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Presentazione di Giuseppe De Nicolao al II Convegno Roars: “Higher Education and Research Policies in Europe: Challenges for Italy”, 21 febbraio 2014 CNR, Piazzale A. Moro 7, Roma
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Le poli(che della ricerca al tempo dei rankings
Giuseppe De Nicolao Università di Pavia
SOMMARIO
Prologo: “mamma li Turchi!”
1. Dall’Egi=o con furore
2. Should you believe in the Shanghai ranking?
3. Numb3rs!
4. No Rankings? No party.
5. The power of numbers
6. Where are we going?
Prologo Mamma li Turchi!
«Siamo agli ultimi posti nelle classifiche mondiali. Per questo motivo presenteremo a novembre la riforma dell’Università, [...] Mi auguro di non dover più vedere in futuro - conclude - la prima università italiana al 174mo posto»
Chi è un “highly skilled migrant”?
Dipende dai ranking
Highly skilled migrants
Can I become a highly skilled migrant in the Netherlands -‐ even if I haven't got a job yet?
To be eligible, you must be in possession of one of the following diplomas or cerPficates:
• a master's degree or doctorate from a recognised Dutch insPtuPon of higher educaPon or
• a master's degree or doctorate from a non-‐Dutch insPtuPon of higher educaPon which is ranked in the top 150 establishments in either the Times Higher EducaPon 2007 list or the Academic Ranking of World UniversiPes 2007 issued by Jiao Ton Shanghai University in 2007
Posso avere una borsa per un master o un PhD?
Dipende dai ranking
Un professore straniero nel collegio del do?orato?
Dipende dai ranking
Capitolo 1 Dall’EgiGo con furore
Capitolo 1 Dall’Egitto con furore
rewind ...
16 seGembre 2010
New York Times, November 14, 2010
Alexandria’s surprising prominence was actually due to “the high output from one scholar in one journal” — soon idenPfied on various blogs as Mohamed El Naschie, an EgypPan academic who published over 320 of his own ar(cles in a scien(fic journal of which he was also the editor.
rewind ...
26 novembre 2008
• ... of the 400 papers by El Naschie indexed in Web of Science, 307 were published in Chaos, Solitons and Fractals alone while he was editor-‐in-‐chief.
• El Naschie’s papers in CSF make 4992 cita(ons, about 2000 of which are to papers published in CSF, largely his own.
never again?
THE ranking 2012: oops, I did it again!
• Only a few of the more than 100 co-‐authors of 2008 and 2010 reviews were from MEPhI
• The 2008 parPcle physics review received nearly 300 Pmes as many citaPons in the year acer publicaPon as the mean for that journal
• Cites were averaged over the rela(vely small number of MEPhI’s publicaPons yielding a very high citaPon-‐rate
• Further, if citaPons are generally low in their countries, then insPtuPons get some more value added (regional modificaAon)
THE ranking 2012: oops, I did it again!
what about other rankings?
the top 10 most spectacular errors of …
reviewed by University Ranking Watch
QS greatest hits: interna(onal Students and Faculty in Malaysian Universi(es
• In 2004 UniversiP Malaya (UM) in Malaysia. reached 89th place in the THES-‐QS world rankings.
• In 2005 came disaster. UM crashed 100 places
• PoliPcal opposiPon: shame on the university leadership!
• Real explanaPon: lot of Malaysian ciPzens of Indian and Chinese descent erroneously counted as “foreigners”.
QS greatest hits: 500 wrong student faculty ra(os in 2007 QS Guide
• Someone slipped three rows when copying and pasPng student faculty raPos: Dublin InsPtute of Technology was given Duke’s raPo, Pretoria got Pune’s, Aachen RWT got Aberystwyth’s (Wales). And so on. Altogether over 500 errors.
Let’s go technical ...
Capitolo 3 Should you believe in the Shanghai ranking?
Shanghai: criteri e importanza %
The “normaliza(on trap” 1/2
The “normaliza(on trap” 2/2
Should you believe in the Shanghai ranking? An MCDM view J.-‐C. Billaut D. Bouyssou P. Vincke
• all criteria used are only loosely connected with what they intended to capture.
• several arbitrary parameters and many micro-‐decisions that are not documented.
• flawed and nonsensical aggregaPon method
• «the Shanghai ranking is a poorly conceived quick and dirty exercise»
«any of our MCDM student that would have proposed such a methodology in her Master’s Thesis would have surely failed according to our own standards»
HUNDREDS OF UNIVERSITIES WITH SIMILAR SCORES SC
OR
E SHANGHAI RANKING:
HOW MUCH RELIABLE?
