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Knowledge Transfer and the Social Sciences

Knowledge Transfer and the Social Sciences. ESRC Regional Knowledge Exchange Network NE Adrian Hill 11 June 2009. KT Unpacked. History and context KT elements, mechanics and trajectory Beauty and the beast(s) Policy and reports Where are we/you now? Questions Links. History and Context.

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Knowledge Transfer and the Social Sciences

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  1. Knowledge Transfer and the Social Sciences ESRC Regional Knowledge Exchange Network NE Adrian Hill 11 June 2009

  2. KT Unpacked • History and context • KT elements, mechanics and trajectory • Beauty and the beast(s) • Policy and reports • Where are we/you now? • Questions • Links

  3. History and Context • A reason for many HEIs • (from 19th century) • The political birth of ‘TT’ (‘The white heat of technological revolution’, 1963) • ‘Realising our Potential’, 1993 • LINK, Teaching Company Scheme, HEROBC, first measures…evolving • Core funding and formulaic metrics

  4. 10 years of ‘third stream’ funding 09 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 Continuation HEIF 4 Third stream embedded? (HEFCE) HEROBC HEROBC Transitional HEIF 1 HEIF 2 ‘HEIF 3’ KTCF HEACF 1 HEACF 2 volunteering funding BUSINESS FELLOWS

  5. Questions • Who generates and who applies the ‘K’? • Should R funding depend on usefulness? • What would happen in a real free market? • Are Universities ‘businesses? • Which sector should take the lead for KT? • Social Sciences different from other KT? • How can KT actively inform Gov’t policy? • We shall return……….

  6. KT essential elements INFORMED DEMAND METRICS (indicators) ‘THIRD STREAM’ ACTIVITY (KT/KE) FUNDING OUTCOMES KNOWLEDGE RESOURCE

  7. BUSINESS COMMUNITY PRIVATE SECTOR PUBLIC SECTOR CULTURAL LANDSCAPE SOCIAL & CIVIC ARENA Resources & Opportunities Cultural Enrichment & Quality of Life Efficiency,Cohesion Competitiveness, Growth The Scope of Knowledge Transfer ENHANCING INNOVATION & PRODUCTIVITYDELIVERING ECONOMIC & SOCIAL BENEFIT NB This represents scope not scale (HEFCE)

  8. The HE Trajectory • Tech Transfer to Knowledge Exchange • From inputs (resources, structure and policy), to activity targets and outputs, thence outcomes and impact • From marginal/part time staffing to professional career (IKT/UNICO/AURIL) • From incomplete logging of remote proxy data to robust measurement of what matters

  9. Strategic Action Manage Knowledge Transfer Schemes

  10. Beauty and the Beast(the policy makers and the practitioners) • Government • Research and Funding Councils • Major charities and ‘great and good’ • UKSPA, AURIL, UNICO/PRAXIS, IKT • Companies • Academic staff • KT offices or similar

  11. Aims of HE knowledge transfer and exchange • Demonstrate value from public funding • - Delivery of benefit, not just maximising income to the publicly funded ‘K’ base • Develop economic and social impact • - Needs valid practical indicators for both • Unlock resources of diverse HE sector • - Need and scope for all HEI’s (also all PSR Establishments) to be engaged

  12. Knowledge Transfer and Impact Strategy Purpose • Achieve and demonstrate a step change in the economic impact of the Science Budget • Knowledge transfer to take centre stage for the research councils • To take forward with the other research councils, with the social science community and with its user communities • Specific emphasis on engagement with the business sector

  13. Some recent publications • The Lambert review; 2003 • The DTI Innovation Report; 2004 • Sci/Innovation investment framework • The ESRC Delivery Plan(s); on-going • The Sainsbury review; 2007 • Saraga report; 2007 • Wellings report; 2008 • Third stream evaluation; (HEFCE 2009/15)

  14. Policy statements • Government • Major stakeholders • Sponsored reports • Guru sources

  15. UK Economic Impact Reporting Framework • Research Council Activities Reported: • interaction with business and public services • collaborative research • commercialisation of research • cooperative training • people exchanges

  16. Effectiveness and evidence • Metrics and targets • - HEFCE’s & Research Council metrics • Input from the market/demand side • - Who are your customers? • Reputation and quality effects • - Citations/peer review, objectivity, integrity, influence + ‘repeat business’ from stakeholders

  17. Institute of Knowledge Transfer • Launched May 2007 with grant from Higher Education Funding Council for England • Focus on individuals and a broad interpretation of KT • Positioned in Innovation and KT space around four themes: • Individual professional standards and career development • Communications and collaboration • Good practice and enhancement of the profession • International engagement • Core membership recruited and committment demonstrated BF/KD February 2009 2009

  18. The IKT offering • Guidelines and standards • Model agreements • Case Studies • Database of awards • Academic underpinning projects • Process accreditation BF/KD February 2009 2009

  19. Questions re-visited • Who generates and who applies the ‘K’? • Should R funding depend on usefulness? • What would happen in a real free market? • Should Universities see themselves as ‘businesses? • Which sector should take the lead for KT? • Is Social Science different from other KT? • How can KT actively inform Gov’t policy?

  20. References (1) • ESRC KT Portal • http://www.esrc.ac.uk/ESRCInfoCentre/Support/knowledge_transfer/index.aspx • Lambert – collaboration • http://www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/lambert_review_business_university_collab.htm • Sainsbury – science and innovation • http://www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/sainsbury_index.htm • HE-business interaction metrics • http://www.hefce.ac.uk/econsoc/buscom/hebci/

  21. References (2) • RCUK KT Portal • http://www.rcuk.ac.uk/innovation/ktportal/default.htm • Saraga – collaborative research • http://www.dius.gov.uk/reports_and_publications/~/media/publications/S/streamlining_august07 • Wellings – IP • http://www.dius.gov.uk/higher_education/shape_and_structure/he_debate/intellectual_property • PACEC/CBR – evaluation • http://www.hefce.ac.uk/pubs/hefce/2009/09_15/ • IKT/CBI video • http://www.youtube.com:80/watch?v=Dmgv1f65fNY

  22. To finish… …an aside from across the pond. • Ned Landon (GE) is reputed to have said, about measuring what we do:

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