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Suggested Citation:"Front Matter." National Research Council. 1982. An Assessment of Research-Doctorate Programs in the United States: Biological Sciences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/9779.
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Below is the uncorrected machine-read text of this chapter, intended to provide our own search engines and external engines with highly rich, chapter-representative searchable text of each book. Because it is UNCORRECTED material, please consider the following text as a useful but insufficient proxy for the authoritative book pages.

An Assessment of Research-Doctorate Programs in the Uniter! States: Biological Sciences Committee on an Assessment of Quality-Relatec] Characteristics of Research-Doctorate Programs in the Uniter] States Lyle V. Jones, Gardner Lindsey, and Porter E. Coggeshall, Editors Sponsored by The Conference Board of Associated Research Councils American Council of Learned Societies American Council on Education National Research Councit Social Science Research Council NATIONAL ACADEMY PRESS Washington, D.C. 1982

NOTICE: The project that is the subject of this report was approved by the Conference Board of Associated Research Councils, whose members are drawn from the American Council of Learned Societies, the American Council on Education, the National Research Council, and the Social Science Research Council. The members of the committee responsible for the report were chosen for their special competences and with regard for appropriate balance. This report has been reviewed by a group other than the authors and editors according to procedures approved by each of the four member Councils of the Conference Board. The Conference Board of Associated Research Councils was created to foster discussion of issues of mutual interest; to determine the extent to which a common viewpoint on such issues prevails within the academic community of the United States; to foster specific investiga- tions when so desired; and, when the Conference Board finds joint, com- mon, or other action desirable, to make recommendations to the appro- priate Councils. Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 82-62670 International Standard Book Number 0-309-03340-3 Available from NATIONAL ACADEMY PRESS 2101 Constitution Avenue, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20418 Copyright ~ 1982 by the National Academy of Sciences No part of this publication be reproduced without permission of the National Academy of Sciences except for official use by the United States Government. Printed in the United States of America

Acknowledgments In conducting this assessment the committee has benefited from the support and advice of many individuals and organizations. The assess- ment was conducted under the aegis of the Conference Board of ASsoci- ated Research Councils, and special thanks go to Roger Heyns, Robert M. Lumiansky, Jack W. Peltason, Frank Press, Kenneth Prewitt, Eleanor Sheldon, John William Ward, and the late Philip Handler for their ef- forts in overseeing the planning and execution of this project. Finan- cial support was provided by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the Ford Foundation, the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the National Science Foundation {NSF), and the National Academy of Sciences. tions the project would not have been undertaken. Without the combined support from these organiza- . m e committee ap- preclates the excellent cooperation it recezved from the staff officers at these organizations--including John Sawyer and James Morris at Mel- lon; Mariam Chamberlain, Gladys Chang Hardy, and Sheila Biddle at Ford; Albert Rees and James Koerner at Sloan; Helen Gee at NIH; and Bernard Stein at NSF. Some supplemental funds to enhance the study were furnished by the Association of American Geographers, the American Psychological Association, and the American Psychological Foundation. The committee is most appreciative of the cooperation it received from individuals in the 228 universities participating in the assess- ment. In particular we thank the university presidents and chancellors who agreed to participate and offered the assistance of staff members at their institutions; the graduate deans, department chairmen, and many other university personnel who helped to compile information about the research-doctorate programs at their own institutions; and the nearly 5,000 faculty members who took the time to complete and return reputational survey forms. This assessment would not have been feasi- ble without the participation of these individuals. Nor would it have been complete without the suggestions from many individuals within and outside the academic community who reviewed the study plans and com- mittee reports. The committee also acknowledges the contributions of Francis Narin and Paul R. McAllister, whose innovative work in the area of publica- tion productivity in science and engineering fields has been a valuable resource. We thank H. Roberts Coward and his colleagues at the Insti- iii

