Just before Christmas the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology - FCT - announced the final results of the assessment of all Portuguese science units, outsourced to the European Science Foundation - ESF. No representatives of the ESF were present at the final press conference, in contrast with the announcement of the results of the first stage, last June, in which almost half of the research centers were either excluded from obtaining any funding or given very scarce means.
The final results, after the two
evaluation stages, for the 322 units are:
Classified as: | Number of units | Annual funding for all units (M€) |
Poor | 32 | 0 |
Fair | 33 | 0 |
Good | 90 | 1 |
Very Good | 104 | 23 |
Excellent | 52 | 34 |
Exceptional | 11 | 13 |
Units classified as “Poor” or
“Fair” will have no funding. Units evaluated with “Good” will
have very limited funding (1M€ for 28 units, which means an average
funding of about 11 000€/unit /year) that will not allow them to
be continue their research activities. Some of these units classified
as Good are eligible for an extra 6 M€ “strategic restructuring”
fund, which is offensive, because many of them do not need to be
“restructured”; they simply need to be properly evaluated.
In practice the 155 units classified
with less than “Very Good” are condemned. These are about 50% of
all research units in Portugal. On the other hand, ample funding will
be awarded to a small number of units. And this is where things are
really strange: the funding does not have a direct relationship with
the classification. Here are the top 5 research centers with the
highest funding and respective classifications:
Classification | Annual funding (€) | |
Institute for Research and Innovation in Health Sciences | Exceptional | 6 195 503 |
Instituto de Medicina Molecular | Excellent | 2 910 485 |
CNC.IBILI, Universidade de Coimbra (UC)
|
Excellent | 2 623 710 |
INESC Technology and Science | Excellent | 2 574 135 |
CICECO-Aveiro Institute of Materials
|
Excellent | 1 891 383 |
The evaluation process that yielded
these results is, in the opinion of many researchers, seriously
flawed. And a flawed process can only give flawed results. More
details on this may be found here:
http://dererummundi.blogspot.pt/2014/12/the-flawed-evaluation-of-portuguese.html
Many researchers understood immediately
after the results announcement that there was no clear correlation between
the grade and the funding, not to mention the lack of correlation
between grade and scientific output, measured by the number and
impact of scientific publications. The ESF remained silent (it seems that they do not want to be involved in the
funding distribution, claiming that this is entirely an FCT
question). Given the many doubts and questions that followed, FCT made public a posteriori
a set of “funding rules” trying to explain what cannot be
rationally explained: they are unable to provide a simple explicative
algorithm. Instead they claim that funds have been distributed
primarily not according to the assessment results but according to
the funding request, with some "modulation" (read
subtractions) based on grading. There are indeed very strange
things: the unit with more funding per capita is a a small private
research group doing psychology, which was virtually unknown.
In fact, there are many protests
pending both from the first and from the second stage of the science
evaluation process in Portugal. . The Portuguese reference daily
newspaper "Publico" devoted a whole page to the more recent
complains:
The title may be translated as: "Nobody
understands the FCT funding criteria".
The President of a top Portuguese
Engineering School, Instituto Superior Técnico - IST, published an article in another national
newspaper (“Expresso”) saying that, from the money given to the
centers in the top rank, while only 5% had gone to engineering, more
than 50% had gone to biomedicine. There is therefore a strong bias
towards biomedicine, the area of both FCT's President and one of its
Vice-Presidents, and of the Secretary of State for Science and
Technology. These last two are associated with two of the five units
mentioned above.
There are also recent news about the first
stage appeals. The Rectors held a meeting with the Prime
Minister (in the presence of the Minister for Science and
Technology). The Prime Minister was sensitive to the objections
raised and said that a different multidisciplinary panel should be
formed to consider the appeals of the first stage. Furthermore, this
should be independent of ESF. This very sound decision is, in itself,
is a criticism of the whole process and of the conduct of the
directive council of FCT. But, in fact, a new decision can take time
and all of the 2015 science budget seems to have been already allocated. There are elections next October and probably the new
government will inherit the problem.
The deadline for second stage appeals was at the end of January and
it seems that
many units did complain. However, FCT refuses to make this number
public. One suspects that a large portion, if not the
majority, did hand in a complaint. Although in the second stage almost all units were rewarded,
some did not agree with the grade while others did not agree with the
funding (there is of course an overlap: some disagreed with both).
There are no known deadlines for the
response to the appeals from either the first or the second stages
(and it is not known whether ESF is handling the second stage appeals
or not).
Let us present some political,
administrative and scientific flaws. The classifications given to the
research units are the result of an unusual quota system to exclude
some scientists from the research system (this is nowadays seen as a
strong political error). There was a contractually defined
restriction of the number of units allowed to proceed to the second
stage of evaluation (and have a possibility to be classified above
“Good”). By contract between FCT and ESF only 50% of the units
would be allowed to proceed to the second stage. Strangely enough ESF
complied with this request. In the second stage there were quotas
too. In this case, the grades could be "exceptional",
"excellent" or "very good", and certain
percentages of each rank was established a priori.
Between the two stages the Conference
of the Portuguese Rectors - CRUP (encompassing the Presidents of all
Universities) wrote a letter to the minister of Education and
Science, whose contents may be read here:
The Portuguese press gave echo to this
strong position and, given the lack of a public response by the Minister, the national public opinion made its own judgment.
Based on the many formal
irregularities, non-observance of the rules and other flaws, a case
has been submitted to court by a teachers' and researchers' union and
some units sentenced to death in the first stage have started to do the
same.
The ESF-FCT assessment was an opaque
process. Very few specialists were involved in the final decisions
of the first and second stages. No site visits were
done during the first stage, contrary to legal dispositions. Site visits were done with very
few panel members in the second phase. Not only do
these facts denote a total lack of respect for proper procedures and
even for the law, but they also clearly undermined any possibility
of a fair and minimally rational evaluation.
hase, in many cases from scientific areas other than those of the visited units.
hase, in many cases from scientific areas other than those of the visited units.
The Spanish astrophysicist Amaya-Morin
was completely right when she wrote in "Nature" that the
process was flawed: it falls short of being clean. See about the ESF
threat to Amaya-Morin:
“Nature" refused to continue this
discussion on its pages. They refused to publish a letter explaining
why science was not being correctly handled in Portugal. One of the
reasons why Europe and the world should care is that two of the
Portuguese connected to the present government have relevant jobs in
Europe: Miguel Seabra, the FCT President, is President of Science
Europe, which took over some of the ESF missions, and Carlos Moedas is
the Science, Research and Innovation Commissioner of the European
Union, responsible for the whole Horizon 2020 program.
We should be absolutely clear about this: what is happening is the
equivalent of closing down half of the institutes and laboratories
of
a given country on the basis of a quick, irregular and unfair
assessment process. In other words, it is tantamount to scientific
genocide. It was not only a lack of a decent peer review: the whole
process was conducted in an amateurish way, to say the
least. And, since there are many appeals pending, still is
Carlos Fiolhais (University of Coimbra) on behalf of a group of reserachers
Carlos Fiolhais (University of Coimbra) on behalf of a group of reserachers
3 comentários:
I regret that there are no figures showing the impact of research and innovation on economic growth in Portugal
you probably will not find that for Maxwell at the time in which he published his Treatise on electricity and magnetism.
João Príncipe
Critics of the "process" seem to assume unlimited funding is due to any research centre just for the sake of existing.
In good portuguese:"não há guita". Tu country has obvious budget constraints.
So it's only natural that the number of "fundable" classifications should be limited from the start. Just as natural as unfunded centres finding the process unfair - the only fair process would be the one that would have granted them money.
Buiça
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