You wouldn’t think
six letters could cause such confusion or in some cases, panic! As part of the
Think Ahead team, my role enables me to be in a variety of settings both with
researchers and professional services colleagues and frequently we end up talking
about ‘impact’. The trouble is, it means different things to different
people. When faced with that reality, in my opinion there’s only one place
to go – Dictionary.com.
Impact is defined there as:
- the striking of one thing against another; forceful contact; collision
- an impinging
- influence; effect
- an impacting; forcible impinging
- the force exerted by a new idea, concept, technology, or ideology
According to RCUK and there are a multitude of ways
research can have ‘impact’ (academic, economic & societal) but if you’ve misplaced your crystal
ball, how do you begin to imagine where and how the results of your labour can
effect change? I don’t have the answer to that one but what I do know is that
all the wise owls say think about it from the beginning. As I understand it, your
‘Pathway to Impact’ begins with the research idea and can in fact shape the
funding proposal. If you are supporting the realisation of someone else’s
idea, perhaps find out where they were and now are in their thinking about the
impact – you might find it has changed along the way. I don’t think it is ever
too early to imagine the piece of the utopia jigsaw you and your work will be
because as much as the research and its outputs will pave the way, you are the
one who can create the change.
I have submitted this
post to spark the discussion we want to have across the university about
impact. Remember, the University of Sheffield wants
researchers to start talking openly about their perspective on impact, regardless
of the stage that their research is at.
I look forward to
reading our researchers' posts.
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