tute for Scientific Information for their help in compiling publica- tions data as well as William Batchelor and John James art NIH and David Staudt at NSF for their help in acquiring data on individual research grant awards. Within the National Research Council many individuals have assisted in the planning and completion of this project. Robert A. Alberty, Harrison Shull, and W. K. Estes, former chairmen of the Commission on Human Resources, and William C. Kelly, Executive Director of the com- mission (now the Office of Scientific and Engineering Personnel), of- fered assistance and helpful counsel during all phases of the study. Lindsey R. Harmon and C. Alan Bone au contributed greatly to the plan- ning of the assessment. To Porter E. Coggeshall, Study Director, the committee expresses thanks for a job extremely well done. His ability to translate the committee's directions into compiled data and analyses must be given a large share of the credit for the completion of this project. He has been ably assisted by Prudence W. Brown, who supervised the data col- lection activities; Dorothy G. Cooper, who provided excellent secre- tarial support; George A. Boyce, whose programming expertise was inval- uable; and Kathleen Drennan and Linda Dix, who helped in preparing final copy of the manuscript. Committee on an Assessment of Quality-Related Characteristics of Research-Doctorate Programs in the United States r iv

Preface The genius of American higher education is often said to be in the close association of training and research--that is, in the nation's research-doctorate programs. Consequently, we are not surprised at the amount of worried talk about the quality of the research doctorate, for deterioration at that level will inevitably spread to wherever research skills are needed--and that indeed is a far-flung network of labora- tories, institutes, firms, agencies, bureaus, and departments. What might surprise us, however, is the imbalance between the putative na- tional importance of research-doctorate programs and the amount of sustained evaluative attention they themselves receive. The present assessment, sponsored by the Conference Board of Asso- ciated Research Councils--comprised of the American Council of Learned Societies, the American Council on Education, the National Research Council (NRC), and the Social Science Research Council--seeks to cor- rect the imbalance between worried talk and systematic study. In this effort the Conference Board continues a tradition pioneered by the American Council on Education. which i n 1 9~R n',hl i shed an Con ~t Qpaliey in Graduate Education, the resort of a study conducted be AN Can M. Marcher, and in 1970 published A Rating of Graduate Programs, by Kenneth D. Roose and Charles J. Andersen. The Cartter and Roose- Andersen reports have been widely used and frequently cited. Some years after the release of the Roose-Andersen report, it was decided that the effort to assess the quality of research-doctorate programs should be renewed, and the Conference Board of Associated Re- search Councils agreed to sponsor an assessment. The Board of Direc- tors of the American Council on Education concurred with the notion that the next study should be issued under these broader auspices. The NRC agreed to serve as secretariat for a new study. m e responsible staff of the NRC earned the appreciation of the Conference Board for the skill and dedication shown during the course of securing funding and implementing the study. Special mention should also be made of the financial contribution of the National Academy of Sciences which, by supplementing funds available from external sources, made it possible for the study to get under way. To sponsor a study comparing the quality of programs in 32 disci- v

plines and from more than 200 doctorate-granting universities is to invite critics, friendly and otherwise. Such was the fate~of the pre- vious studies; such has been the fate of the present study. Scholar- ship, fortunately, can put criticism to creative use and has done so in this project. The study committee appointed by the Conference Board reviewed the criticisms of earlier efforts to assess research-doctorate programs, and it actively solicited criticisms and suggestions for improvements of its own design. Although constrained by limited funds, the committee applied state-of-the-art methodology in a design that incorporated the lessons learned from previous studies as well as at- tending to many critics of the present effort. Not all criticism has thus been stilled; nor could it ever be. Additional criticisms will be voiced by as many persons as begin to use the results of this effort in ways not anticipated by its authors. These criticisms will be wel- come. The Conference Board believes that the present study, building on earlier criticisms and adopting a multidimensional approach to the assessment of research-doctorate programs, represents a substantial improvement over past reports. Nevertheless, each of the diverse measures used here has its own limitations, and none provides a precise index of the quality of a program for educating students for careers in research. No doubt a future study, taking into account the weak- nesses as well as strengths of this effort, will represent still fur- ther improvement. One mark of success for the present study would be for it to take its place in a continuing series, thereby contributing to the indicator base necessary for informed policies that will main- tain and perhaps enhance the quality of the nation's research-doctorate programs. ~ For the more immediate future the purposes of this assessment are to assist students and student advisers seeking the best match possible between individual career goals and the choice of an advanced degree program; to serve scholars whose study site is higher education and the nation's research enterprise; and to inform the practical judgment of the administrators, fenders, and policymakers responsible for protect- ing the quality of scholarly education in the United States. A remarkably hard-working and competent group, whose names appear on page vii of this report, oversaw the long process by which this study moved from the planning stage to the completion of these reports. The Conference Board expresses its warmest thanks to the members of its committee and especially to their co-chairmen, Lyle V. Jones and Gard- ner Lindzey. Conference Board of Associated Research Councils V1

