自上而下的政策与新兴的自下而上的实践:对“(为什么)开放的研究实践是语言学习研究的未来?”的评论?

IF 3.5 1区 文学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Language Learning Pub Date : 2023-04-17 DOI:10.1111/lang.12572
Mikael Laakso
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The initial spark for many (I dare say most) open research practices and services for operating them have often been spawned as researcher-driven initiatives, for example, IRIS (Marsden &amp; Mackey, <span>2014</span>) and OASIS (Marsden et al., <span>2018</span>) for research in language learning, without top-down requirement or enforcement. Today science policy, particularly within the European Union, is heavily influencing the uptake of open research practices by introducing requirements and monitoring for their compliance both through the open science requirements stated in the grant agreements of their own research funding instruments but also more generally for member countries to implement and report back on. However, if the requirements given top down are experienced as irrelevant and disconnected from the research context as seen by researchers, there is risk of alienation and a negative outcome for adoption (Lilja, <span>2020</span>). 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The initial spark for many (I dare say most) open research practices and services for operating them have often been spawned as researcher-driven initiatives, for example, IRIS (Marsden &amp; Mackey, <span>2014</span>) and OASIS (Marsden et al., <span>2018</span>) for research in language learning, without top-down requirement or enforcement. Today science policy, particularly within the European Union, is heavily influencing the uptake of open research practices by introducing requirements and monitoring for their compliance both through the open science requirements stated in the grant agreements of their own research funding instruments but also more generally for member countries to implement and report back on. However, if the requirements given top down are experienced as irrelevant and disconnected from the research context as seen by researchers, there is risk of alienation and a negative outcome for adoption (Lilja, <span>2020</span>). Alignment of policy and practice in the context of open research practices is no easy challenge—balancing variables such as timing, sensitivity to the needs of individual research disciplines, research assessment, technological maturity, and practical feasibility runs the risk of friction in many regards.</p><p>Even though challenging, alignment is necessary to smoothly scale useful new practices beyond the pioneering early adopters who take them into use in a bottom-up way. While the democratization of research that the internet has enabled has been a strong positive force for spurring innovation in the space of open research practices, the distributed nature of the environment introduces new threats to the scholarly record. The risk of open research initiatives being held up by solely volunteer effort without robust organizational backing can be very destructive as it could mean that valuable scholarly resources vanish, as has been the case, for example, for hundreds of open access scholarly journals (Laakso et al., <span>2021</span>). Once new practices gain momentum it would be wise for institutions and policymakers to meet the research community halfway, that is, to align and to facilitate the creation of robustness to otherwise vulnerable services. One should not require or mandate practices that do not yet exist or have demonstrated potential, but if those leading in the field wait too long or support the wrong action or actors, this can lead to loss of momentum or even worse. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

