Academic research is publicly funded -- why isn't it publicly available? | Erica Stone

53,597 views

2018-04-19 ใƒป TED


New videos

Academic research is publicly funded -- why isn't it publicly available? | Erica Stone

53,597 views ใƒป 2018-04-19

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:12
Do you ever find yourself referencing a study in conversation
0
12921
4230
00:17
that you didn't actually read?
1
17175
3372
00:20
(Laughter)
2
20571
2038
00:22
I was having coffee with a friend of mine the other day,
3
22633
2673
00:25
and I said, "You know, I read a new study
4
25320
2665
00:28
that says coffee reduces the risk of depression in women."
5
28009
3169
00:32
But really, what I read was a tweet.
6
32175
4960
00:37
(Laughter)
7
37476
1628
00:39
That said --
8
39128
1179
00:40
(Laughter)
9
40331
1167
00:41
"A new study says drinking coffee may decrease depression risk in women."
10
41522
4156
00:45
(Laughter)
11
45702
1486
00:47
And that tweet had a link to the "New York Times" blog,
12
47212
4460
00:51
where a guest blogger translated the study findings
13
51696
2707
00:54
from a "Live Science" article,
14
54427
2182
00:56
which got its original information
15
56633
1936
00:58
from the Harvard School of Public Health news site,
16
58593
3444
01:02
which cited the actual study abstract,
17
62061
3294
01:05
which summarized the actual study published in an academic journal.
18
65379
4385
01:09
(Laughter)
19
69788
1765
01:11
It's like the six degrees of separation,
20
71577
2595
01:14
but with research.
21
74196
1310
01:15
(Laughter)
22
75530
1149
01:16
So, when I said I read a study,
23
76703
3303
01:20
what I actually read was 59 characters that summarized 10 years of research.
24
80030
6168
01:26
(Laughter)
25
86222
1933
01:28
So, when I said I read a study,
26
88179
2763
01:30
I was reading fractions of the study
27
90966
3088
01:34
that were put together by four different writers
28
94078
2721
01:36
that were not the author,
29
96823
1897
01:38
before it got to me.
30
98744
1333
01:40
That doesn't seem right.
31
100823
1564
01:42
But accessing original research is difficult,
32
102886
3159
01:46
because academics aren't regularly engaging with popular media.
33
106069
3896
01:50
And you might be asking yourself,
34
110982
1746
01:52
why aren't academics engaging with popular media?
35
112752
2809
01:55
It seems like they'd be a more legitimate source of information
36
115585
2968
01:58
than the media pundits.
37
118577
1333
02:00
Right?
38
120760
1150
02:01
(Laughter)
39
121934
1151
02:03
In a country with over 4,100 colleges and universities,
40
123109
3571
02:06
it feels like this should be the norm.
41
126704
1952
02:09
But it's not.
42
129513
1150
02:11
So, how did we get here?
43
131087
1847
02:14
To understand why scholars aren't engaging with popular media,
44
134505
3398
02:17
you first have to understand how universities work.
45
137927
2793
02:21
Now, in the last six years,
46
141497
1317
02:22
I've taught at seven different colleges and universities
47
142838
2620
02:25
in four different states.
48
145482
1261
02:27
I'm a bit of an adjunct extraordinaire.
49
147473
1882
02:29
(Laughter)
50
149379
1038
02:30
And at the same time, I'm pursuing my PhD.
51
150441
2587
02:33
In all of these different institutions,
52
153458
2349
02:35
the research and publication process works the same way.
53
155831
3035
02:39
First, scholars produce research in their fields.
54
159232
3301
02:42
To fund their research, they apply for public and private grants
55
162557
4151
02:46
and after the research is finished,
56
166732
1678
02:48
they write a paper about their findings.
57
168434
2135
02:50
Then they submit that paper to relevant academic journals.
58
170879
2976
02:54
Then it goes through a process called peer review,
59
174807
2373
02:57
which essentially means that other experts
60
177204
2000
02:59
are checking it for accuracy and credibility.
61
179228
2096
03:02
And then, once it's published,
62
182553
2333
03:04
for-profit companies resell that information
63
184910
3096
03:08
back to universities and public libraries
64
188030
1968
03:10
through journal and database subscriptions.
65
190022
2201
03:13
So, that's the system.
66
193038
2263
03:16
Research, write, peer-review, publish, repeat.
67
196188
4229
03:21
My friends and I call it feeding the monster.
68
201315
3079
03:25
And you can see how this might create some problems.
69
205657
2586
03:29
The first problem is that most academic research is publicly funded
70
209728
4651
03:34
but privately distributed.
71
214403
1733
03:37
Every year, the federal government spends 60 billion dollars on research.
72
217268
4337
03:42
According to the National Science Foundation,
73
222498
2119
03:44
29 percent of that goes to public research universities.
74
224641
3142
03:47
So, if you're quick at math, that's 17.4 billion dollars.
75
227807
5238
03:53
Tax dollars.
76
233707
1166
03:55
And just five corporations are responsible
77
235667
2334
03:58
for distributing most publicly funded research.
78
238025
2594
04:00
In 2014, just one of those companies made 1.5 billion dollars in profit.
79
240643
6238
04:07
It's a big business.
80
247505
1333
04:09
And I bet you can see the irony here.
81
249520
2826
04:12
If the public is funding academics' research,
82
252370
3033
04:15
but then we have to pay again to access the results,
83
255427
2972
04:19
it's like we're paying for it twice.
84
259871
1777
04:22
And the other major problem
85
262855
1309
04:24
is that most academics don't have a whole lot of incentive
86
264188
2723
04:26
to publish outside of these prestigious subscription-based journals.
87
266935
3272
04:30
Universities build their tenure and promotion systems
88
270988
2581
04:33
around the number of times scholars publish.
89
273593
2400
04:36
So, books and journal articles are kind of like a form of currency for scholars.
90
276338
4255
04:40
