As an academic, I take public engagement seriously. 聽I see it as a responsibility that comes with the societally-sanctioned licence to study the things that I鈥檓 passionate about. And I consider聽it a privilege to interact with others who can inform what I do as well as potentially benefitting from it. 聽Yet I鈥檇 be the first to admit that engaging with non-academics聽isn鈥檛 exactly a badge of honour within the hallowed halls of academia.
Mostly, this feeling that spending time talking with and listening to people who aren鈥檛 academically 鈥渋nstitutionalized鈥 (or are not potential donors) isn鈥檛 valued is just that: a feeling; an ill-defined sense that your peers and your academic unit think of聽you as slightly less 鈥渨orthy鈥 鈥 an academic lightweight. It鈥檚 a nagging doubt that鈥檚 easy to put down to insecurity or paranoia. But two recent papers by Richard Watermeyer at the University of Warwick (the second covered in 探花视频鈥檚 recent article 鈥淧ublic engagement means 鈥榮acrificing鈥 academic career鈥)聽suggest that聽there may be more substance to the perception that public engagement places academics at a disadvantage in their institutions.
Academics and聽public engagement
The papers report on a series of interviews Watermeyer conducted聽with between 40 and 45 British academics. All were聽accredited by the (NCCPE) as 鈥淧ublic Engagement Ambassadors鈥, and so were, as Watermeyer聽describes them, a 鈥渕inority and marginal group of academics, distinguished for their achievements in [public engagement]鈥.
The interviews were specifically aimed at exploring participants鈥 perceptions of the value and impact of聽聽public engagement on their academic work and their careers.
探花视频
By way of context, it鈥檚 important to realize that both of these papers are specific to the higher education system in the UK 鈥 where there have been considerable moves in recent years to promote societal relevance in academic research. It鈥檚 also important to understand that what is reported is a synthesis of personal perceptions 鈥 it鈥檚 a qualitative study that probes how academics who participate substantially in public engagement feel it impacts their lives as academics. 聽Nevertheless, I must confess that I found the results聽demoralizing.
Institutional support for public engagement
In the paper 鈥溾, Watermeyer looks at the extent to which public engagement receives institutional support within the UK. As the title suggests, the news isn鈥檛 good.聽From the interviews, a clear disconnect emerges between personal motives to engage, and institutional support for engagement.聽There is a strong perception amongst a number of participants that some聽institutions actively discourage engagement.
探花视频
Watermeyer concludes of his interviewees: 鈥淭hey are a group whose victory is chimeric or perhaps pyrrhic, where their attempts to penetrate the mainstream of academic culture have kept them firmly outside or at best at the limits of accepted practice. They are concurrently a group who in the main, find their efforts to engage the public inhibited by the conventions of academic practice and the preponderance of institutional resistance.鈥
Perceived impact on career paths
The second聽paper 鈥 鈥溾 鈥 looks more closely at perceived impacts of public engagement on career progression in academia. 聽
Here Watermeyer聽concludes: 鈥淭he [public engagement]聽academic is also one at risk. At risk of becoming lost, somewhere between the rhetoric of policy, which recommends all such things to all academicians, and the reality of executing such a role in a space, perhaps as one respondent stated, a 鈥榖aseless space鈥, that does not support or recognize such endeavour.鈥
Together, these two papers聽paint a picture of academic institutions that talk the talk of public engagement, but are institutionally incapable of walking the walk 鈥 and either intentionally or inadvertently penalise those that do.
This becomes painfully apparent in a number of quotes from participants in the study. For example:
- 鈥淭here is a kind of prejudice. Engagement is not what they [senior management] are interested in. It鈥檚 when eyes begin to roll 鈥 especially at a [vice-chancellor] level, and a sense that, 鈥榳e don鈥檛 want the enthusiasts to take over鈥.鈥
- 鈥淧eople pay lip-service to it. They鈥檙e happy for you to do it but make sure you do it on your own time.鈥
- 鈥淲hilst personally productive it鈥檚 been a complete non-starter in terms of career progression. It鈥檚 not something I could do on the terms of academic development. Consequently, I鈥檝e gone from being highly engaged in public and community engagement to being not involved at all.鈥
- 鈥淵ou鈥檙e virtually sacrificing your academic career. This is not something that gets captured in your career path and this dissuades most people from embracing public engagement.鈥
- 鈥淧ublic engagement conflicts with an incredibly competitive labour market. There鈥檚 no question it diverts researchers and is disruptive to career progression.鈥
- 鈥淧romotion on the basis of [public engagement]? That鈥檚 hard when you鈥檙e not on hard money, and most aren鈥檛. The rewards and recognition system just isn鈥檛 there. There鈥檚 no reward for being a good communicator. There鈥檚 no career pathway for engagement.鈥
- 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know anyone who has gained promotion through their engagement.鈥
Personal value of engagement
Yet despite a clear lack of institutional support for public engagement, a number of聽participants recognised the personal value it holds. 聽This was often rooted in a sense of social responsibility and personal reward.聽There was a strong sense of participants聽engaging beyond academia because they thought it was the right thing to do, despite the professional barriers and personal cost.
