1 / 28

Colin P. North University of Aberdeen, Scotland, UK

Perceptions, expectations, transparency and reputation: A view from across the pond AGI Leadership Forum – Sept. 2008 Public-private Partnerships in the Geosciences. Colin P. North University of Aberdeen, Scotland, UK. Cause for concern?. GSA Sedimentology Division: Fall 2007

alena
Download Presentation

Colin P. North University of Aberdeen, Scotland, UK

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Perceptions, expectations, transparency and reputation:A view from across the pondAGI Leadership Forum – Sept. 2008Public-private Partnerships in the Geosciences Colin P. NorthUniversity of Aberdeen, Scotland, UK

  2. Cause for concern? • GSA Sedimentology Division: Fall 2007 • Teaching of Sedimentology forum at “Seds and suds” icebreaker • How meet industry need for sedimentologists? • Where will they come from? US supply too small? • How build and support quality teaching? • What about the smaller colleges? • Perceptions – of duties, roles • Industry too passive? Academe too demanding? • Expectations – of funding, responsibilities • Entitlement, or required to be earned?

  3. Perceptions & expectations • Industry comments: • We pay our taxes too ... it’s a Society problem ... • It’s not our business, shareholders don’t want it ... • Too many, too small colleges to be practical ... • Going to UK to get employees • University comments: • Not enough public money available ... • Good science (& teaching) deserves support ... • My thoughts: • So what do we do in UK? How overcome issues?

  4. Outline • Aberdeen University - a window into UK hydrocarbon and mining industry interactions • Typical of major universities with vocational aims, e.g. Leeds, Manchester, Imperial College • What we do for industry • Training, research, public education • Why does it work? • Record of success? Is it sustainable? • When does it go wrong? • Threats and weaknesses • Generic lessons and observations

  5. Aberdeen Glasgow Edinburgh London500 miles Aberdeen - where’s that?

  6. University of Aberdeen • Over 500 years old • Geology taught since 1860s, Mineralogy bias • Steadily rising geology student numbers ~ 15 years • against background of falling science intakes • Petroleum industry links? • Petroleum Geology MSc since 1973, first oil 1975 • Ambivalent to petroleum industry until ~1987 • Now heavily linked at all levels • We had to work at it, it didn’t just happen • “Oil Capital of Europe” – we make good use of this but it is not itself essential to success • Companies follow excellence

  7. Geoscience Products • Each year, we produce graduates: • 35+ BSc Petroleum Geology or Geoscience • 25+ MSc Integrated Petroleum Geoscience (IPG) • 16+ MSc Oil & Gas Enterprise Management • 10+ PhD in industry-relevant topics • 90% MSc and PhD output goes immediately to industry (mostly petroleum) • Some MSc to PhD; a few PhD stay in academia • Industry-relevant research activity • Basic and applied topics, publication crucial

  8. Geoscience Products • US$ 8M annual research income • ~75% industry (e.g. JIPs), ~25% government (KTP) • Areas related to energy • Deep-water frontier group • Injected sands group • Terrestrial reservoirs group • Fluids: organic geochemistry, inclusions … • Non-destructive characterization of materials • Earth systems science: environmental change • Climate change and terrestrial erosion • Extreme events and meteorite impacts

  9. Exemplar research theme: Injected sands group • Geological recognition of subsurface remobilisation of sand • Reinterpretation of core, logs, & seismic • Better reservoir modelling and more efficient engineering

  10. Industry research success? • Have original ideas & vision, clear deliverables • Make industry aware of them !!! • Interactions throughout project life • Not just limited to funding and final report • Mutual understanding of needs, expectations • Much more time-consuming than if public funded • Defining problems – analysis of their data • Honest dialogue on business problems, potential(don’t over-egg the pudding) • Technology transfer • Testing ideas on their projects, training

  11. One-year MSc in IPG • Tightly structured and prescribed, intensive • Developed, delivered just for this MSc program • Full-time, immersive ... life-changing ! • Taught components – 7 months • Instruction, practicals, fieldwork, teamwork • Geoscience plus industry-expected generic skills • Individual technical project – 4 months • Mostly placed with a company (some out of town) • Recruit best students we can get • Keep up quality by cap on class size & origin • Importance of reputation, studentships

  12. One-year MSc in IPG • Focus on industry destination, needs • The nature of the oil industry, business awareness • Role of geoscientists in that industry • Dealing with uncertainty • Pragmatism or technical perfection? • Communication with related disciplines • Needs and vocabulary • Preparation for interviews, assessment centres • Ready for polishing through on-job experience • MSc students often outperform PhDs • Impression at interviews • Readiness for employment

  13. Industry interactions • Studentships to our MSc IPG course • Industry direct to Department (~10) • UK Government advanced training (5 NERC) • Industry for specific persons (e.g. 3 Thai, 1 Brunei) • Overseas government schemes (3 PTDF Nigeria) • Yearly arrangements, not endowments • In-kind support • Software: Landmark, Kingdom, Petrel (>$10M) • Direct contributions, small and large: • Tutors, data, core store, exercises, projects • Catalyst for industry awareness of Dept.