在他们的文章中,马斯登和摩根-肖特全面回顾了开放研究实践中关键领域的现状和发展轨迹,无论是在一般情况下还是在语言科学的背景下。正如文章所揭示的,开放研究实践的范围是巨大的,本质上涉及到执行研究和与研究互动的各个方面。作者提到了语言科学中缺乏一个成熟的元科学,这将有助于为研究实践的发展提供信息和指导,但是,在我看来,这个问题是普遍存在的,总的来说,创建一个更强大、更有凝聚力的元科学学科将是有益的。虽然研究人员已经在科学哲学、科学史、信息科学和高等教育政策领域建立了研究、教育和专门的学术交流渠道,但元科学仍然是一个讨论高度分散的领域,并且在不同的研究学科中零星出现。正如马斯登和摩根-肖特的评论所表明的那样,关于如何在全球范围内推进研究和研究人员的最大利益,还有很多悬而未决的问题。一个更有凝聚力的元科学核心将有助于立即创造有用的知识。我想提出一个关键的观点,以促进对围绕语言科学以及其他学科的开放研究实践的复杂挑战的进一步结构化反思,即在自上而下的政策(例如,资助者或机构对出版物或数据开放的要求,机构参与研究基础设施)和自下而上的实践(研究人员自己采用特定的实践,主要由内在动机驱动)。一般来说,研究人员在他们的工作中有很多自主权,这为创造和更广泛地采用新实践创造了一个独特的环境。许多(我敢说大多数)开放的研究实践和服务的最初火花往往是作为研究人员驱动的倡议而产生的,例如IRIS (Marsden &Mackey, 2014)和OASIS (Marsden et al., 2018)用于语言学习研究,没有自上而下的要求或强制执行。今天,科学政策,特别是在欧盟内部,通过引入要求和监测它们的遵守情况,在很大程度上影响着开放研究实践的采用,这些要求既通过它们自己的研究资助工具的资助协议中规定的开放科学要求,也通过更普遍地要求成员国实施和报告。然而,如果研究人员认为自上而下给出的要求是不相关的,与研究背景脱节的,那么就有异化的风险,并对采用产生负面影响(Lilja, 2020)。在开放研究实践的背景下,政策与实践的协调绝非易事——平衡时间、对个别研究学科需求的敏感性、研究评估、技术成熟度和实践可行性等变量在许多方面都存在摩擦的风险。尽管具有挑战性,但是对于顺利地扩展有用的新实践,超越以自下而上的方式使用它们的先驱早期采用者来说,一致性是必要的。虽然互联网带来的研究民主化已经成为一股强大的积极力量,刺激了开放研究实践领域的创新,但环境的分布式特性给学术记录带来了新的威胁。开放研究计划仅仅由志愿者努力而没有强大的组织支持的风险是非常具有破坏性的,因为它可能意味着宝贵的学术资源消失,例如,数百种开放获取学术期刊(Laakso et al., 2021)。一旦新的实践获得动力,对机构和政策制定者来说,向研究界妥协将是明智的,也就是说,协调并促进为脆弱的服务创造健壮性。人们不应该要求或授权那些尚未存在或已显示出潜力的做法,但如果那些在该领域处于领先地位的人等待太久或支持错误的行动或参与者,这可能导致失去动力,甚至更糟。在IRIS和OASIS的案例中,通过研究执行机构和研究资助机构的早期参与,这种关注已经得到了典型的满足。那么,在目前的环境还不太适合开放研究实践的情况下,什么可以帮助政策和实践的协调?Marsden和Morgan-Short强调,研究评估的变化有可能大大减轻开放研究实践所面临的一些采用挑战。 在过去的十年里,我一直参与关于开放研究实践的小组讨论,这是一个反复出现的主题:如果评估不改变,无论建立和推荐使用什么,研究人员都永远不会取得任何进展。在我参加的最近一个专家组的最终报告中(欧盟委员会,研究与创新总局,2019年),研究评估的变化也被列为学术出版和学术交流变革的最大障碍。尽管《旧金山研究评估宣言》(San francisco Declaration of Research Assessment)引起了热议,但机构缺乏将开放研究实践作为研究评估一部分的整合仍然是普遍现象(Ross-Hellauer et al., 2023)。一个问题是缺乏采取切实步骤从根本上改变实践,而不是仅仅表示支持研究评估多样化的更大原因。最近发起的推进研究评估联盟(2022)寻求组织签署方承诺并跟进其评估实践的发展。这一重大的新倡议将对环境产生什么影响还有待观察,但它有可能帮助政策和实践的协调,而《研究评估宣言》除了在利益相关者之间发起非常重要的讨论和创造一个总体方向之外,还没有做到这一点。研究人员作为高度自主的行为体,需要感知到投入时间和精力的开放研究实践的切实使用和认可,否则这些实践就有可能永远无法充分发挥其在改进研究系统方面的潜力。
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Alignment of Top-Down Policies With Emerging Bottom-Up Practices: A Commentary on “(Why) Are Open Research Practices the Future for the Study of Language Learning?”

In their article, Marsden and Morgan-Short comprehensively review the current state and development trajectories for key areas within open research practices, both in general as well as more particularly in the context of language sciences. As the article reveals, the scope of open research practices is enormous and essentially touches upon every aspect of performing and interacting with research. The authors touch upon the lack of an established metascience within language sciences that would help inform and guide development of research practices, but, as I see it, the problem is universal, and there would be benefit in creating a stronger and more cohesive metascience discipline in general. While researchers have established practices of research, education, and dedicated scholarly communication outlets within the philosophy of science, history of science, information science, and higher education policy, metascience has remained an area where the discussion is highly distributed and appears sporadically across diverse research disciplines. As Marsden and Morgan-Short's review demonstrates, there are a lot of open questions relating to how to move forward on a global scale in the best interest of research and researchers. A more cohesive core of metascience would aid in the creation of immediately useful knowledge.

