For universities bent on rising up the research rankings, one solution might be to implant a chip in academicsâ brains to enhance their cognitive abilities. But if Coventry Universityâs new deputy vice-chancellor for research and self-proclaimed cyborg, Kevin Warwick, has such a scheme up his sleeve, he is not letting on.
Professor Warwick â who famously had a chip implanted into the nerves in his arm and most recently has invited critical scrutiny after claiming that a computer program had passed the Turing artificial intelligence test â told 51³Ô¹Ï that he aims to use more traditional methods to achieve the universityâs goal of entering THEâs ranking of the worldâs top 100 universities under 50 years old by 2020. Those methods are principally inspiration, perspiration and £100 million drawn from Coventryâs reserves to boost its research performance.
Its research strategy, Excellence With Impact, was developed by former vice-chancellor Madeleine Atkins and her replacement, John Latham. But Professor Warwick was lured from his chair in cybernetics at the University of Reading earlier this year by the âchallengeâ of implementing it, and it is his image â complete with robot hand â that graces the first adverts for the new research-focused positions the university is creating.
Appointments will be concentrated in areas where Coventry already has distinct strengths or advantages â around which its network of research institutes will also be amalgamated into large, cross-disciplinary, âuniversity research centresâ or smaller âfaculty research centresâ. These will also directly recruit the 50 new professors, 50 readers and 100 other research-focused academics whom Professor Warwick hopes will allow Coventry to continue a rise up the university rankings that has so far been driven by a successful focus on the student experience.
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âWe are looking for academics who really want to make a difference,â Professor Warwick says. âThey could be people who have already achieved something and now really want to take on the world in their research area. Or they could be somebody more mid-career who has previously been working under someone elseâs cloak and hasnât been able to express themselves. We arenât really looking for well-established academics to come and spend a few years and have a cushy time.â
Despite the research councilsâ recent confinement of doctoral funding largely to traditional research powers, Coventry also hopes to significantly increase its count of research students by using both internal and industry funding.
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Professor Warwick will leverage Coventryâs strong industrial links for project funding, such as by co-locating more university and industrial research facilities along the lines of the Institute for Advanced Manufacturing and Engineering it is currently setting up with manufacturing and logistics firm Unipart â which will also yield lots of âimpact brownie pointsâ for the next research excellence framework.
He denies that it would have been better to recruit ahead of the 2014 REF, believing it is preferable to give the academics plenty of time to build up a head of steam for the 2020 round, in which he would like Coventry to be in the top quartile in at least some subjects.
Recruiting now also avoids the danger that existing staff resent the newcomers for being âparachuted in to change the statsâ. Rather, he hopes they will âenthuseâ existing staff into upping their own research performance â although he adds that a primary focus on teaching will continue to be an option.
Nor, he says, will Coventryâs new research focus detract from its existing emphasis on teaching and applied contract research. Rather, income from these areas will be invaluable for research: âIt is all part of one big scheme of things, which is the university.â
For Professor Warwick, his namesake institution and Coventryâs closest neighbour shows it is genuinely possible for a young institution to establish itself among the research elite and, beyond 2020, he has his sights set on the worldâs top 200.
âThere is a strong belief and a very positive feeling in the staff; a lot of people would be delighted to kick ass a bit and stir it up,â he says.
And despite his new managerial responsibilities, he hopes to keep his own shoulder against the research wheel, noting excitedly that one of the surgeons involved in the implant experiments is now based at a Coventry hospital.
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âI love research and I donât see why I canât keep it up,â he says. âThere is the management side but, as much as anything, I am a flag waver, saying: âLetâs go for it!ââ
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In numbers
50 - the number of new professors that the university will directly recruit
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