Committee on an Assessment of Quality-Related Character~shcs of Research-Doctorate Programs In Me United States LYLE V. JONES (Co-Chairman), Director of the L. L. Thurstone Psycho- metric Laboratory, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill GARDNER LINDZEY (Co-Chairman), Director, Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences PAUL A. ALBRECHT, Vice-President and Dean, Claremont Graduate School MARCUS ALEXIS, Department of Economics, Northwestern University ROBERT M. BOCK, Dean of the Graduate School, University of Wisconsin at Madison PHILIP E. CONVERSE, Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan JAMES H. M. HENDERSON, Department of Plant Physiology, Tuskegee Insti- tute of Alabama ERNEST S. KUH, Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sci- ences, University of California, Berkeley WINFRED P. LEHMANN, Department of Linguistics, University of Texas at Austin SAUNDERS MAC LANE, Department of Mathematics, University of Chicago NANCY S. MILBURN, Dean, College of Liberal Arts and Jackson College for Women, Tufts University - LINCOLN E. MOSES, Department of Statistics, Stanford University JAMES C. OLSON, President, University of Missouri C. K. N. PATEL, Director, Physical Research Laboratory, Bell Labora- tories MICHAEL J. PELCZAR, JR., President, The Council of Graduate Schools in the United States JEROME B. SCHNEEWIND, Department of Philosophy, Johns Hopkins Uni- versity DUANE C. SPRIESTERSBACH, Vice-President, Educational Development and Research, University of Iowa HARRIET A. ZUCKERMAN, Sociology Department, Columbia University Study Director PORTER E. COGGESHALL, Office of Scientific and Engineering Personnel, National Research Council · ~ V11

Contend I ORIGINS OF STUDY AND SELECTION OF PROGRAMS Prior Attempts to Assess Quality in Graduate Education, 3 Development of Study Plans, 7 Selection of Disciplines and Programs to be Evaluated, 9 II METHODOLOGY Program Size, 18 Characteristics of Graduates, 19 Reputational Survey Results, 22 University Library Size, 27 Research Support, 28 Publication Records, 29 Analysis and Presentation of the Data, 31 I II BIOCHEMISTRY PROGRAMS IV BOTANY PROGRAMS 1 15 r 35 59 V CELLULAR/MOLECULAR BIOLOGY PROGRAMS 79 VI MICROBIOLOGY PROGRAMS 99 VI I PHYSIOLOGY PROGRAMS 123 VIII ZOOLOGY PROGRAMS 145 IX SUMMARY AND DISCUSSION Summary of the Results, 164 Correlations Among Measures, 167 Analysis of the Survey Response, 175 Interpretation of Reputational Survey Ratings, 188 Comparison with Results of the Roose-Andersen Study, 189 Future Studies, 197 MI NORITY STATEMENT 163 199 · . ~ V'11

