A proposed overhaul of Polandâs research assessment system has been met with scepticism, with experts raising concerns about cost, bias and a potential negative impact on universities.
Produced by the Polish Academy of Sciences, the  encourage a move away from bibliometrics in favour of peer review and expert assessment. Funding, the academy advised, should comprise a âbasic subsidyâ based on the number of employees and the âcost-effectivenessâ of the research unit, as well as supplementary funding that matches a percentage of external grants received and an âexcellence subsidyâ determined by expert assessment.
Because of cost and organisational limitations, only âunits that have already demonstrated their high qualityâ should receive expert assessment, the academy said. Overall, the academy said, the proposed system would be ârelatively simple and not susceptible to manipulationâ.
Marcin PaĆys, a former rector of the University of Warsaw and chair of Polandâs Central Council of Science and Higher Education, welcomed the academyâs emphasis on expert assessment over bibliometrics. A reliance on bibliometrics, he said, can incentivise researchers to churn out papers, regardless of quality.
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Marta Natalia WrĂłblewska, a higher education scholar at SWPS University, noted the susceptibility of Polandâs current research assessment system to external interference. âWe donât use metrics like impact factor or journal impact factor but rather a list of journals and publishing houses that is more or less manually compiled by a committee appointed by the minister,â she said.
âPart of the dissatisfaction with the current system comes from the fact that the list doesnât reflect the actual standing of journals or publishing houses at all.â
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The former minister of education and science, PrzemysĆaw Czarnek, was ânotorious for hand-steering the listâ, Dr WrĂłblewska said, with small theological journals receiving similar weighting to some more renowned titles.
Nevertheless, both Dr WrĂłblewska and Professor PaĆys said a move towards expert assessment could be hindered by a lack of trust in experts in Poland. âHow do you guarantee that the âinternational peer reviewersâ will be unbiased, objective and resistant to manipulation? Who will appoint them?â asked Dr WrĂłblewska. The sole focus of expert assessment on high-performing research units, she added, would see weaker units lose out on valuable critical feedback.
Such reforms, both noted, would also come at considerable cost. â[The authors] acknowledge that their proposals make sense only when combined with a significant increase of research funding,â Professor PaĆys said. âThe prospects for increasing [government] investment in science are not optimistic at the moment.â
StanisĆaw Kistryn, coordinator of the Polish chapter of the Coalition for Advancing Research Assessment and a professor at Jagiellonian University, said the academy proposals were ânot good for universitiesâ, with the proposed funding structure omitting any financial incentives for teaching excellence.
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Professor Kistryn also raised concerns about the academyâs plan to fund research units rather than institutions as a whole. âIn many universities, faculties are semi-autonomous, but if there is separate funding and separate assessment then we do not have a university any more â we have a federation of faculties, and no common research policy is possible,â he said.
Dr WrĂłblewska suggested that the academyâs proposals for a new assessment system were premature, noting that Polandâs current assessment regulations were established in 2018, with only one round of evaluation, in 2022, carried out to date.
âThere are details of the regulations that require tweaking for sure, but overhauling the entire system would amount to throwing out the baby with the bathwater,â Dr WrĂłblewska said. âTo my mind, what would be helpful is an independent review of the evaluation exercise to assess its influence on the field.â
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