RANK
THE RANKING
SHA
NG
HA
I RA
NK
ING
Twenty Ways to Rise in the Rankings (1/3) by Richard Holmes hGp://rankingwatch.blogspot.it/2013/12/twenty-‐ways-‐to-‐rise-‐in-‐rankings-‐quickly.html
1. Get rid of students. The university will therefore do be=er in the faculty student raPo indicators.
2. Kick out the old and bring in the young. Get rid of ageing professors, especially if unproducPve and expensive, and hire lots of temporary teachers and researchers.
5. Get a medical school. Medical research produces a disproporPonate number of papers and citaPons which is good for the QS citaPons per faculty indicator and the ARWU publicaPons indicator. Remember this strategy may not help with THE who use field normalisaPon..
7. Amalgamate. What about a new mega university formed by merging LSE, University College London and Imperial College? Or a tres grande ecole from all those li=le grandes ecoles around Paris?
9. The wisdom of crowds. Focus on research projects in those fields that have huge mul( -‐ “author” publica(ons, parPcle physics, astronomy and medicine for example. Such publicaPons ocen have very large numbers of citaPons.
10. Do not produce too much. If your researchers are producing five thousand papers a year, then those five hundred citaPons from a five hundred “author” report on the latest discovery in parPcle physics will not have much impact.
Twenty Ways to Rise in the Rankings (2/3) by Richard Holmes hGp://rankingwatch.blogspot.it/2013/12/twenty-‐ways-‐to-‐rise-‐in-‐rankings-‐quickly.html
13. The importance of names. Make sure that your researchers know which university they are affiliated to and that they know its correct name. Keep an eye on Scopus and ISI and make sure they know what you are called.
18. Support your local independence movement. Increasing the number of internaPonal students and faculty is good for both the THE and QS rankings. If it is difficult to move students across borders why not create new borders?
20. Get Thee to an Island. Leiden Ranking has a li=le known ranking that measures the distance between collaborators. At the moment the first place goes to the Australian NaPonal University.
Twenty Ways to Rise in the Rankings (3/3) by Richard Holmes hGp://rankingwatch.blogspot.it/2013/12/twenty-‐ways-‐to-‐rise-‐in-‐rankings-‐quickly.html
Capitolo 3 Numb3rs!
Capitolo 4
Let’s open the box
UNIVERSITY RANKING
RAW DATA
Fonte: “Malata e Denigrata” a cura di M. Regini, Donzelli 2009
INTERNAZIONALIZZAZIONE
Let’s open the box
1. “ScienPfic excellence” 2. Student faculty raPo 3. Job market
4. Funding
1. “Scien(fic excellence”
Classifiche degli atenei: valore scienAfico assai dubbio.
Come si può misurare il peso di una nazione nel panorama scienAfico internazionale?
Contando gli ar(coli scien(fici che produce e
le citazioni che ques( oGengono
Italia: 8° per ar(coli scien(fici Fonte: SCImago su daP Scopus 1996-‐2012
0
10000
20000
30000
40000
50000
60000
70000
80000
90000
100000
1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010
Regno Unito
Germania
Giappone
Francia
Canada
Italia
Spagna
Olanda
Svizzera
Svezia
PUBBLICAZIONI (WoS)
PUBBLICAZIONI 2004-2010: CRESCITA MEDIA ANNUA (%)
-‐1
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Fonte: VQR 2004-2010 – Rapporto Finale ANVUR, Giugno 2013 (Tab. 3.2) (dati ISI Web of Knowledge, Thomson-Reuters) http://www.anvur.org/rapporto/files/VQR2004-2010_RapportoFinale_parteterza_ConfrontiInternazionali.pdf
0
1000000
2000000
3000000
4000000
5000000
6000000
PUBBLICAZIONI 2004-2010: NUMERO DI CITAZIONI
Fonte: VQR 2004-2010 – Rapporto Finale ANVUR, Giugno 2013 (Tab. 4.1) (dati ISI Web of Knowledge, Thomson-Reuters) http://www.anvur.org/rapporto/files/VQR2004-2010_RapportoFinale_parteterza_ConfrontiInternazionali.pdf
Efficienza: Italia baGe Germania, Francia e Giappone
OCTOBER 2009
Ma come fanno questi italiani a produrre così tanta ricerca con così poche risorse?
2. Student faculty ra(o
1
26 countries
6 4 2 5INDONESIA CZECH REP. ITALY BELGIUM SLOVENIA
3 SAUDI ARABIA
Rapporto studenti/docenti: su 26 nazioni solo 5 stanno peggio di noi
3. Job market
4. Funding
Quanto è elitaria la “top 500”?
OTHER 16,500 UNIVERSITIES TOP 500
PERFORMANCE
NU
MB
ER O
F U
NIV
ERSI
TIES
... e cosa costa stare in cima?
