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Basken, Paul – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2013
The National Science Foundation (NSF), in carrying out the Obama administration's new push for greater public access to research published in scientific journals, will consider exclusivity periods shorter than the 12-month standard in the White House directive, as well as trade-offs involving data-sharing and considerations of publishers'…
Descriptors: Public Agencies, Public Policy, Scientific Research, Periodicals
Basken, Paul – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Scientific journals have been retracting unreliable articles at rapidly escalating rates in the past few years, raising concern about whether research faces a burgeoning ethical crisis. Various causes have been suspected, with the common theme being that journals are seeing more cases of plagiarism and fudging of data as researchers and editors…
Descriptors: Expertise, Scientific Research, Plagiarism, Integrity
Basken, Paul – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
For many Americans, the confluence of a recession and a growing realization that the nation needs to end its reliance on fossil fuels seems like a double dose of bad news. But for the nation's research universities, it may be an opportunity. A Brookings Institution, a policy-study group with ties to the Democratic leaders now controlling the White…
Descriptors: Energy, Research and Development, Research Universities, Federal Aid
Berrett, Dan – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Original research in biology, which is thought to spark student interest and bolster majors, makes its way to the associate-degree level. Through a grant from the National Science Foundation, students of biology in community colleges will have the chance to do research on open-ended, real-world questions with no predetermined answers--and…
Descriptors: Majors (Students), Educational Benefits, Student Interests, Biology
Lindsey, Ursula – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Eight years after the U.S. invasion of Iraq and a few months after the withdrawal of the military forces from the country, Iraq's universities, devastated by years of dictatorship, sanctions, and war, are still struggling to recover. The security situation has improved since the deadly, dark days of 2006 and 2007, when the country teetered on the…
Descriptors: Scholarship, Scientific Research, Sanctions, Foreign Countries
Basken, Paul – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
After spending $133-million to build a new award-winning technological gem of a power plant, officials at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst are expecting their fuel bills to rise by $7-million a year. And yet they are very proud of the accomplishment. The reasons for the higher energy costs involve a complicated mix of technology,…
Descriptors: Educational Facilities Planning, Fuels, Energy Management, Energy
Brainard, Jeffrey – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Not long ago, academic scientists welcomed calls from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) asking them to volunteer as peer reviewers. Many were glad for the opportunity to help distribute billions of dollars in federal biomedical-research grants even though the service required a big time commitment--the equivalent of one month a year to…
Descriptors: Public Agencies, Peer Evaluation, Grants, Scientists
Marino, Lori – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
In a well-cited 1996 editorial in "Science," "The Activist Scientist," Jaleh Daie calls for scientists to take an assertive role in educating politicians and the public about the importance of government support for research. She writes that most scientists are reluctant to become involved in political lobbying for a variety of reasons--time…
Descriptors: Animals, Student Attitudes, Integrity, Scientific Enterprise
Basken, Paul – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
When President Obama dreams out loud, as he did in a speech last week, of a future when solar panels are as "cheap as paint" and buildings produce their own energy, researchers like the physicist Yang Yang are dreaming right along with him. Mr. Yang's laboratory is among hundreds at colleges around the country that stand to benefit from a new…
Descriptors: Fuels, Universities, Physical Sciences, Energy
Peck, Steven L. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
The perception that academic scientists must pursue money from government agencies like the National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health is subverting the aims of science and making it harder for institutions and individual professors to do innovative and original research. Of course winning a large federal grant attracts a…
Descriptors: Scientific Research, Federal Aid, Public Agencies, Grants
Basken, Paul – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
After a month of celebrating the largest boost in federal spending on scientific research that most of them have ever seen, university presidents are increasingly tuned to the possibility of a downside. The new money--primarily from a $21.5-billion jump in research-and-development spending in the economic-stimulus law--is certainly welcome,…
Descriptors: Scientific Research, Federal Aid, Job Development, Employment Opportunities
Wiedeman, Reeves – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Among the 142 ballot measures that will be before voters in 33 states this November are 17 proposals in 13 states that would directly affect higher education. Michigan voters will face questions about stem-cell research, people going to the polls in Colorado and Nebraska will be asked about affirmative action, and voters in six states will decide…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Affirmative Action, Scholarships, State Legislation
Howard, Jennifer – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
A life-and-death battle is going on over public access to federally financed research--life for taxpayers and many scientists, and death for publishers. Or so each side claims. That battle, whose outcome will affect many university researchers, kicked into high gear on Capitol Hill on September 11, as the combatants debated the merits of a bill…
Descriptors: Access to Information, Publishing Industry, Scientific Research, Journal Articles
Greenberg, Daniel S. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
These are especially difficult times for researchers who depend on government money. Their "anxiety is palpable," Elias A. Zerhouni, director of the National Institutes of Health, wrote last 2006. Moreover, Leo Furcht, president of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology, warned Congress that "we are, quite simply, losing our…
Descriptors: Scientific Research, Research Problems, Grants, Financial Exigency
Brainard, Jeffrey; Hermes, J. J. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
A record-breaking number of Congressional pork-barrel projects this year has loaded college and university plates with more earmarks than ever before, despite growing worries that the noncompetitive grants undermine the American scientific enterprise, and in spite of promises by some lawmakers to cut back. An analysis by "The Chronicle" shows that…
Descriptors: Legislators, Federal Aid, Funding Formulas, Finance Reform