All about ASH

On Friday last (15th April) I attended a “Policy & Practice Think Tank” day hosted at the University of Oxford, part of a project called ASHPIT (Arts, Social Sciences & Humanities Policy & practice Implementation Think Tank). The theme of this gathering was enterprise, considering how to engage researchers from the Arts, Social Sciences & Humanities disciplines in the development of skills relating to entrepreneurship & enterprise.

I was asked to contribute because of my involvement in a project to develop resources on Social Enterprise which has now been released through the national Vitae networks and so I gave a short presentation of why we set about developing those resources in the first place. The presentation I gave can be found below.

 There are many links to video resources contained within the presentation, click on the images to find out more!

There were two main things that came out of the day for me, one that I was happy with and the other left me feeling perplexed.

Firstly, there was a lot of interest in using social enterprise as a way to engage researchers, my basic argument is that many researchers are not inspired by attempts to improve their skills in enterprise, not because they don’t understand business and the commercial environment (I’m pretty sure that most researchers have a pretty good grasp of profit maximising business models) but are not driven or inspired by that culture. The difference with social enterprises is that whilst they are businesses that trade for profit, it is what happens to the profit that is inspiring. It is good to know that researchers feel inspired by solving problems in society.

The second thing for me was the underlying assumption that the discussions of the day seemed to propagate and it is this that has left me feeling uncomfortable. There were a few discussions around the need to create generic skills development resources and materials that are ‘specifically targeted towards the Arts, Social Sciences & Humanities disciplines’. I couldn’t help but question why. Why is there a perception that all skills development resources are only suited for researchers in STEM subjects (Science Technology, Engineering & Mathematics)? I’m not convinced that skills developers in ASH subjects need to reinvent their development programmes to accommodate discipline specific sensitivities. After all, a good generic development resource that is well facilitated will de facto span all disciplines…

But then I am a trained scientist so maybe I just don’t understand where the ASH researchers are coming from?

Finding time to write – snacking instead of feasting

At the end of January we ran a workshop here at UWE for researchers entitled “Writing for Publication”. Dr Rowena Murray from the University of Strathclyde, a veritable expert on the topic, came to facilitate the event for us.

Rowena has published a number of books on the subject aimed PhD students and academic research staff, it was a fascinating day. She outlined a number of approaches to achieving some writing goals (having actually established some in the first instance!) that can be utilised by almost anybody.

I have to confess that I find writing extremely hard, it is not an activity I like doing particularly. This is especially so when it comes to writing about research. I’m aware that this has a lot to do with my personality, how I prefer to approach things. However you would describe it or quantify it, I am an extreme example of “Mr Last Minute”, a deadline has to be looming above me like a boiling, tumultuous storm cloud in order for me to find the clarity of thought, energy and enthusiasm to commit the contents of my head to paper. Indeed, my PhD thesis was largely written in a period of six weeks (having procrastinated for the previous six months) only because I had no other choice but to finish it before an externally imposed deadline.

One of the approaches that Rowena described on that day was that if one waits to feel “comfortable” or “good” about writing before you commence, then most of us would be waiting forever. There is value in adjusting the mindset to realise that thinking about writing is never going to feel good. Another practical consideration, which I have come across in other spheres, is the idea about having to have a large enough block of time to actually achieve anything, therefore fooling oneself into thinking that it is not worth starting anything that you can’t ‘get your teeth into’.

The reality is that if one has a clear goal, a results oriented approach, then plenty can be achieved in really small chunks of time. The idea of free writing has never really sat well with me but it can be amazing to see how much one can write when you suspend the “quality control” feature!

This approach is then to realise that one has to make the best of increasingly small chunks of time in order to achieve things including writing, learning how to “snack write” rather than waiting for sufficient time to “binge” or “feast” on writing.

One of the outcomes of the workshop was to establish a writers’ group, something I duly did. In fact that is exactly where I am sitting now, in a room free of distractions with some other researchers who are furiously scribbling away and making progress on their latest research paper.

I, on the other hand, am merely writing this blog entry. Still, that’s something I have achieved today…

Postgraduate Research Summer Connections

The summer of 2011 seems to be shaping up nicely in the researcher development world despite the upheaval in terms of reorganisation that generally pervades right now. I am currently working with colleagues to put on a few events through May and June to give research students at UWE the opportunity to share their interests.

We are aiming to provide some institution-wide development events to complement the round of departmental seminars and conferences that are already planned. The theme of these overarching events is connections; gettting ones research out to where it matters.

To help with this I am putting together a workshop on the topic of “Preparing Research Posters”, an exploration of how to communicate your research in a visual way on one sheet of paper, not easy to do effectively. 

I’m also hoping to firm up arrangements for a friend and colleague, Dr Tristram Hooley from the University of Derby, to come to UWE and facilitate a workshop on how to use social media tools to augment your research efforts. Just knowing that he is coming has given me impetus to set up this very blog! He has his own blog right here. Preparing for and advertising this event will force me to widen my use of social media tools although I’m a prolific (and proficient?) user of both Twitter and facebook.

The final event that we are trying to organise (if we can get some rooms booked whilst the summer school season kicks into top gear!) will aim to showcase the research posters (and offer a prize for the posters judged to be the most effective at communicating the message).

So this is my inaugural post on a blog. Time now to get organising and make some connections happen!

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