(no title)
grepLeigh | 1 year ago
Are there any mechanisms to balance out the "race to the bottom" observed in other types of academic compensation? e.g. increase of adjunct/gig work replacing full-time professorship.
Do universities require staff to perform a certain number of reviews in academic journals?
hanche|1 year ago
throwaway2037|1 year ago
SJC_Hacker|1 year ago
No. Reviewers mostly do it because its expected of them, and they want to publish their own papers so they can get grants
In the end, the university only cares about the grant (money), because they get a cut - somewhere between 30-70% depending on the instituition/field - for "overhead"
Its like the mafia - everyone has a boss they kick up to.
My old boss (PI on an RO1) explained it like this
Ideas -> Grant -> Money -> Equipment/Personnel -> Experiments -> Data -> Paper -> Submit/Review/Publish (hopefully) -> Ideas -> Grant
If you don't review, go to conferences/etc. its much less likely your own papers will get published, and you won't get approved for grants.
Sadly there is still a bit of "junior high popularity contest" , scratch my back I'll scratch yours that is still present in even "highly respected" science journals.
I hear this from basically every scientist I've known. Even successful ones - not just the marginal ones.
davrosthedalek|1 year ago
tokinonagare|1 year ago
davrosthedalek|1 year ago
Professors are expected to review by their employer, typically, and it's a (very small) part of the tenure process.
paulpauper|1 year ago
jasonfarnon|1 year ago
Depends on what you mean by "require". At most research universities it is a plus when reviewing tenureship files, bonuses, etc. It is a sign that someone cares about your work, and the quality of the journal seeking your review matters. If it were otherwise faculty wouldn't list the journals they have reviewed for on their CVs. If no one would ever find out about a reviewers' efforts e.g. the process were double blind to everyone involved, the setup wouldnt work.
canjobear|1 year ago
acomjean|1 year ago
I was approached to review something for no compensation as well, but I was a bad fit.