One key perspective I would like to put forward to facilitate further structured reflection on the complex challenges surrounding open research practices in language sciences as well as in other disciplines is that of alignment seeking between top-down policies (e.g., mandates by funders or institutions for making publications or data open, institutional involvement in research infrastructures) and bottom-up practices (researchers taking particular practices into use by themselves, driven primarily by intrinsic motivation). Researchers in general have a lot of autonomy within their work, an aspect which creates a unique environment for the creation and wider adoption of new practices. The initial spark for many (I dare say most) open research practices and services for operating them have often been spawned as researcher-driven initiatives, for example, IRIS (Marsden & Mackey, 2014) and OASIS (Marsden et al., 2018) for research in language learning, without top-down requirement or enforcement. Today science policy, particularly within the European Union, is heavily influencing the uptake of open research practices by introducing requirements and monitoring for their compliance both through the open science requirements stated in the grant agreements of their own research funding instruments but also more generally for member countries to implement and report back on. However, if the requirements given top down are experienced as irrelevant and disconnected from the research context as seen by researchers, there is risk of alienation and a negative outcome for adoption (Lilja, 2020). Alignment of policy and practice in the context of open research practices is no easy challenge—balancing variables such as timing, sensitivity to the needs of individual research disciplines, research assessment, technological maturity, and practical feasibility runs the risk of friction in many regards.

Even though challenging, alignment is necessary to smoothly scale useful new practices beyond the pioneering early adopters who take them into use in a bottom-up way. While the democratization of research that the internet has enabled has been a strong positive force for spurring innovation in the space of open research practices, the distributed nature of the environment introduces new threats to the scholarly record. The risk of open research initiatives being held up by solely volunteer effort without robust organizational backing can be very destructive as it could mean that valuable scholarly resources vanish, as has been the case, for example, for hundreds of open access scholarly journals (Laakso et al., 2021). Once new practices gain momentum it would be wise for institutions and policymakers to meet the research community halfway, that is, to align and to facilitate the creation of robustness to otherwise vulnerable services. One should not require or mandate practices that do not yet exist or have demonstrated potential, but if those leading in the field wait too long or support the wrong action or actors, this can lead to loss of momentum or even worse. In the case of IRIS and OASIS, this concern has been exemplarily catered to through early involvement of institutional support from both research performing as well as research funding organizations.

What could then help aid alignment of policy and practice where circumstances are currently not yet so optimal for open research practices? Marsden and Morgan-Short highlighted that changes in research assessment have the potential to substantially alleviate some of the adoption challenges that open research practices have faced. This is a persistently recurring theme in panel discussions on open research practices in which I have been involved for over the last decade: Without change in assessment, researchers will never get anywhere regardless of what is built and recommended to be used. Change in research assessment was also singled out as the most substantial obstacle for change in scholarly publishing and scholarly communication in the final report of a recent expert group of which I was part (European Commission, Directorate-General for Research and Innovation, 2019). Despite the buzz around the San Franscisco Declaration of Research Assessment, it is still common for institutions to lack integration of open research practices as part of research assessment (Ross-Hellauer et al., 2023). One issue has been the lack of taking tangible steps to fundamentally changing practices rather than just signaling support towards the greater cause of diversification in research assessment.

The recently launched Coalition for Advancing Research Assessment (2022) seeks organizational signatories to commit to and follow up the development of their assessment practices. It remains to be seen what effect this substantial new initiative will have on the landscape, but it carries the potential to help with the alignment of policy and practice in a way that the Declaration of Research Assessment has not done beyond initiating a very important discussion and creating a general direction among stakeholders. Researchers as highly autonomous actors need to perceive tangible use and acknowledgement of investing their time and effort into open research practices, otherwise these practices run the risk of never reaching their full potential in improving the research system.

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来源期刊
Language Learning
Language Learning Multiple-
CiteScore
9.10
自引率
15.90%
发文量
65
期刊介绍: Language Learning is a scientific journal dedicated to the understanding of language learning broadly defined. It publishes research articles that systematically apply methods of inquiry from disciplines including psychology, linguistics, cognitive science, educational inquiry, neuroscience, ethnography, sociolinguistics, sociology, and anthropology. It is concerned with fundamental theoretical issues in language learning such as child, second, and foreign language acquisition, language education, bilingualism, literacy, language representation in mind and brain, culture, cognition, pragmatics, and intergroup relations. A subscription includes one or two annual supplements, alternating among a volume from the Language Learning Cognitive Neuroscience Series, the Currents in Language Learning Series or the Language Learning Special Issue Series.
期刊最新文献
Order Effects in Second Language Learning Lexical Effects on Second Language Grammar Acquisition: Testing Psycholinguistic and Neurocognitive Predictions “That Was a Good One”: Talking About Irony in Study Abroad Simulating the Relationship Between Nonword Repetition Performance and Vocabulary Growth in 2‐Year‐Olds: Evidence From the Language 0–5 Project Mixed‐Effects Modeling with a Multinomial Dependent Variable
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