In putting together evidence for the REF, impact can be attributed to a specific piece of research if it made a distinctive contribution (REF2014 2011a). The Oxford English Dictionary defines impact as a 'Marked effect or influence', this is clearly a very broad definition. Studies (Buxton, Hanney and Jones 2004) into the economic gains from biomedical and health sciences determined that different methodologies provide different ways of considering economic benefits. In many instances, controls are not feasible as we cannot look at what impact would have occurred if a piece of research had not taken place; however, indications of the picture before and after impact are valuable and worth collecting for impact that can be predicted. The exploitation of research to provide impact occurs through a complex variety of processes, individuals, and organizations, and therefore, attributing the contribution made by a specific individual, piece of research, funding, strategy, or organization to an impact is not straight forward. If this research is to be assessed alongside more applied research, it is important that we are able to at least determine the contribution of basic research. Teacher Education: Pre-Service and In-Service, Introduction to Educational Research Methodology, Teacher Education: Pre-Service & In-Service, Difference and Relationship Between Measurement, Assessment and Evaluation in Education, Concept and Importance of Measurement Assessment and Evaluation in Education, Purpose, Aims and Objective of Assessment and Evaluation in Education, Main Types of Assessment in Education and their Purposes, Main Types of Evaluation in Education with Examples, Critical Review of Current Evaluation Practices B.Ed Notes, Compare and Contrast Formative and Summative Evaluation in Curriculum Development B.ED Notes, Difference Between Prognostic and Diagnostic Evaluation in Education with Examples, Similarities and Difference Between Norm-Referenced Test and Criterion-Referenced Test with Examples, Difference Between Quantitative and Qualitative Evaluation in Education, Difference between Blooms Taxonomy and Revised Blooms Taxonomy by Anderson 2001, Cognitive Affective and Psychomotor Domains of Learning Revised Blooms Taxonomy 2001, Revised Blooms Taxonomy of Educational Objectives, 7 Types and Forms of Questions with its Advantages, VSA, SA, ET, Objective Type and Situation Based Questions, Definition and Characteristics of Achievement Test B.Ed Notes, Steps, Procedure and Uses of Achievement Test B.Ed Notes, Meaning, Types and Characteristics of diagnostic test in Education B.ED Notes, Advantages and Disadvantages of Diagnostic Test in Education B.ED Notes, Types of Tasks: Projects, Assignments, Performances B.ED Notes, Need and Importance of CCE: Continuous and Comprehensive Evaluation B.Ed Notes, Characteristics & Problems Faced by Teachers in Continuous and Comprehensive Evaluation, Meaning and Construction of Process Oriented Tools B.ED Notes, Components, Advantages and Disadvantages of Observation Schedule, Observation Techniques of Checklist and Rating Scale, Advantages and Disadvantages of Checklist and Rating Scale, Anecdotal Records Advantages and Disadvantages B.ED Notes, Types and Importance of Group Processes and Group Dynamics, Types, Uses, Advantages & Disadvantages of Sociometric Techniques, Stages of Group Processes & Development: Forming, Storming, Norming, Performing, Adjourning, Assessment Criteria of Social Skills in Collaborative or Cooperative Learning Situations, Portfolio Assessment: Meaning, Scope and Uses for Students Performance, Different Methods and Steps Involved in Developing Assessment Portfolio, Characteristics & Development of Rubrics as Tools of Assessment, Types of Rubrics as an Assessment Tool B.ED Notes, Advantages and Disadvantages of Rubrics in Assessment, Types & Importance of Descriptive Statistics B.ED Notes, What is the Difference Between Descriptive and Inferential Statistics with Examples, Central Tendency and Variability Measures & Difference, What are the Different Types of Graphical Representation & its importance for Performance Assessment, Properties and Uses of Normal Probability Curve (NPC) in Interpretation of Test Scores, Meaning & Types of Grading System in Education, Grading System in Education Advantages and Disadvantages B.ED Notes, 7 Types of Feedback in Education & Advantages and Disadvantages, Role of Feedback in Teaching Learning Process, How to Identify Learners Strengths and Weaknesses, Difference between Assessment of Learning and Assessment for Learning in Tabular Form, Critical Review of Current Evaluation Practices and their Assumptions about Learning and Development, The Concept of Test, Measurement, Assessment and Evaluation in Education. "Evaluation is a process of judging the value of something by certain appraisal." Characteristics of evaluation in Education Below are some of the characteristics of evaluation in education, Continuous Process Comprehensive Child-Centered Cooperative Process Common Practice Teaching Methods Multiple Aspects Continuous Process The Social