Taking societal impact โfrom ivory tower to town squareโ
2022๋ 12์ 8์ผ | 8๋ถ ์ฝ๊ธฐ
์ ์: Zoรซ Genova
The panel โNew measures of societal impact: From ivory tower to town squareโ featured moderator Dr Arthur Ellis (left) and panelists Prof Sir Anton Muscatelli, Prof Robin Garrell and Prof Cheryl de la Rey. (Photo by Alison Bert)
In a global panel, academic leaders show how their universities are taking unique approaches to improving the world around them โ and measuring their progress
As a result of social, economic and pandemic-related global challenges, academic institutions are starting to develop society-driven research agendasย ย to complement existing curiosity-driven research agendas. This growing trend raises a number of key questions.
How can universities measure societal impact in a way that goes beyond traditional metrics? How can the culture on campuses be changed to recognize innovation, entrepreneurship and community engagement? And how can universities engage academic communities in creating narratives around societal contributions?
At theย 2022 Times Higher Education (THE) World Academic Summitย ์ ํญ/์ฐฝ์์ ์ด๊ธฐ, a distinguished panel of academic leaders gathered at NYU October 11 to answer these questions and present examples from their own institutions. The panel โ titledย New measures of societal impact: From ivory tower to town squareย ์ ํญ/์ฐฝ์์ ์ด๊ธฐย โ featured Profย Cheryl de la Reyย ์ ํญ/์ฐฝ์์ ์ด๊ธฐ, Vice Chancellor of theย University of Canterburyย ์ ํญ/์ฐฝ์์ ์ด๊ธฐย in New Zealand; Profย Robin Garrellย ์ ํญ/์ฐฝ์์ ์ด๊ธฐ, President of theย City University of New York (CUNY) Graduate Centerย ์ ํญ/์ฐฝ์์ ์ด๊ธฐ; and Prof Sirย Anton Muscatelliย ์ ํญ/์ฐฝ์์ ์ด๊ธฐ, Principal and Vice Chancellor of theย University of Glasgowย ์ ํญ/์ฐฝ์์ ์ด๊ธฐย in Scotland. Drย Arthur Ellisย ์ ํญ/์ฐฝ์์ ์ด๊ธฐ, a Senior Advisor at Elsevier, moderated the discussion.
Catalyzing cultural change in the wake of Christchurch mosque shootings
Society-driven research often requires cultural change within an institution. Prof de la Rey shared that theย University of Canterburyย ์ ํญ/์ฐฝ์์ ์ด๊ธฐย has a growing commitment to bilingualism (English and Te Reo Mฤori), civic responsibility, and place-based scholarship. For example, the university now incorporates local Mฤori interests in research proposals and projects. In 2020, catalyzed by the horrific Christchurch mosque attacks in 2019, the campus established theย Te Pae Raka Hau Canterbury Knowledge Commonsย ์ ํญ/์ฐฝ์์ ์ด๊ธฐย โ a place for the university to partner with the ลtautahi Christchurch and Waitaha Canterbury communities on research initiatives โ to address underlying social issues. Through the Knowledge Commons and partnerships, research projects draw on collective knowledge and needs of the wider community. To measure the success of the Knowledge Commons, the university has created a data platform that can, for example, identify households using multiple social services repeatedly to determine where to focus interventions. The campus has also looked at the universityโs commitment to theย UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)ย ์ ํญ/์ฐฝ์์ ์ด๊ธฐ. The University of Canterbury ranked first globally among campuses in SDG 12 (responsible consumption and production) in last yearโsย THE Impact Rankingsย ์ ํญ/์ฐฝ์์ ์ด๊ธฐ, powered byย Scopus, reflecting the institutionโs partnership with local agencies. Under Prof de la Reyโs leadership, the university is using its Impact Rankings of 11thย for SDG 13 (climate action) and 29thย for SDG 15 (life on land) as targets for improvement.
Addressing social justice issues in New York by engaging the public in the research
Prof Garrell connectedย CUNYย ์ ํญ/์ฐฝ์์ ์ด๊ธฐโs dedication to public-facing scholarship and social justice that addresses issues of concern for New York City and New York State by engaging the public in the research itself. She shared a few examples of how CUNY is accomplishing this through:
A state-funded initiativeย ์ ํญ/์ฐฝ์์ ์ด๊ธฐ fostering academic-industry partnerships. For example, graduate students work alongside citizen scientists to develop and use environmental sensors to monitor energy usage, noise pollution and water quality.
Participatory Action Researchย ์ ํญ/์ฐฝ์์ ์ด๊ธฐ, whereby CUNY collaborates with the community to develop research questions around community concerns. The research and partnerships inform local practices and provisioning of social services to promote social justice.
The Center for Humanities at the CUNY Graduate Centerย ์ ํญ/์ฐฝ์์ ์ด๊ธฐ, which conducts work that reimagines the role of the university in the community. In a recent project, the center collected contemporary oral history contributions from communities to inform the cityโs decisions on how to use public land.
