51勛圖

RAE is not a fair game 1

Published on
January 15, 2009
Last updated
May 22, 2015

The peculiar methodology of the research assessment exercise was always likely to produce strange league tables ("Reviewers raise concerns about RAE gameplaying", 8 January). Take the composition of the sub-panels: 15 or so senior UK academics, some of whom were nominated by subject associations, ploughing through hundreds of outputs.

No one could claim that all those outputs were RAE-assessed with the expertise brought to them by their publishers' readers. That community - which really does represent world opinion - would be better served by journal rankings.

Without disrespect to the people concerned, it would require unusual fortitude in a subject association nominee not to feel that he or she was there to ensure that the picture looked as rosy as possible when shown to the funding council purse-holders. On both counts, the secrecy of the panel meetings is scandalous.

And who on earth dreamt up the idea that you can judge the research environment of a department or university without knowing what proportion of staff take part in it?

David Roberts, Newman University College.

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