The use of scientific ranking in the Academic career. An exemplificative survey in an Italian relatively young University

Salvatore Chirumbolo
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Abstract

Scientific ranking, usually involved in a metric evaluation of one’s own academic reputation, does not seem to even match with the career advancement in the University context. Paradoxically, members with a low ranking in bibliometric evaluation, usually expressed as number of publications (now known as “research products”), Hirsch’s index (Hind) and citations, cover responsibilities decisively higher than other members with a better ranking position. Although this research has been performed in a single exemplificative Italian Academy, this issue may be expanded to many further Italian Universities, representing a great concern for the advancement of science. Ideally, researchers in the field support the thesis that academic career and scientific rankings walk alongside following meritocratic rules [1], yet, sound analyses in the real world make this enthusiastic consideration somehow controversial [2-7]. Following Gelmini’s law, in 2010, a significant burden of “subjectivity” on the Expert Committee’s evaluation of academic careers, occurring once a candidate participated in earning the National Scientific Qualification for teaching in an Academy, led meritocracy to fail [7]. The apparently shareable consideration that a scientific crew should be empowered in selecting the best candidate suited for the defined project, often points at human and character features, empathy, promptness to obey without discussing head’s ideas, self-denial and a poor creative participation, in order to prevent any conflictual proposal, idea or debate. In this arrangement of skills, scientific rankings cannot bear any real support. Yet, Gelmini’s law introduced important novelties to the complete anarchy in selecting candidates for the Academic career, such as the so-called “medians”, in order to properly link the expertise of the candidate with his/her own scientific reputation, i.e., its scientific ranking compared to at least the half of current Academic experts in the same professional branch. Medians would be a paramount method to evaluate one’s own reputation on the basis that the candidate has exceeded the 50% of the confirmed experts in a nationwide assessment. Notwithstanding, other “personalized” items were involved in the selection route, just causing real perturbating bias in the correctness of the same selection. What have we lost in this dramatic drift far from a true, honest meritocracy? A first, maybe trivial, consideration would be to arrange a cut off of rankings to possibly select a candidate as worth of teaching in an Academy, either as Associate Professor or Full Professor. If rankings are recognized as the only reliable metric to categorize the expertise level of a researcher or a scholar, then primarily an Institution should consider rankings as the leading source of professionality for a defined field of research. In this Editorial, I will address this point.
在学术生涯中使用科学排名。意大利一所相对年轻大学的示范性调查
科学排名通常涉及对个人学术声誉的度量评估,但似乎与大学中的职业发展并不匹配。矛盾的是,在文献计量学评价中排名靠后的成员(通常用出版物数量(现在称为 "研究成果")、赫希指数(Hind)和引用次数来表示)所承担的责任明显高于排名靠前的其他成员。虽然这项研究是在意大利的一所示范性学院进行的,但这一问题可能会扩大到意大利其他许多大学,这代表了对科学进步的极大关注。在理想情况下,该领域的研究人员支持学术生涯和科学排名与任人唯贤的规则并行不悖的论点[1],然而,对现实世界的合理分析却使这一热切的考量在某种程度上引起了争议[2-7]。根据盖尔米尼定律,2010 年,一旦候选人参与获得在学院任教的国家科学资格,专家委员会对学术生涯评价的 "主观性 "负担就会大大加重,导致择优原则失效[7]。科研人员应有权选择最适合既定项目的候选人,这一看似可以共享的考虑往往指向人和性格特点、同理心、迅速服从而不讨论领导的想法、自我否定和创造性参与度低,以防止任何冲突性建议、想法或辩论。在这种技能安排中,科学排名无法得到真正的支持。然而,盖尔米尼定律为学术界选拔候选人的完全无政府状态引入了重要的新方法,如所谓的 "中值",以便将候选人的专业技能与其自身的科学声誉恰当地联系起来,即与同一专业分支中至少一半的现有学术专家相比,候选人的科学排名。中位数是评价候选人自身声誉的最重要方法,其依据是候选人在全国范围的评估中超过了 50%的已确认专家。尽管如此,其他 "个性化 "的项目也参与到了选拔过程中,只是对同一选拔的正确性造成了真正的干扰性偏差。在这种远离真正的、诚实的任人唯贤的急剧偏离中,我们失去了什么?首先,也许是微不足道的考虑,是安排一个排名截断点,以选择值得在学院任教的候选人,无论是副教授还是正教授。如果排名被认为是划分研究人员或学者专业水平的唯一可靠指标,那么机构就应该把排名作为确定研究领域专业性的主要来源。在这篇社论中,我将论述这一点。
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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