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Fast track: raising the lower threshold may disadvantage early career researchers
The Economic and Social Research Council has pledged to ensure that increasing the minimum amount that can be applied for through its standard grants scheme will not disadvantage early career researchers.
The ESRC announced earlier this month that, from July, the programme鈥檚 lower funding threshold would be raised from 拢200,000 to 拢350,000, while the upper threshold would be lowered from 拢2 million to 拢1 million.
The funder said that the change was partly a response to grant assessment panels鈥 difficulties in gauging the relative merits of applications for such a wide range of funding.
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Adrian Alsop, director of research, partnerships and international at the ESRC, told 探花视频 that this issue had become particularly acute because of a recent increase in applications for large amounts, pushing the average sum applied for up to 拢446,000. Narrowing the range would allow panels to compare 鈥渁pples with apples鈥.
The ESRC also hopes that the move will stem declining success rates that, according to Mr Alsop, were just over 10 per cent in the most recent standard grant round after a 60 per cent increase in applications between 2012 and 2014. But some observers fear that raising the lower threshold will have a disproportionate impact on early career researchers.
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Andrew Oswald, professor of economics at the University of Warwick, said: 鈥淚t is essential in a society to allow young researchers to begin their careers with a grant of under 拢100,000. Once they prove they can drive a Ford without crashing, maybe we can let them have a Porsche, but surely not before.鈥
Mr Alsop said that the ESRC was conscious of the risk. He noted that its Future Research Leaders funding stream had no lower funding limit, and pledged that the scheme would be reviewed ahead of another call later in the year.
Meera Sabaratnam, a lecturer in international relations at Soas, University of London, was concerned about the move to longer, larger grants by the ESRC 鈥 which closed its small grant scheme in 2011. She said: 鈥淏oth studies and the everyday experience of researchers show that a greater spread of funding is better for research overall.鈥
But Mr Alsop said that analysis by the ESRC鈥檚 evaluation committee suggested that its largest investments have 鈥渢he greatest impacts鈥 on social science 鈥 such as crossdisciplinary work.
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He dismissed fears that larger grants would be more conservative and focused on ESRC priorities, noting that a separate responsive mode scheme will be set up for applications for between 拢1 million and 拢2.5 million. He also pointed out that the ESRC still provides small grants 鈥渨here it is appropriate鈥, such as for secondary data analysis.
Speaking about demand management, he said that the ESRC reserved the right to impose application quotas on institutions that fail to effectively police the quality of their applications.
He acknowledged the risk, raised by Dr Sabaratnam, that the changes would simply result in researchers submitting 鈥渕ore inflated and wasteful claims鈥.
鈥淏ut our funding is, frankly, so competitive that that kind of strategic behaviour is not likely to impress the panels,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey will be focusing on the absolute best value we can provide [for the funding available].鈥
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