โWhat we measure signals what we value.โ
When it comes to measurement, Prof Garrell said these kinds of research need appropriate metrics, noting, โWhat we measure signals what we value.โ As an institution, CUNY is interested in keeping a focus on knowledge creation and societal impact. Prof Garrell identified a trio of guiding questions:
What do we value and want to know beyond what weโre already measuring?
Where does this information exist and are there places we arenโt looking?
What measures could be developed?
Addressing these questions could help CUNY better assess, for instance, the impact of its research discoveries on public opinion and civic engagement.
โTo raise to distinction those who were born in the lowest placeโ
Prof Muscatelli shared the founding statute of theย University of Glasgowย ์ ํญ/์ฐฝ์์ ์ด๊ธฐ, which includes the phrase, โto raise to distinction those who were born in the lowest place.โ As a civic-minded institution, it is important for the university to widen access and connect to its origins in this way, he noted. These values are used to recognize issues facing the community and to effect sustainable changes through partnerships with local businesses and governments based on research. The university was recently shown to have an estimated economic impact of ยฃ4.4 billion. Moreover, the campus regards its purview as expanding beyond Scotland into the sustainable development space for nations impacted by colonialism. Prof Muscatelli described the universityโsย GALLANT Living Laboratory Projectย ์ ํญ/์ฐฝ์์ ์ด๊ธฐ, which seeks to use the city of Glasgow to test sustainable solutions addressing the effects of climate change, such as retrofitting tenement blocks for better energy usage. He highlighted the campusโs creation of theย Mazumdar-Shaw Advanced Research Centre (ARC)ย ์ ํญ/์ฐฝ์์ ์ด๊ธฐย as a new interdisciplinary research venue that also engages the public. During the lead-up to theย UN Climate Change Conference COP 26ย ์ ํญ/์ฐฝ์์ ์ด๊ธฐ, held in Glasgow in 2021, the university looked increasingly at placing its research in the context of the UN SDGs. The 2021 THE Impact Rankings placed the University of Glasgow at 19thย globally. Prof Muscatelli put this accomplishment in perspective by stating, โWeโve got to look at measurements and โฆ try to refine and understand what we do.โ He said itโs important to look at where the university can contribute across all the SDGs.
Q&A: Panelists answer questions about getting buy-in from their campuses and how they use metrics for their research narratives
For the Q&A segment, Dr Ellis asked panelists how they obtained buy-in from their campuses to move in the inspiring directions they described.
Prof de la Rey said her institution had an expectation from the nationโs legislature to act as โcritic and conscienceโ in society.ย ย When she asked her campus colleagues if they wished to go beyond this to make a meaningful contribution to society, there was an enthusiastic response to produce positive change.
Prof Garrell noted that in some sense, CUNYโs mission and its embeddedness in the fabric of New York City and the region have positioned it appropriately for societal impact and to attract top talent. However, she remarked that in competing globally, CUNY scholars are being judged by metrics that are incomplete for public-facing scholarship, and more tools and guidance regarding โwhat countsโ is needed.
Prof Muscatelli provided two illustrations illuminating issues he saw. One was the cultural change required with the Mazumdar-Shaw ARC project to bring disciplinary scholars and students together in a venue designed for interdisciplinary scholarship and public-facing usage. The other was a change in institutional financial procedures to enable the campus to assist low-income countries in collaborative projects.
Dr Ellis shared examples of what can be done with modern data analytics to map scholarly outputs and patents to the UN SDGs, and the recent ability to mine policy documents for citations to scholarly outputs.
He then asked if there were suggestions for how such metrics could be used to help researchers and institutions craft narratives around their research. All panelists suggested teaming up with communications or external relations teams and using tools that track when stories are picked up by the media which reference campus research results.
Panelists were also asked about great challenges they faced and accomplishments worth noting.
Prof de la Rey pointed to bringing together public agencies and media with the university in the aftermath of the mosque attacks. She said connecting databases was a major challenge, but it has paid substantial dividends in the insights it has offered.
Prof. Garrell noted that state funding was an excellent resource, but CUNY was at a stage where it wanted to have more societal impact and recognized it needed more funding. She felt the campus was learning how to better tell its story with pride and conviction to attract additional resources.
Prof Muscatelli highlighted the importance of having a great team in leadership roles and properly embedding strategy in its planning activities.
โThis isnโt theoretical, itโs practical.โ
Profย Olanrewaju Fagbohunย ์ ํญ/์ฐฝ์์ ์ด๊ธฐย ofย Lagos State Universityย ์ ํญ/์ฐฝ์์ ์ด๊ธฐย and the Environmental Law Research Institute in in Nigeria, had asked the panelists at what point the SDGs were mainstreamed into their curricula and research agendas.
Afterwards, he called this session โone of the most helpful panelsโ of the summit:
In the last two days, weโve been talking about the need for universities to make an impact on their communities because the idea of the university is to create knowledge and for it to impact communities around the university. โฆ What this session has done for me is actually break it down. Indeed, we can make this impact. [The panelists] have shown us what theyโve done, and optimism is thereโฆ This isnโt theoretical, itโs practical.