Publishing articles helps you get tenure and more research grants down the road.
91
280617
4190
04:45
But academics are not rewarded for publishing with popular media.
92
285347
4330
04:50
So, this is the status quo.
93
290780
2642
04:54
The current academic ecosystem.
94
294002
2067
04:56
But I don't think it has to be this way.
95
296820
2213
04:59
We can make some simple changes to flip the script.
96
299776
3063
05:04
So, first, let's start by discussing access.
97
304403
2690
05:08
Universities can begin to challenge the status quo
98
308069
3968
05:12
by rewarding scholars for publishing
99
312061
2041
05:14
not just in these subscription-based journals
100
314126
2769
05:16
but in open-access journals as well as on popular media.
101
316919
3928
05:21
Now, the open-access movement is starting to make some progress
102
321673
2960
05:24
in many disciplines,
103
324657
1325
05:26
and fortunately, some other big players have started to notice.
104
326006
3031
05:30
Google Scholar has made open-access research
105
330252
3682
05:33
searchable and easier to find.
106
333958
2000
05:37
Congress, last year, introduced a bill
107
337077
3214
05:40
that suggests that academic research projects
108
340315
3439
05:43
with over 100 million or more in funding
109
343778
3053
05:46
should develop an open-access policy.
110
346855
1992
05:49
And this year, NASA opened up its entire research library to the public.
111
349488
4996
05:55
So, you can see this idea is beginning to catch on.
112
355353
3261
05:59
But access isn't just about being able
113
359585
2421
06:02
to get your hands on a document or a study.
114
362030
2617
06:05
It's also about making sure
115
365165
1634
06:06
that that document or study is easily understood.
116
366823
2551
06:09
So, let's talk about translation.
117
369830
2690
06:15
I don't envision this translation to look like the six degrees of separation
118
375497
5350
06:20
that I illustrated earlier.
119
380871
1523
06:23
Instead, what if scholars were able to take the research that they're doing
120
383847
4088
06:27
and translate it on popular media
121
387959
1841
06:29
and be able to engage with the public?
122
389824
2533
06:33
If scholars did this,
123
393672
1365
06:35
the degrees of separation between the public and research
124
395061
3254
06:38
would shrink by a lot.
125
398339
1467
06:40
So, you see, I'm not suggesting a dumbing-down of the research.
126
400276
3936
06:44
I'm just suggesting that we give the public access to that research
127
404236
3207
06:47
and that we shift the venue and focus on using plain language
128
407467
3936
06:51
so that the public who's paying for the research
129
411427
2690
06:54
can also consume it.
130
414141
1801
06:57
And there are some other benefits to this approach.
131
417395
2631
07:01
By showing the public how their tax dollars
132
421427
2863
07:04
are being used to fund research,
133
424314
2144
07:06
they can begin to redefine universities' identities
134
426482
3254
07:09
so that universities' identities are not just based on a football team
135
429760
3960
07:13
or the degrees they grant
136
433744
2095
07:15
but on the research that's being produced there.
137
435863
2495
07:19
And when there's a healthy relationship between the public and scholars,
138
439157
4984
07:24
it encourages public participation in research.
139
444165
3200
07:28
Can you imagine what that might look like?
140
448673
2541
07:32
What if social scientists
141
452188
1635
07:33
helped local police redesign their sensitivity trainings
142
453847
3627
07:37
and then collaboratively wrote a manual to model future trainings?
143
457498
4162
07:42
Or what if our education professors consulted with our local public schools
144
462924
5763
07:48
to decide how we're going to intervene with our at-risk students
145
468711
3096
07:51
and then wrote about it in a local newspaper?
146
471831
2329
07:55
Because a functioning democracy
147
475411
3238
07:58
requires that the public be well-educated and well-informed.
148
478673
3561
08:03
Instead of research happening behind paywalls and bureaucracy,
149
483030
4309
08:07
wouldn't it be better if it was unfolding right in front of us?
150
487363
3261
08:12
Now, as a PhD student,
151
492419
2690
08:15
I realize I'm critiquing the club I want to join.
152
495133
3233
08:18
(Laughter)
153
498390
1259
08:19
Which is a dangerous thing to do,
154
499673
1603
08:21
since I'm going to be on the academic job market in a couple of years.
155
501300
3374
08:25
But if the status quo in academic research
156
505347
3462
08:28
is to publish in the echo chambers of for-profit journals
157
508833
2824
08:31
that never reach the public,
158
511681
2372
08:34
you better believe my answer is going to be "nope."
159
514077
2937
08:38
I believe in inclusive, democratic research
160
518085
3429
08:41
that works in the community and talks with the public.
161
521538
3665
08:45
I want to work in research and in an academic culture
162
525727
2508
08:48
where the public is not only seen as a valuable audience,
163
528269
3634
08:51
but a constituent, a participant.
164
531927
2458
08:55
And in some cases even the expert.
165
535066
3396
09:00
And this isn't just about
166
540852
3654
09:04
giving you guys access to information.
167
544530
3396
09:08
It's about shifting academic culture from publishing to practice
168
548768
5039
09:13
and from talking to doing.
169
553831
2690
09:17
And you should know that this idea, this hope --
170
557458
3730
09:21
it doesn't just belong to me.
171
561212
1934
09:23
I'm standing on the shoulders of many scholars, teachers,
172
563743
3929
09:27
librarians and community members
173
567696
2976
09:30
who also advocate for including more people in the conversation.
174
570696
3421
09:34
I hope you join our conversation, too.
175
574912
2604
09:37
Thank you.
176
577540
1166
09:38
(Applause)
177
578730
4452
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7