Monday, October 15, 2018

Universities Claim To Value Public Engagement In Scholarship, But Do Not In Practice

Universities Claim To Value Public Engagement In Scholarship, But Do Not In Practice

Chronicle of Higher Education, Do Universities Value Public Engagement? Not Much, Their Policies Suggest:
Scholarly work that serves the public is the kind of thing that, theoretically, universities want faculty members to pursue. But a new study of the language used by more than 100 colleges in their tenure-and-promotion criteria shows little evidence that such scholarship is valued in a way that advances faculty careers [How Significant Are the Public Dimensions of Faculty Work in Review, Promotion, and Tenure Documents?].
And because of that, faculty members are given incentives mostly to pursue research that fits in an established framework.
"There’s a very entrenched culture that exists around how we review successful academics," said Juan P. Alperin, the lead author of a report on the study and an assistant professor in the publishing program at Simon Fraser University, in Canada, who studies scholarly communications. "We want this kind of work to be valued on par with the other quantifiable research outputs that are dominant."