Conference Paper (published)

Key Features of a Positive Research Culture

Details

Citation

Norman R & Bradley C (2024) Key Features of a Positive Research Culture. In: volume 11, pp. 39-47. https://doi.org/10.31273/eirj.v11i3

Abstract
The Research Culture Awards were introduced as a way of celebrating people and groups who positively contribute towards enhancing the research environment at the University of Stirling. Colleagues can be nominated anonymously across multiple categories (including leadership, collaboration, mentoring), with nominees receiving their full nomination feedback: both this aspect, and the celebratory awards ceremony, seek to recognise the often-hidden contributions and efforts and create a shared understanding of what good research culture looks like for Stirling. First introduced in 2020, the awards have been held annually and have grown in popularity year on year. Exploring these nominations has allowed for an analysis of the key features of a positive research culture from a person-centric perspective, as felt at local level. The analysis was carried out using a manual frequency analysis of related words and phrases. The overarching results showed that teamwork/collegiality; sharing expertise; good role modelling and good listening skills were the attributes which were most appreciated in colleagues.

Keywords
research environment; recognition; soft skills; hidden contributions, research culture at local level

Journal
Exchanges: The Interdisciplinary Research Journal: Volume 11, Issue 3

StatusPublished
Publication date08/08/2024
Publication date online08/08/2024
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/36183
eISSN2053-9665

People (1)

Professor Rachel Norman

Professor Rachel Norman

Chair in Food Security & Sustainability, Mathematics

Files (1)