in summer/autumn 2017 REF initial decisions document Summary of consultation responses Full consultation responses Launch of REF2021 website and Twitter account

Thank you for listening Follow us on Twitter at #REF2021 Thank you for listening info@ref.ac.uk openaccess@hefce.ac.uk