Return on Investment (SROI) guide (The SROI Network 2012) suggests that The language varies impact, returns, benefits, value but the questions around what sort of difference and how much of a difference we are making are the same. A Review of International Practice, HM Treasury, Department for Education and Skills, Department of Trade and Industry, Yes, Research can Inform Health Policy; But can we Bridge the Do-Knowing its been Done Gap?, Council for Industry and Higher Education, UK Innovation Research Centre. SIAMPI is based on the widely held assumption that interactions between researchers and stakeholder are an important pre-requisite to achieving impact (Donovan 2011; Hughes and Martin 2012; Spaapen et al. A university which fails in this respect has no reason for existence. This atmosphere of excitement, arising from imaginative consideration transforms knowledge.. 0000346296 00000 n This distinction is not so clear in impact assessments outside of the UK, where academic outputs and socio-economic impacts are often viewed as one, to give an overall assessment of value and change created through research. Table 1 summarizes some of the advantages and disadvantages of the case study approach. Standard approaches actively used in programme evaluation such as surveys, case studies, bibliometrics, econometrics and statistical analyses, content analysis, and expert judgment are each considered by some (Vonortas and Link, 2012) to have shortcomings when used to measure impacts. 0000012122 00000 n This raises the questions of whether UK business and industry should not invest in the research that will deliver them impacts and who will fund basic research if not the government? The origin is from the Latin term 'valere' meaning "be strong, be well; be of value, or be worth". While valuing and supporting knowledge exchange is important, SIAMPI perhaps takes this a step further in enabling these exchange events to be captured and analysed. The Payback Framework is possibly the most widely used and adapted model for impact assessment (Wooding et al. 0000007777 00000 n 0000002109 00000 n Assessment for learning is ongoing, and requires deep involvement on the part of the learner in clarifying outcomes, monitoring on-going learning, collecting evidence and presenting evidence of learning to others.. 2007; Grant et al. Indicators, evidence, and impact within systems, Department for Business, Innovation and Skills 2012, http://www.arc.gov.au/pdf/ERA_Indicator_Principles.pdf, http://www.charitystar.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/Return_on_donations_a_white_paper_on_charity_impact_measurement.pdf, http://www.oecd.org/science/innovationinsciencetechnologyandindustry/37450246.pdf, http://www.cahs-acss.ca/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/ROI_FullReport.pdf, http://mice.cerch.kcl.ac.uk/wp-uploads/2011/07/MICE_report_Goldsmiths_final.pdf, http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/story.asp?storyCode=409614§ioncode=26, http://www.odi.org.uk/rapid/Events/ESRC/docs/background_paper.pdf, http://www.iscintelligence.com/archivos_subidos/usfacultyburden_5.pdf, http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/impactofsocialsciences/tag/claire-donovan/, http://www.atn.edu.au/docs/Research%20Global%20-%20Measuring%20the%20impact%20of%20research.pdf, http://www.hbs.edu/research/pdf/10-099.pdf, http://www.esf.org/index.php?eID=tx_ccdamdl_file&p[file]=25668&p[dl]=1&p[pid]=6767&p[site]=European%20Science%20Foundation&p[t]=1351858982&hash=93e987c5832f10aeee3911bac23b4e0f&l=en, http://www.rand.org/pubs/research_briefs/2007/RAND_RB9202.pdf, http://www.rand.org/pubs/documented_briefings/2010/RAND_DB578.pdf, http://ukirc.ac.uk/object/report/8025/doc/CIHE_0612ImpactReport_summary.pdf, http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/story.asp?storyCode=415340§ioncode=26, http://www.publicengagement.ac.uk/sites/default/files/80096%20NCCPE%20Social%20Value%20Report.pdf, http://www2.lse.ac.uk/government/research/resgroups/LSEPublicPolicy/Docs/LSE_Impact_Handbook_April_2011.pdf, http://www.artscouncil.org.uk/media/uploads/documents/publications/340.pdf, http://www.ref.ac.uk/media/ref/content/pub/researchexcellenceframeworkimpactpilotexercisefindingsoftheexpertpanels/re01_10.pdf, http://www.ref.ac.uk/media/ref/content/pub/assessmentframeworkandguidanceonsubmissions/02_11.pdf, http://www.ref.ac.uk/media/ref/content/pub/assessmentframeworkandguidanceonsubmissions/GOS%20including%20addendum.pdf, http://www.ref.ac.uk/media/ref/content/pub/panelcriteriaandworkingmethods/01_12.pdf, http://www.russellgroup.ac.uk/uploads/REF-consultation-response-FINAL-Dec09.pdf, http://www.siampi.eu/Pages/SIA/12/625.bGFuZz1FTkc.html, http://www.siampi.eu/Content/SIAMPI/SIAMPI_Final%20report.pdf, http://www.thesroinetwork.org/publications/doc_details/241-a-guide-to-social-return-on-investment-2012, http://www.ucu.org.uk/media/pdf/n/q/ucu_REFstatement_finalsignatures.pdf, http://www.esrc.ac.uk/_images/Case_Study_of_the_Future_of_Work_Programme_Volume_2_tcm8-4563.pdf, Receive exclusive offers and updates from Oxford Academic, Automated collation of evidence is difficult, Allows evidence to be contextualized and a story told, Incorporating perspective can make it difficult to assess critically, Enables assessment in the absence of quantitative data, Preserves distinctive account or disciplinary perspective, Rewards those who can write well, and/or afford to pay for external input. In undertaking excellent research, we anticipate that great things will come and as such one of the fundamental reasons for undertaking research is that we will generate and transform knowledge that will benefit society as a whole. Baselines and controls need to be captured alongside change to demonstrate the degree of impact. 