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Renewing the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC): Consultation at UNBC and Northern B.C. Jim Randall & Suzanne LeBlanc University of Northern British Columbia. OUTLINE. WHAT is SSHRC and why Does it Need to be Transformed? New Vision and New Core Values for SSHRC?
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Renewing the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC):Consultation at UNBC and Northern B.C. Jim Randall & Suzanne LeBlancUniversity of Northern British Columbia
OUTLINE • WHAT is SSHRC and why Does it Need to be Transformed? • New Vision and New Core Values for SSHRC? • Comments on Current Programs? • Comments on Suggested New Programs? • What are the Priorities? • Overview of the Consultation Process • An Interview with Marc Renaud, President of SSHRC
WHAT is SSHRC and Why Does it Need to be Transformed? • Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada • Mandate: promote and support university-based research and training in the social sciences and humanities • Also Serves Law, Education, Commerce, Fine Arts • 18,000 Faculty and 40,000 Graduate Students from 90 Universities/Colleges are Eligible; Also, Researchers from NPOs/CBOs • Recent Examples of UNBC – SSHRC-funded Research: Aboriginal-University partnership for sustainable resource management, community transition in a single-industry town, emotional climate of parent-child communications, ‘transatlantic romanticism’
WHAT is SSHRC and Why Does it Need to be Transformed? (continued) • 1 of 3 main Federal Granting Agencies for University-Based Research • Other Granting Agencies are Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC), Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) • 2003/04 budget = $242 million; only 14% of Total $1.7 billion to all 3 Granting Agencies; NSERC = $760 mill., CIHR = $727 mill. • SSHRC Standard Research Grant Success Rate = 35-40%; NSERC = 55-65%; CIHR = 25% (but much higher $ amounts) • 4A Category in SSHRC: “Worthy but no Money”
WHAT is SSHRC and Why Does it Need to be Transformed? (continued) • Types of SSHRC Programs • Core Grants and Fellowships ($137 mill.) • 38% of this investigator/”curiousity”-driven research • Community-University Research Alliances • Doctoral and Post-Doctoral Fellowships • Initiative on the New Economy • Canada Graduate Scholarships (M.A.) • Aid to Small Universities • Conference/Workshop/Congress Grants and Support for Professional Association Meetings
WHAT is SSHRC and Why Does it Need to be Transformed? (continued) • 25% of SSHRC-eligible researchers from Small Universities; Receive only 10% of Funding • Percent of Grant Applications Successful: Small Univ. (27%), Medium (40.4%), Large (45.8%) • Many More 4As from Small Universities
Why Does SSHRC Need to be Transformed? • To “move beyond operating primarily as a granting agency, and to become a full-fledged ‘knowledge agency,’ one that helps establish new connections between researchers and research users and that supports research through its full cycle, from development to knowledge utilization.” • To Be More Effective in Communicating Societal Value in Relation to NSERC and CIHR • To Receive More Funding
SSHRC CORE VALUES • Existing Core Values: • Research Excellence, Competitive Funding, Inclusiveness, Innovative Continuity and Accountability • Proposed Core Values: • Interactive Engagement: fostering larger, ongoing linkages and interactions through a mix of partnerships that span researchers, students, fields of activity, institutions, communities, regions and countries • Maximum Knowledge Impact: building greater capacity for understanding research and its applicability, thus maximizing the impact of knowledge, not just within a discipline but also in government, business and in the community.
Reforming Current Programs • Smaller "Operating" Grants to More People OR Larger Grants to Fewer People? • Special Support for Young Scholars • Support Greater Relevance, Synergy and Impact of Strategic Grants • Different or New Support for Research Communications • New or Different Support to Institutions • Development of More Collective Tools for Research
Suggestions for New Programs or Initiatives • Confederations of Learning (i.e., groupings of people with shared research interests), • more Formal Institutes focusing on cross-cutting issues of major and immediate importance (e.g., cities, governance, environment and sustainability, Aboriginal peoples) (similar to CIHR), • Knowledge Mobilization Units within universities dedicated to transferring human knowledge • Web-Facilitated Communities of Practice that will cut down on the time needed for groups to share knowledge
Suggestions for New Programs or Initiatives (continued) • Clearinghouse for Advanced Expertise • Researcher Exchange/Mobility Programs both within and across universities, government business and the non-profit sector • Enriched Postsecondary Training Environments providing additional training resources to those departments proven to be the most effective in training students, • Human Sciences Foundation that would broker or mobilize knowledge, • Develop Scholarly-Based Journals for Lay Audiences
Consultation Process and Timelines • Local Representatives for Each of 90 Universities and Colleges Consult Widely in their Communities • Reports Due at end of April • Consult with Professional Associations • SSHRC Draft Report in June (Learneds Congress in Winnipeg) • Final Report to Government by October
UNBC and Northern BC Consultation • Jim Randall Asked to Serve as Local Representative (Assisted by Suzanne LeBlanc) • Three Parts to Consultation: • Face-to-Face Meetings (Faculty, Students, Community Researchers, Regions) • Follow-Up On-Line Survey (Linked to Position Paper) • Return Draft Report to Stakeholders for Review
A DVD Interview with Marc Renaud, President of SSHRC, with Ann Medina, on the Transformation of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council