Welcome to the Support Services Conference 2007. We would appreciate your comments regarding the conference and any ideas for suture events so please help us by returning the feedback forms.
Mar 28, 2015
Welcome to the Support Services Conference 2007.
We would appreciate your comments regarding the conference and any ideas for suture events so please help us by returning the feedback forms.
Dr David Langley, Director of RED
Key Trends in Research and Development
Support Services Conference, 26th June 2007
3 Context
• Research and Enterprise (along with teaching) is at the
heart of what the University of Bristol does
• It contributes to the University's international reputation,
it informs and stimulates teaching and it contributes to
the economy of the South West, the UK and globally
• We are recognised as one of the most research
intensive Universities in the UK, even though we are
one of the smallest in size
• We are also a global player undertaking research that is
world-leading or internationally excellent
4
But, what do we mean by ‘Research’ ?
5 What is research ? – the Fracsati definition
• “Research is original investigation undertaken in order to gain knowledge and understanding;
• It includes scholarship, invention and generation of new ideas, images, performances, artefacts and design and the use of existing knowledge to produce new materials, devices, products and processes…”
• It excludes routine testing or analysis
6 What Research do we do and how good are we at doing it?
• We have an extremely diverse portfolio across
many disciplines, Faculties and Depts and have
approx 2000 funded research projects.
• In the last independent assessment of research
quality (RAE 2001), 78 per cent of Bristol
University's departments were judged to be world
class or internationally excellent
• The next RAE is scheduled for 2008…
7 Research Funding
• Almost all research done at the University is funded by
external organisations such as Govts, Research
Councils, Charities, Industry, NGO, EU,
philanthropists and through peer reviewed competition
• Various factors affect the success of a research
proposal e.g. quality and deliverability, scope,
experience of the researcher, political climate,
external priorities and drivers, strategies set by
funding organisations
8 Research Funding
• In recent years the Government has substantially
increased spending on research, and science
budget has than doubled since 1997, rising to £3.4
billion
• The strength of the economy impacts on the ability
of charities and industry to fund research
• The expectation is that research will continue to ‘do
well’ under a Gordon Brown premiership
9
So, what does the research portfolio at the University
look like?
10 Research Income 2005/06 -University of Bristol, £76m
Research Councils39%
UK Charities27%
UK Government17%
European6%
Overseas3%
UK Industry8%
11
What are the big issues that we need to be aware of ?
12 Big issues: analysis and intelligence, influence
• Planning and prioritisation of research activities can
be informed by intelligence– Horizon scanning – knowing about opportunities
and understanding the thinking of policy makers, increased networking
– Anticipating the “grand challenges”– Being involved in setting agenda nationally &
internationally (rather than responding to it!)– Understanding what is going on in key policy
areas (e.g. China & India) – Knowing what our competitors are doing
13 Big issues - Collaboration
• Encouraging collaboration across disciplines and
with other Universities, industry and other countries
(e.g. Worldwide Universities Network)
• Being prepared to lead bigger, bolder programmes
of research with clearly articulated deliverables e.g.
Gates, EU
• Being slick at relationship management with
research funders in key sectors; awareness that
funders are now starting to work together and want
to be involved throughout a project
14 But….
• Collaboration and size adds complexity and researchers
need good pre-award and post-award advice, support and
management
• This increasingly requires specialist skills such as bid
support, research governance & ethics, project
management, EU, relationship management, contracting,
enterprise
• Efficient systems are essential
• Ideally, we work in partnership – we are more than a clerical
function but must demonstrate our professionalism…
15 Big issues – Research themes
• Focus on and support known areas of strength and
international excellence; identify what Bristol
uniquely has to offer
• Research themes are a tool aimed at encouraging
research development, particularly multidisciplinary,
and communicating this externally
• They can assist Deans in allocation of resources
• Compare our research themes with external
horizon scans – be proactive and dynamic
16 Examples of University Research Themes
• Cardiovascular Science
• Neuroscience
• Nanoscience and Quantum
Information
• Animal Welfare and Behaviour
• Cell Biology
• Vision
• Human Rights
• Global Change
• Advanced Composites
• Dynamics Engineering
• Medieval Cultures
• Colonialism
• Performativity, Place, Space
• Security and Governance
• Gender
17 Big issues – Impact of Research
• “Measurement” of impact as a key indicator increasingly popular (economic, political, social, etc.)– Publications, citations– Novel compounds, devices, patents, licences,
spin-outs– Consultancy, policy development, press
coverage, conferences, training, outreach to communities, benefits to society
• These will become increasingly important
18 Other issues
• Research requires investment in– Big, expensive buildings (e.g. Science)– Expensive equipment (e.g. High Performance
Computing– Information resources (e.g. Libraries, etc)– World class academics– Developing academics
• What support and where/how provided ?
19 And I haven’t even mentioned
– Enterprise and Knowledge Exchange– Support for early stage researchers– Success rates and how we improve them– Full economic costs and sustainability issues– Cultural change– And the numerous roles RED undertakes…..
www.bristol.ac.uk/research/
20 And now some actual researchers…
• Professor Nishan Canagarajah (Dept of Electrical
and Electronic Engineering)
• Dr Michael Naughton (School of Law)
• Dr Mark Horton (Dept of Archaeology and
Anthropology)
Welcome to the Support Services Conference 2007.
We would appreciate your comments regarding the conference and any ideas for suture events so please help us by returning the feedback forms.