The challenge of demonstrating the impact of research beyond traditional mechanisms

The concept of ‘impact’ in academia is a focus of not only research councils but also of nationwide institutional research evaluations. In the UK, it is necessary for academics and their institutions to not only conduct research which has real impact, but to provide evidence of impact beyond academi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Marcella, R., Lockerbie, H., Cameron, Roslyn
Other Authors: ECRM
Format: Conference Paper
Published: ECRM 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/45932
_version_ 1848757421388857344
author Marcella, R.
Lockerbie, H.
Cameron, Roslyn
author2 ECRM
author_facet ECRM
Marcella, R.
Lockerbie, H.
Cameron, Roslyn
author_sort Marcella, R.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The concept of ‘impact’ in academia is a focus of not only research councils but also of nationwide institutional research evaluations. In the UK, it is necessary for academics and their institutions to not only conduct research which has real impact, but to provide evidence of impact beyond academic bibliometrics. This includes evidence of impact on industry, government, wider communities and beyond (REF 2011). In Australia, the Excellence in Research for Australia (ERA) requirements for the 2015 reporting indicate research outputs, income, and both applied and esteem measures, are to be used to assess the excellence of research activity (Australian Research Council 2014). In addition the Australian Research Council (ARC) has piloted a new tool, the Excellence in Innovation for Australian (EIA) as a potential companion exercise alongside ERA to measure impact. This paper provides an overview of impact definitions in the UK and Australia, drawing on guidance from research councils and the UK’s Research Excellence Framework (REF). The research assessment environments in both countries are also described. The challenges of research assessment and the introduction of impact into this are discussed.The analysis of four impact case studies, published by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) from the UK, is presented and discussed, and one author offers personal reflections into the construction of an impact case study for REF 2015. The paper ends with discussions on best practice, identified through critical examination of existing frameworks and case studies, on how to incorporate impact into research design ab initio, including anticipated and unanticipated impacts, as well as the collection of evidence to demonstrate these. At a time when the importance of impact is growing in the demonstration of institutional and personal research excellence and esteem, the paper contributes to an area of very significant dialogue and reflection for the research community, of value to both early career and senior researchers.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T09:27:49Z
format Conference Paper
id curtin-20.500.11937-45932
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T09:27:49Z
publishDate 2015
publisher ECRM
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-459322017-01-30T15:24:09Z The challenge of demonstrating the impact of research beyond traditional mechanisms Marcella, R. Lockerbie, H. Cameron, Roslyn ECRM The concept of ‘impact’ in academia is a focus of not only research councils but also of nationwide institutional research evaluations. In the UK, it is necessary for academics and their institutions to not only conduct research which has real impact, but to provide evidence of impact beyond academic bibliometrics. This includes evidence of impact on industry, government, wider communities and beyond (REF 2011). In Australia, the Excellence in Research for Australia (ERA) requirements for the 2015 reporting indicate research outputs, income, and both applied and esteem measures, are to be used to assess the excellence of research activity (Australian Research Council 2014). In addition the Australian Research Council (ARC) has piloted a new tool, the Excellence in Innovation for Australian (EIA) as a potential companion exercise alongside ERA to measure impact. This paper provides an overview of impact definitions in the UK and Australia, drawing on guidance from research councils and the UK’s Research Excellence Framework (REF). The research assessment environments in both countries are also described. The challenges of research assessment and the introduction of impact into this are discussed.The analysis of four impact case studies, published by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) from the UK, is presented and discussed, and one author offers personal reflections into the construction of an impact case study for REF 2015. The paper ends with discussions on best practice, identified through critical examination of existing frameworks and case studies, on how to incorporate impact into research design ab initio, including anticipated and unanticipated impacts, as well as the collection of evidence to demonstrate these. At a time when the importance of impact is growing in the demonstration of institutional and personal research excellence and esteem, the paper contributes to an area of very significant dialogue and reflection for the research community, of value to both early career and senior researchers. 2015 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/45932 ECRM restricted
spellingShingle Marcella, R.
Lockerbie, H.
Cameron, Roslyn
The challenge of demonstrating the impact of research beyond traditional mechanisms
title The challenge of demonstrating the impact of research beyond traditional mechanisms
title_full The challenge of demonstrating the impact of research beyond traditional mechanisms
title_fullStr The challenge of demonstrating the impact of research beyond traditional mechanisms
title_full_unstemmed The challenge of demonstrating the impact of research beyond traditional mechanisms
title_short The challenge of demonstrating the impact of research beyond traditional mechanisms
title_sort challenge of demonstrating the impact of research beyond traditional mechanisms
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/45932