[Raving ] 27 November, 2008 15:55

I wrote a partly whimsical, partly bitter essay with this title in 2001 for the SA Journal of Science, following a less-then-inspiring grant from the National Research Foundation (NRF), following their most recent reorganisation.  They  declined to publish it, incidentally, seeing as they were then run by the NRF....

I found it interesting to revisit it this week, given that they have just had another paroxysmic organisational reset which will probably result in much the same thing happening all over again.  An edited version:

"Since 1984 I have been a loyal and dependent client of what was the Foundation for Research Development (FRD), and is now the National Research Foundation (NRF).  This semi-autonomous body is South Africa's premier science funding organisation, especially when one considers "blue sky" or non-applied research.  I have worked my way up in the scale of grants from merely promising, to relatively accomplished, to accomplished researcher: this has been quite a slog, involving as it has a great deal of research, reporting on research, applying for research monies, supervising students, writing research papers, and helping the FRD and then the NRF in peer review of projects and of people.  Indeed, with the amount of paperwork the FRD/NRF has generated for us, my colleagues and I have sometimes jokingly wondered whether they worked for us, or we for them: certainly, we seem to have spent an inordinate amount of time, especially in recent years, in wrestling with recalcitrant Web-based forms which change yearly, with reporting requirements which do the same, and with deadlines which are suddenly imposed close to term, and without warning.

We have coped with all of this with (fairly) good grace, most of us, given that the body is often our main provider, and we are (mostly) committed to seeing what seemed to be a good vision, work for us and for the country.

Here, the newly-minted NRF - formed from the not-yet-old FRD and the Centre for Science Development of the Human Sciences Research Council - suddenly asked us to reapply for research monies in a one-off process, despite the fact that many of us were supposedly on funding programmes that extended beyond the end of 2000.  This was to be done in order to bridge the transition to the new order, and - I suspect - to give a shakedown cruise to the new and rather contentious "Focus Areas" [see below] which had replaced the previous programmes/themes.  And so we grumbled, but we obliged, and filled in yet another new Web-based form, which - surprisingly enough - was actually almost user-friendly.  It also - surprise, surprise! - had enough space for even quite lengthy descriptions of projects (unlike previous versions, which arbitrarily cut one off in mid-justification).  So we filled it all in, and sat back, expectantly.

In pleasurable anticipation, in my case: after all, I had been quite productive, in terms of producing students and papers, and enhancing both mine and South Africa's image in my discipline.  Granted, I had not attracted any "black" South Africans to my projects, and this was a negative in terms of "corrective action": however, without actively going out and kidnapping people, I could see no other way of coercing folk with excellent employment prospects into what is a pretty dead-end field in terms of personal financial advancement.  Granted, I did not have strong ties to an HDI - hitherto-disadvantaged institution, which is an interesting acronym for places created to further apartheid's grand schemes, and which on the whole, were rather well funded until recently.  However, I did have excellent ties with SADC research folk, and in fact had postgraduate students from Kenya, Zimbabwe and Malawi, and had fostered exchanges with researchers from Kenya and students from the Netherlands.  I had also, over the previous 8 years, done rather well in terms of FRD/NRF funding: never less than three PhD studentships, and fairly generous running monies.  I had also been publishing very well, and was in fact peaking in terms of production of students and publications from my favourite research area: I had had 8 papers and 4 chapters in 3 years, had produced 3 MSc and 3 PhDs in 5 years, and had another 4 PhDs finishing in the period 2000 - 2001.  So, complacency ruled….

It was with a severe jolt, therefore, that I read the "Total for 2001" line in my award letter a few weeks ago.  "It's a misprint", I thought.  "They've left a zero off", I prayed.  "They'd never cut me by 80%, would they?" I said, tremblingly, into the hushed quiet of my office.

No, no, and yes, as it turned out.  No, they had not given me the equipment I asked for.  No, they had not given me enough bursary money to support even the one PhD I had on the project who was eligible for funding, let alone the one I wanted to attract.  Yes, they had given only enough running money to support one student for a third of a year, instead of the minimum I needed, of enough for a year for two.

I left an incoherent message on someone's voicemail at the NRF.  I leapt to my trusty friend, my Netscape Messenger, and raced off indignant letters into the ether.  I phoned colleagues in Pretoria, in Stellenbosch, I talked to people down the corridor.

An interesting picture emerged, over several days, and from all over the country.  People who I consider to be leaders in their fields have had their research awards slashed; people who I know to be good researchers have received no money at all.  Other people, on the other hand, have had no complaints: however, the overall picture seems to be of bewildered researchers wondering what they had done wrong, and high-up people in University Faculties scrambling to demand explanations of the NRF."

Interesting times, back there in 2001....  I survived, incidentally, by switching fields and funding bodies: I shifted my focus to mainly medical-related applied research, and discovered - as many had before me - that you could get a lot more money by so doing.  I even abandoned the NRF as a source of funding for a while, given that they seemed to not be very interested in Virology.

