Career advancement and scientific performance in universities

被引:43
作者
Abramo, Giovanni [1 ]
D'Angelo, Ciriaco Andrea [1 ,2 ]
Rosati, Francesco [2 ]
机构
[1] Natl Res Council Italy, Inst Syst Anal & Comp Sci IASI CNR, Lab Studies Res & Technol Transfer, I-00185 Rome, Italy
[2] Univ Roma Tor Vergata, Dept Management & Engn, I-00133 Rome, Italy
关键词
Research evaluation; Recruitment; Career advancement; Bibliometrics; Universities; Italy; MINORITY FACULTY RECRUITMENT; HIGHER-EDUCATION; RETENTION; PROMOTION; NEPOTISM; IMPACT; GENDER; LEVEL;
D O I
10.1007/s11192-013-1075-8
中图分类号
TP39 [计算机的应用];
学科分类号
081203 ; 0835 ;
摘要
Many governments have placed priority on excellence in higher education as part of their policy agendas. Processes for recruitment and career advancement in universities thus have a critical role. The efficiency of faculty selection processes can be evaluated by comparing the subsequent performance of competition winners against that of the losers and the pre-existing staff of equal academic rank. Our study presents an empirical analysis concerning the recruitment procedures for associate professors in the Italian university system. The results of a bibliometric analysis of the hard science areas reveal that new associate professors are on average more productive than the incumbents. However a number of crucial concerns emerge, in particular concerning occurrence of non-winner candidates that are more productive than the winners over the subsequent triennium, and cases of winners that are completely unproductive. Beyond the implications for the Italian case, the analysis offers considerations for all decision-makers regarding the ex post evaluation of the efficiency of the recruitment process and the desirability of providing selection committees with bibliometric indicators in support of evaluation (i.e. informed peer review).
引用
收藏
页码:891 / 907
页数:17
相关论文
共 37 条
[1]  
Abramo G., 2012, RELATIVES SAME U FAC
[2]   Individual research performance: A proposal for comparing apples to oranges [J].
Abramo, Giovanni ;
Cicero, Tindaro ;
D'Angelo, Ciriaco Andrea .
JOURNAL OF INFORMETRICS, 2013, 7 (02) :528-539
[3]   The impact of unproductive and top researchers on overall university research performance [J].
Abramo, Giovanni ;
Cicero, Tindaro ;
D'Angelo, Ciriaco Andrea .
JOURNAL OF INFORMETRICS, 2013, 7 (01) :166-175
[4]   The importance of accounting for the number of co-authors and their order when assessing research performance at the individual level in the life sciences [J].
Abramo, Giovanni ;
D'Angelo, Ciriaco Andrea ;
Rosati, Francesco .
JOURNAL OF INFORMETRICS, 2013, 7 (01) :198-208
[5]   The dispersion of research performance within and between universities as a potential indicator of the competitive intensity in higher education systems [J].
Abramo, Giovanni ;
Cicero, Tindaro ;
D'Angelo, Ciriaco Andrea .
JOURNAL OF INFORMETRICS, 2012, 6 (02) :155-168
[6]   Assessing the varying level of impact measurement accuracy as a function of the citation window length [J].
Abramo, Giovanni ;
Cicero, Tindaro ;
D'Angelo, Ciriaco Andrea .
JOURNAL OF INFORMETRICS, 2011, 5 (04) :659-667
[7]   Citations versus journal impact factor as proxy of quality: could the latter ever be preferable? [J].
Abramo, Giovanni ;
D'Angelo, Ciriaco Andrea ;
Di Costa, Flavia .
SCIENTOMETRICS, 2010, 84 (03) :821-833
[8]   National research assessment exercises: a measure of the distortion of performance rankings when labor input is treated as uniform [J].
Abramo, Giovanni ;
D'Angelo, Ciriaco Andrea ;
Solazzi, Marco .
SCIENTOMETRICS, 2010, 84 (03) :605-619
[9]   ASPECTS OF PROMOTION PROCEDURES IN AUSTRALIAN UNIVERSITIES [J].
ALLEN, N .
HIGHER EDUCATION, 1988, 17 (03) :267-280
[10]   Measuring Nepotism through Shared Last Names: The Case of Italian Academia [J].
Allesina, Stefano .
PLOS ONE, 2011, 6 (08)