It may be that these perceptions are not an accurate indicator of the reality around academic public engagement in the UK. 聽It may be that the UK is a unique case, and the same is not seen elsewhere in the world. 聽However, from my own experiences, I wouldn鈥檛 expect the responses to be too dissimilar in the US.
Is the US different?
In May of this year, I was co-organiser of a on the role of academic in public and political discourse. 聽One of the themes to emerge was the lack of recognition of public engagement in the tenure process 鈥 that cultural bastion of academic recognition. 聽Embedded within this was a strongly hinted at cultural and institutional bias against engagement that decreased research productivity.
探花视频
This 鈥 together with a more general dismissal聽of the relevance of public engagement 鈥 is certainly something that I鈥檝e observed as a faculty member and former department chair in the US. 聽I鈥檝e seen tenure-track faculty advised on numerous occasions to just focus on their research productivity until they get tenure.聽Even beyond the tenure process, public engagement has not been considered in annual reviews in my own institution 鈥 with the primary factors in determining many pay rises being research dollars awarded and publications. There鈥檚 a subtle but prevalent culture in my experience of seeing engagement as something that鈥檚 OK, as long as it doesn鈥檛 interfere with the 鈥渞eal business鈥 of the academy. And where there is recognition, it鈥檚 often the patronizing聽praise you sometimes see聽well-meaning but struggling students receiving when they聽exceed below-average expectations.
探花视频
Academics engage, despite the barriers
Yet despite this seeming institutional marginalization of public engagement, there is a vibrant community of academics who do engage 鈥 and engage effectively 鈥 in the US. They often do this despite the system 鈥 because it鈥檚 important to them, not because it will advance their careers. This reflects Watermayer鈥檚 UK findings that academics who think that public engagement is important, do it聽despite the barriers.
There鈥檚 also considerable heavyweight support for this. 聽In the recent Michigan meeting, Jane Lubchenco 鈥 former president of the American Association for the Advancement of Science 鈥 .
Lubchenco聽made the point that academics 鈥 early career scientists in particular 鈥 are engaging聽anyway, no matter what they are advised. It鈥檚 something I see every day at the University of Michigan, where there is a hunger amongst PhD students in particular for support聽and opportunities in engaging with people and communities outside their academic circles.
Public engagement as an integral part of the academic enterprise
Lubchenco聽also argued that engagement聽is important for the academic enterprise 鈥 that it聽is part and parcel of improving lives and society through the research we are socially sanctioned to conduct. And this is where I find the conclusions of Watermeyer particularly disturbing.
Public engagement 鈥 true two-way communication and partnerships between academic and non-academic communities 鈥 is about more than personal duty or enjoyment. It鈥檚 an essential part of ensuring society gets a return on its investment in the 鈥渁cademy鈥, and that research and discovery translate into creating a better world and more fulfilled lives for everyone.聽It鈥檚 something that should be integral to academic culture, and the institutions that support it.
Some institutions recognize this. 聽Arizona State University for instance 鈥 my new academic home from August 鈥 is built on eight 鈥溾 that emphasise聽the institution鈥檚 role in society. Yet this embracing of a broader vision of academic responsibilities and aspirations is not prevalent 鈥 certainly in the US.
One clear conclusion from the Watermeyer papers is that, in the UK, academic institutions are locked into a path of performance evaluation that public engagement doesn鈥檛 fit into 鈥 it鈥檚 tough to measure the quality and impact of engagement. Ironically, this means that, while engagement is seen as laudable, because it isn鈥檛 easily measurable, it is institutionally聽marginalized. And worse 鈥 with an emphasis on numerically assessed聽outputs, ineffective but quantifiable public engagement activities potentially end up taking precedence over meaningful but more subjective initiatives.
At the end of the day, I鈥檓 not sure I would agree that pubic engagement stunts academic careers 鈥 for one, it depends on what your definition of a successful career is.聽But it certainly doesn鈥檛 help achieve prominence amongst your academic peers. If public engagement is to have a greater impact within academia and society, this needs to change.
Public engagement needs to be built on more than personal responsibility and enjoyment. 聽There needs to be strong institutional recognition of its importance and value as an integral part of the academic enterprise.聽There needs to be a cultural shift within the academy itself, where academics and their professional organisations聽recognise and honour those who engage with non-academic constituencies. And there need to be better ways of supporting and rewarding public engagement聽as an activity that is integral to聽being a successful academic.
Andrew Maynard is professor of environmental health sciences at the University of Michigan. This posting first appeared on his personal blog, .
探花视频
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