Now the observant among you will have noted the highlighted (OK, bolded then...B-) "Focus Areas" above: the NRF basically turned South African science funding on its head to institute a bold new system...which they have now abandoned.  Yes, the all-things-to-all-researchers reinvented NRF has just now released a "NRF Vision 2015" statement, accompanied by the news that Focus Areas are being phased out.  Just what they are planning to replace them with is outlined here - which apparently encompasses seven broad fields:

Broad Investment Areas % of budget

  • Established researchers    18%
  • Human Capital Development and unrated researchers     23%
  • Strategic Knowledge Fields     23%
  • Strategic Platforms (Including research at the National Research Facilities)     11%
  • International Initiatives     11%
  • Applied & Industrial Research & Innovation     14% 
  • Community Engagement Research     0.2%

TOTAL 100%

This all sounds quite reasonable...until one realises a few things.  Which are, that the NRF is simultaneously trying to fund all of this AND phase out Focus Areas AND the SARChi Chairs.

All of which means they will run horribly short of money to fund ANYTHING new in the next couple of years, unless Cabinet approves more budget or they dump something.

Buckle up, comrades: if you depend on the NRF for funding, and if you are currently being re-rated or initiating a new project or two...there could be lean times ahead.  Wither/whither indeed - my money's on (or in) the latter.

Ed Rybicki

MCB, UCT

[Raving ] 19 November, 2008 16:17

...or as they would be if it were.

If you see what I mean.

[Raving ] 15 November, 2008 11:57

In the Weekly Mail Mail & Guardian yesterday: a full page ad asking the following:

"What do 5 Nobel Laureates and the first South African in space have in common?

They all studied at UCT.

Any questions??"

It goes on about worldwide reputations, repeats a claim that we are the only University in Africa ranked in the top 200 worldwide, says

"When you're looking for the one university most qualified to help you unlock your full potential, there is simply no question where to go.

UCT. Changing minds.  Changing futures."

Putting you first...sorry, they don't do say that; that was Nashua.

Yes.  Um.  5 Nobel Laureates??  I thought we went through this a while ago- and UCT can lay claim to three, I believe.  Allan Cormack, Aaron Klug, that guy from the English Department...and who else?  I can only think of another 6 Seffrican Nobellists, and they are D Tutu, FW de Klerk, NH Mandela, A Luthuli, N Gordimer and M Theiler - none of whom are associated with OUTM UCT as far as I know.  Oh, I suppose we could try for D Lessing, but why would we want her, and in any case, Zim has a better claim.

But this is branding, people - OUTM is alive and well, and recruiting more cannon fodder for the acadmic mill.

Now, if only the extra would go to salaries - and not into non-pensionable increments - I could be persuaded to give a whatsit.  As it is - what the hell, we're not in danger of producing any more Nobellists, so let them get away with a little hyperbole.

Unless I'm wrong, of course.

 

[Raving ] 12 November, 2008 12:44

I knew I meant to say something about Obama's win on Nov 4th, given that we got so caught up in it - but found that someone else before me had already said it, so much better.  I give you my wife's favourite artist, that noted hagiographer (yes, he really did write biographies of Canadian saints (yes, there are several)), rake and magnificently depressed poet and singer, L. Cohen Esq.

"Democracy"

It's coming through a hole in the air,
from those nights in Tiananmen Square.
It's coming from the feel
that this ain't exactly real,
or it's real, but it ain't exactly there.
From the wars against disorder,
from the sirens night and day,
from the fires of the homeless,
from the ashes of the gay:
Democracy is coming to the U.S.A.

It's coming through a crack in the wall;
on a visionary flood of alcohol;
from the staggering account
of the Sermon on the Mount
which I don't pretend to understand at all.
It's coming from the silence
on the dock of the bay,
from the brave, the bold, the battered
heart of Chevrolet:
Democracy is coming to the U.S.A.

It's coming from the sorrow in the street,
the holy places where the races meet;
from the homicidal bitchin'
that goes down in every kitchen
to determine who will serve and who will eat.
From the wells of disappointment
where the women kneel to pray
for the grace of God in the desert here
and the desert far away:
Democracy is coming to the U.S.A.

Sail on, sail on
O mighty Ship of State!
To the Shores of Need
Past the Reefs of Greed
Through the Squalls of Hate
Sail on, sail on, sail on, sail on.

It's coming to America first,
the cradle of the best and of the worst.
It's here they got the range
and the machinery for change
and it's here they got the spiritual thirst.
It's here the family's broken
and it's here the lonely say
that the heart has got to open
in a fundamental way:
Democracy is coming to the U.S.A.

It's coming from the women and the men.
O baby, we'll be making love again.
We'll be going down so deep
the river's going to weep,
and the mountain's going to shout Amen!
It's coming like the tidal flood
beneath the lunar sway,
imperial, mysterious,
in amorous array:
Democracy is coming to the U.S.A.

Sail on, sail on ...

I'm sentimental, if you know what I mean
I love the country but I can't stand the scene.
And I'm neither left or right
I'm just staying home tonight,
getting lost in that hopeless little screen.
But I'm stubborn as those garbage bags
that Time cannot decay,
I'm junk but I'm still holding up
this little wild bouquet:
Democracy is coming to the U.S.A.


[ www.azlyrics.com ]

[Raving ] 07 November, 2008 11:05

...that Sarah Palin answered the door in what has variously been described as a towel, or a bathrobe, to John McCain's staffers recently?

And Barack means "Blessed One"?

And that this is the first time in history when two men of Luo parentage, with surnames beginning with "O" (like most Luos) will be leading different countries?  (Hint: Odinga is the other one).

Or that putting the Figure one uses in a comprehension exam up on the Web, well in advance, with discussion, still does not guarantee that the class examined on it knows anything about it - despite being told it was examinable?

Yes, Transplant_Ed, I am wasting time again...less prevarication!!  More marking!!!