The value of research activities “other than” publishing articles: reflections on an experimental workshop series

Yasmine Chahed, Robert Charnock, Sabina Du Rietz Dahlström, Niels Joseph Lennon, Tommaso Palermo, Cristiana Parisi, Dane Pflueger, Andreas Sundström, Dorothy Toh, Lichen Yu
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Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this essay is to explore the opportunities and challenges that early-career researchers (ECRs) face when they seek to contribute to academic knowledge production through research activities “other than” those directly focused on making progress with their own, to-be-published, research papers in a context associated with the “publish or perish” (PoP) mentality.

Design/methodology/approach

Drawing broadly on the notion of technologies of humility (Jasanoff, 2003), this reflective essay develops upon the experiences of the authors in organizing and participating in a series of nine workshops undertaken between June 2013 and April 2021, as well as the arduous process of writing this paper itself. Retrospective accounts, workshop materials, email exchanges and surveys of workshop participants provide the key data sources for the analysis presented in the paper.

Findings

The paper shows how the organization of the workshops is intertwined with the building of a small community of ECRs and exploration of how to address the perceived limitations of a “gap-spotting” approach to developing research ideas and questions. The analysis foregrounds how the workshops provide a seemingly valuable research experience that is not without contradictions. Workshop participation reveals tensions between engagement in activities “other than” working on papers for publication and institutionalized pressures to produce publication outputs, between the (weak) perceived status of ECRs in the field and the aspiration to make a scholarly contribution, and between the desire to develop a personally satisfying intellectual journey and the pressure to respond to requirements that allow access to a wider community of scholars.

Originality/value

Our analysis contributes to debates about the ways in which seemingly valuable outputs are produced in academia despite a pervasive “publish or perish” mentality. The analysis also shows how reflexive writing can help to better understand the opportunities and challenges of pursuing activities that might be considered “unproductive” because they are not directly related to to-be-published papers.

发表文章之外 "的研究活动的价值:对系列实验研讨会的思考
本文旨在探讨早期职业研究人员(ECRs)在 "要么发表,要么毁灭"(PoP)的思维背景下,通过研究活动为学术知识生产做出贡献时所面临的机遇和挑战。这篇反思性文章广泛借鉴了谦逊技术的概念(Jasanoff,2003 年),以作者在 2013 年 6 月至 2021 年 4 月期间组织和参与九次系列研讨会的经历以及撰写本文的艰辛过程为基础。回顾性叙述、研讨会材料、电子邮件交流以及对研讨会参与者的调查为本文的分析提供了重要的数据来源。研究结果本文展示了研讨会的组织工作是如何与建立小型 ECR 社区以及探索如何解决 "发现差距 "方法在提出研究想法和问题方面的局限性交织在一起的。分析强调了研讨会如何提供了一种看似有价值的研究体验,但也并非没有矛盾。工作坊的参与揭示了在参与 "除 "为发表论文而工作之外的活动与产生发表成果的制度化压力之间的紧张关系,ECR 在该领域的(薄弱的)认知地位与做出学术贡献的愿望之间的紧张关系,以及发展个人满意的智力之旅的愿望与响应允许进入更广泛的学者社区的要求的压力之间的紧张关系。原创性/价值我们的分析有助于讨论学术界在普遍存在 "发表或毁灭 "心态的情况下产生看似有价值的成果的方式。分析还表明,反思性写作如何有助于更好地理解从事可能被视为 "非生产性 "活动的机遇和挑战,因为这些活动与即将发表的论文没有直接关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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