OPERATING EXPENSES
FONDO FINANZIAMENTO ORDINARIO 2012
MILIARD
I DI EURO
LE “OPERATING EXPENSES” DI HARVARD AMMONTANO AL 44% DEL FONDO DI FINANZIAMENTO DELL’INTERO SISTEMA UNIVERSITARIO STATALE ITALIANO
E. Hazelkorn:
“EsKmated yearly budget of €1.5 billion to be ranked in the world’s top 100”
Spesa per università (% PIL): l’Italia è 30° su 33 (fonte: OCSE 2013)
e ciò nonostante ...
% di Atenei che entrano nei “top 500” (Leiden: top 250)
Fonte dei daK: “Malata e denigrata : l’universita italiana a confronto con l’Europa” (a cura di M. Regini, Roma, Donzelli 2009)
CLASSIFICA:
No ranking? No party.
Capitolo 4
Niente classifica? Niente valutazione.
“Ogni valutazione deve me[ere capo a una classifica. Questa è la logica della valutazione. Se c' è una classifica, non c' è neanche una reale valutazione” Giulio TremonP, “Il passato e il buon senso” CdS 22-‐08-‐08
Per rispondere andiamo alle fon(
(la “VQR inglese”)
ma come fanno veramente gli inglesi ?
NO RANKINGS PLEASE!WE’RE ENGLISH!!
“RAE2008 results are in the form of a quality profile for each submission made by an HEI [Higher Education Institution]. We have not produced any ranked lists of single scores for institutions or Units of Assessment, and nor do we intend to.”
5 livelli di qualità (assolu()
La chiave di volta: i “quality profiles”
Dai livelli ai numeri
9 (dal 2011)
La formula
Score = Volume × Cost × (9p4 + 3p3 + p2)
p4 = % prodos in classe 4 p3 = % prodos in classe 3 p2 = % prodos in classe 2
Capitolo 5 The power of numbers
Rankings
• Fragile scienPfic grounds • IncenPve to gaming
• Raw data are obscured • They are not necessary to manage funding (see RAE/REF)
Why, then?
Rankings are based on composite indicators
Science or pseudo-‐science?
Aggregators vs non-‐aggregators (1/3)
Aggregators vs non-‐aggregators (2/3)
Aggregators vs non-‐aggregators (3/3)
• Aggregators: value in combining indicators: extremely useful in garnering media interest and hence the a[enKon of policy makers
• Non-‐aggregators: key objecKon to aggregaKon: the arbitrary nature of the weighKng process by which the variables are combined
Germany
• “We look back decades and people came to German universiKes; today they go to US universiKes.”
• The Exzellenzini(a(ve (2005): from tradiPonal emphasis on egalitarianism towards compePPon and hierarchical stra(fica(on
France
• The Shanghai ranking
“generated considerable embarrassment among the French intelligentsia, academia and government: the first French higher educaKon insKtuKon in the ranking came only in 65th posiAon, mostly behind American universiKes and a few BriKsh ones”
Australia
• The SJT and QS: at least two Australian universiPes among the top 100.
• Opposing strategic opPons: – fund a small number of top-‐Per compePPve universiPes
– “creaPon of a diverse set of high performing, globally-‐focused insPtuPons, each with its own clear, dis(nc(ve mission”.
Japan
• “The government wants a first class university for internaKonal presKge ”
• “in order for Japanese HEIs to compete globally, the government will close down some regional and private universiKes and direct money to the major universiAes”
• some insPtuPons will become teaching only.
Why obsessing about the “top 1%”?
OTHER 16,500 UNIVERSITIES TOP 1%
PERFORMANCE
NU
MB
ER O
F U
NIV
ERSI
TIES
Answer: trickle-‐down knowledge!
E. Hazelkorn on rankings
• 90 or 95% of our students do not a=end elite insPtuPons. Why are we spending so much on what people aren’t aGending as opposed to what they are a=ending?
• EsPmated yearly budget of €1.5 billion to be ranked in the world’s top 100. May detract resources from pensions, health, housing, ....
• Are “elite” insPtuPons really driving naPonal or regional economic and social development?
Does trickle-‐down work?
“Governments and universities must stop obsessing about global rankings and the top 1% of the world's 15,000 institutions. Instead of simply rewarding the achievements of elites and flagship institutions, policy needs to focus on the quality of the system-as-a-whole.”
There is little evidence that trickle-down works.
Capitolo 6
Where are we?
• (Even) Phil Baty (Times Higher EducaKon) admits that there are aspects of academic life where rankings are of li=le value
• Can we/you afford the ‘reputaPon race’? • We will have to live in a world in which extremely poor rankings are regularly published and used.
What can be done then?
What can be done then?
• There is no such thing as a ‘‘best university’’ in abstracto.
• Stop talking about these ‘‘all purpose rankings’’. They are meaningless.
• Lobby in our own insPtuPon so that these rankings are never men(oned in insPtuPonal communicaPon
• Produce many alterna(ve rankings that produce vastly different results.
Grazie per l’aGenzione!