Biology needs a modern assessment system for professional productivity

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Authors
McDade, Lucinda A.
Maddison, David R.
Guralnick, Robert
Piwowar, Heather A.
Jameson, Mary Liz
Helgen, Kristofer M.
Herendeen, Patrick S.
Hill, Andrew
Vis, Morgan L.
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Issue Date
2011-08
Type
Article
Keywords
Academic assessment , Curation of natural history collections , Digital objects , Scientific productivity , Systematic biology
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Abstract

Stimulated in large part by the advent of the Internet, research productivity in many academic disciplines has changed dramatically over the last two decades. However, the assessment system that governs professional success has not kept pace, creating a mismatch between modes of scholarly productivity and academic assessment criteria. In this article, we describe the problem and present ideas for solutions. We argue that adjusting assessment criteria to correspond to modern scholarly productivity is essential for the success of individual scientists and of our discipline as a whole. The authors and endorsers of this article commit to a number of actions that constitute steps toward ensuring that all forms of scholarly productivity are credited. The emphasis here is on systematic biology, but we are not alone in experiencing this mismatch between productivity and assessment. An additional goal in this article is to begin a conversation about the problem with colleagues in other subdisciplines of biology. � 2011 by American Institute of Biological Sciences. All rights reserved.

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BioScience
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63568
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