Saturday, September 26, 2009

ARMS 2009, Christchurch, NZ

From the 16-18 of September 2009 I attended the Australasian Research Management Society (ARMS) Conference in Christchurch, New Zealand. The conference was titled The Evolution of Research Management which was inspired by the 200th anniversary of the birth of Charles Darwin and the 150th anniversary his book On the Origin of Species.

There were three themes for the conference which were:

  • Supporting the Researcher: from gatekeepers to champions
  • Evaluating Research: the conditions that unleash excellence
  • Through the Veil: looking to future systems for successful research

Before the conference began there was also a choice of a full day workshop. I chose to attend the workshop – Introduction to Research Management.

The workshop consisted of four modules:

  • an overview of the national research context
  • funding opportunities
  • lifecycle of a research grant
  • ethics and accountability frameworks governing the conduct of research

One take-home point (among many) from the conference was the importance of stakeholders and stakeholder engagement in supporting research and researchers. Research managers and administrators are important as facilitators and translators between the researchers and external stakeholders. They manage expectations and help ensure stakeholders understand the relevance of research. The research manager is a key player in securing and retaining resources for research. Institutions such, as universities, that have excellent research management and develop excellent research managers and administrators have the potential to compete against other institutions that have not developed these qualities and rely only on their reputation.

Christchurch

Christchurch is a beautiful city - it is a sister city to Adelaide in South Australia and is called the Garden City. In a day and a half I managed to squeeze in: a climb to the top of the cathedral spire; a trip on the tourist tram around the city; the museum, the botanic gardens, a gondola ride up Mt Cavendish and some really great meals, including the Dux de Lux and the Tap Room.

The ARMS 2009 website can be found here: http://www.arms2009.org/index.htm

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Eigenfactor

Eigenfactor is a web based tool that ranks research journals. There are a number of journal rankings available, including; Thomson-Reuters' impact factor, the Australian Research Council (ARC) journal ranking list and various other discipline specific ranking lists. Each of these lists attempts to rank journals based on their quality within a field of research - and each list has its own ranking criteria.

Eigenfactor uses citation metrics to rank journals and gives weightings to citations from specific journals based on their quality. It works in much the same way that Google's pagerank algorithm works. Eigenfactor also includes a indicator of the value for money a journal delivers; this is a feature that is quite unique to the Eigenfactor.

To see a short article I wrote on the Eigenfactor for Collection Management click here.

To visit the Eigenfactor website and try it for yourself, click here.

Information on the ARC's journal ranking lists can be found at the ARC's ERA website.