2008), developed during the mid-1990s by Buxton and Hanney, working at Brunel University. Test, measurement, and evaluation are concepts used in education to explain how the progress of learning and the final learning outcomes of students are assessed. Any tool for impact evaluation needs to be flexible, such that it enables access to impact data for a variety of purposes (Scoble et al. Concerns over how to attribute impacts have been raised many times (The Allen Consulting Group 2005; Duryea et al. This is recognized as being particularly problematic within the social sciences where informing policy is a likely impact of research. Systems need to be able to capture links between and evidence of the full pathway from research to impact, including knowledge exchange, outputs, outcomes, and interim impacts, to allow the route to impact to be traced. SIAMPI has been used within the Netherlands Institute for health Services Research (SIAMPI n.d.). Cb)5. Capturing knowledge exchange events would greatly assist the linking of research with impact. The process of evaluation is dynamic and ongoing. Although some might find the distinction somewhat marginal or even confusing, this differentiation between outputs, outcomes, and impacts is important, and has been highlighted, not only for the impacts derived from university research (Kelly and McNicol 2011) but also for work done in the charitable sector (Ebrahim and Rangan, 2010; Berg and Mnsson 2011; Kelly and McNicoll 2011). The time lag between research and impact varies enormously. Definition of Evaluation "Evaluation is the collection, analysis and interpretation of information about any aspect of a programme of education, as part of a recognised process of judging its effectiveness, its efficiency and any other outcomes it may have." Mary Thorpe 2. Teresa Penfield, Matthew J. Baker, Rosa Scoble, Michael C. Wykes, Assessment, evaluations, and definitions of research impact: A review, Research Evaluation, Volume 23, Issue 1, January 2014, Pages 2132, https://doi.org/10.1093/reseval/rvt021. Johnston (Johnston 1995) notes that by developing relationships between researchers and industry, new research strategies can be developed. Assessment refers to the process of collecting information that reflects the performance of a student, school, classroom, or an academic system based on a set of standards, learning criteria, or curricula. Assessment is the process of gathering and discussing information from multiple and diverse sources in order to develop a deep understanding of what students know, understand, and can do with their knowledge as a result of their educational experiences; the process culminates when assessment results are used to improve subsequent learning. Gathering evidence of the links between research and impact is not only a challenge where that evidence is lacking. 0000004731 00000 n According to Hanna- " The process of gathering and interpreted evidence changes in the behavior of all students as they progress through school is called evaluation". These metrics may be used in the UK to understand the benefits of research within academia and are often incorporated into the broader perspective of impact seen internationally, for example, within the Excellence in Research for Australia and using Star Metrics in the USA, in which quantitative measures are used to assess impact, for example, publications, citation, and research income. One might consider that by funding excellent research, impacts (including those that are unforeseen) will follow, and traditionally, assessment of university research focused on academic quality and productivity. n.d.). It is important to emphasize that Not everyone within the higher education sector itself is convinced that evaluation of higher education activity is a worthwhile task (Kelly and McNicoll 2011). It incorporates both academic outputs and wider societal benefits (Donovan and Hanney 2011) to assess outcomes of health sciences research. What are the methodologies and frameworks that have been employed globally to evaluate research impact and how do these compare? As Donovan (2011) comments, Impact is a strong weapon for making an evidence based case to governments for enhanced research support. What are the reasons behind trying to understand and evaluate research impact? The development of tools and systems for assisting with impact evaluation would be very valuable.