  14. Student centred training • Primary aim is shaping a human resource • Not about scientific output

  15. Recipe for success? • Done best when: • Know industry’s needs ... • and have own vision, so a leader not a follower • Regular dialogue with industry: transparency • Work with industry on curriculum and delivery • Creates good reputation • Will survive economic cycles

  16. Comes easily? • “You benefit from your location !!” • Perception? Envy? • Yes ... • e.g. drilling centre, core store • and no ... work hard to get all this support • And have to keep working at it every year • Depends heavily on personal contacts • Projects not automatic, studentships re-justified • Rotating staff, duties in companies • Depends on impressions created • Employability of graduates, quality of training

  17. U.S.A. Masters • MS in N. America generally research degree: • One year mix of generic courses, & frame project • One year research and dissertation (mini-PhD) • Same model as most of Western Europe • But Calgary setting up UK-type version !! • Differences, from industry perspective? • Business understanding negligible or accidental • Varies with supervisor’s contacts, research topic • Students more mature (older !) • May know much more about some things • But lack breadth of knowledge • Two-years not guaranteed, often slips

  18. PhD training • Three-year research degree: • No coursework, minimal transferable skill courses • Assessment by thesis (coherent single argument) • Writing may slip into year 4, but hard on longer • Govt. funding for PhDs denied if average >4 years • Often straight from BSc (age 21), finish by age 25 • Typically part of larger theme: • Project determined in advance, advert for students • Funding in place in advance, usually for 3 years • Full-time - rare teaching-assistant finance in UK • Industry relevance & skills gained highly variable

  19. U.S.A. PhD • Typically 4 to 5 year research degree • Year 1 for project formulation, coursework • Can be more a collection of papers than thesis • Funding more piecemeal • But have teaching assistant scheme to get started • Differences, from industry perspective? • As UK, business awareness & skills very variable • Much more mature, often age 28-30 on exit • Deeper science knowledge, often have papers out • More polished, more experienced

  20. Decision-makers ? • Interaction with public bodies • More limited, diluted in UK – public sector small • No explicit training for public sector geoscience • Professional registration still rarely needed • Government measures of • Research rating = overall institutional status • Affects Govt. funding (but not industry?) • Teaching quality = little effect on MSc and PhD • Government policy? • Routed through professional body - e.g. GSL • Indirectly influence through industry ‘friends’

  21. Cultural differences • USA = personal responsibility paramount • Alumni much more likely to help • Europe = looks to society, government • History of state oil companies forced to fund • Altruism taken into account e.g. in licensing • State funding means alumni less active • Extreme case of industry funding: • Petronas Malaysia fund a whole university

  22. How increase support? • Is this where AGI Societies have key role? • Networking, showcasing, facilitating? • Wrapped up with Q: “What are Societies for?” • Government has little money to give out • Universities are oil industry’s research labs • Highly dependent on personal contacts • No such thing as institutional reputation? • Get self and ideas known: • Conferences, papers - personal company visits • Events at institution: workshops, ‘open-days’ • Be in, or set up, industry-relevant meetings

  23. Personal industry links: Society industry links:

  24. Problems we face • PhD students (good ones) hard to recruit • Going to industry via MSc • Academic future not attractive • Post-doctoral researchers hard to find • Sucked into industry after PhD • Disillusioned by lack of faculty posts, lifestyle, pay • Faculty staff (good ones) hard to recruit & keep • Consequence of above, global competition • Industry-skilled ones drawn away • Institutional reputation and vision crucial

  25. Lessons ? • Manage perceptions and expectations • Academe not entitled to industry funding • Not industry’s business to do fundamental training • But everyone benefits from sharing responsibility • Trust and respect • Openness and open-minded = transparency • Taking the time to understand each others needs • Importance of reputation, record of delivery • Have to keep working at it, this is time intensive • Does it require critical mass in academic units? • Strategic alliances with other institutions?

  26. Thank you for listening

  27. Reviewing • All journals struggling • Reviewing expected, but not respected (credited) by employers • So is what gets the push (or done badly) when time is tight • Real pain for editors, slowing up publication • Commonly have to approach at least 6 (often 8 or more) before get 2 signed up • Ultimately bad for everyone • Science inadequately checked

  28. Background • Personal experience: • with BP (oil and coal) for 8 years • 18 years university research and teaching • teaching, supervision and curriculum adviser from BSc to PhD • 8 years as Director of the MSc in IPG • industry-funded research projects, both single and consortium (JIP) funded • convener industry-supported research conferences • involved with SEPM and AAPG; editor JSR 4 years

More Related