APPENDIXES Letter to Institutional Coordinators and Accompanying~- Survey Form (Measures 01-03) B Survey of Earned Doctorates (Measures 04-07) C Letter to Evaluators and Specimen of the Instrument Used in the Reputational Survey (Measures 08-11) D The ARL Library Index (Measure 12) E Data on Faculty Research Support and R&D Expenditures (Measures 13 and 14) F Data on Publication Records (Measures 15 and 16) G Conference on the Assessment of Quality of Graduate Education Programs--Participants and Summary H Planning Committee for the Study of the Quality of Research-Doctorate Programs I Region and State Codes for the United States and Possessions LIST OF FIGURES 3.1 3.2 3.3 203 210 213 219 221 226 244 248 249 Mean rating of scholarly quality of faculty (measure 08) versus number of faculty members (measure 01~--138 programs in biochemistry, 54 Mean rating of program effectiveness in educating research scholars/scientists (measure 09) versus number of graduates in last five years (measure 02~--124 programs in biochemistry, 55 Mean rating of scholarly quality of faculty in 138 programs in biochemistry, 57 4.1 Mean rating of scholarly quality of faculty (measure 08) versus number of faculty members (measure 01~--83 programs in botany, 74 4.2 Mean rating of program effectiveness in educating-research scholars/scientists (measure 09) versus number of graduates in last five years (measure 02~--82 programs in botany, 75 4.3 Mean rating of scholarly quality of faculty in 83 programs in botany, 77 5.1 Mean rating of scholarly quality of faculty (measure 08) versus number of faculty members (measure 01~--86 programs in cellular/molecular biology, 94 5.2 Mean rating of program effectiveness in educating research scholars/scientists (measure 09) versus number of graduates in last five years (measure 02~--69 programs in cellular/molecular biology, 95 5.3 Mean rating of scholarly quality of faculty in 86 programs in cellular/molecular biology, 97 6.1 Mean rating of scholarly quality of faculty (measure 08) versus number of faculty members (measure 011--131 programs in microbiology, 118 6.2 Mean rating of program effectiveness in educating research scholars/scientists (measure 09) versus number of graduates in last five years (measure 02~--123 programs in microbiology, 119 ix

6.3 Mean rating of scholarly quality of faculty in 131 programs in microbiology, 121 -- 7.1 Mean rating of scholarly quality of faculty (measure 08) versus number of faculty members (measure 011--94 programs in physiology, 140 Mean rating of program effectiveness in educating research scholars/scientists (measure 09) versus number of graduates in last five years (measure 02~--87 programs in physiology, 141 Mean rating of scholarly quality of faculty in 94 programs in physiology, 143 8.1 Mean rating of scholarly quality of faculty (measure 08) versus number of faculty members (measure 01~--69 programs in zoology, 158 8.2 Mean rating of program effectiveness in educating research scholars/scientists (measure 09) versus number of graduates in last five years (measure 02~--67 programs in zoology, 159 8.3 Mean rating of scholarly quality of faculty in 69 programs in zoology, 161 9.1 Mean rating of scholarly quality of faculty (measure 08) versus mean rating of faculty in the Roose-Andersen study--90 programs in biochemistry, 191 9.2 Mean rating of scholarly quality of faculty (measure 08) versus mean rating of faculty in the Roose-Andersen study--52 programs in botany, 192 9.3 Mean rating of scholarly quality of faculty (measure 08) versus mean rating of faculty in the Roose-Andersen study--53 programs -in cellular/molecular biology, 193 ~ 9.4 Mean rating of scholarly quality of faculty (measure 08) versus mean rating of faculty in the Roose-Andersen study--82 programs in microbiology, 194 9.5 Mean rating of scholarly quality of faculty (measure 08) versus mean rating of faculty in the Roose-Andersen study--63 programs in physiology, 195 9.6 Mean rating of scholarly quality of faculty (measure 08) versus mean rating of faculty in the Roose-Andersen study--48 programs in zoology, 196 LIST OF TABLES 1.1 Number of Research Doctorates Awarded in Biological Science Disciplines, FY1976-78, 10 Number of Programs Evaluated in Each Discipline and the Total FY1976-80 Doctoral Awards from These Programs, 13 2.1 Measures Compiled on Individual Research-Doctorate Programs in the Biological Sciences, 17 2.2 Percentage of FY1975-79 Doctoral Recipients with Definite Commitments for Employment Outside the Academic Sector, 22 2.3 Survey Response by Discipline and Characteristics of Evaluator, 24 3.1 Program Measures (Raw and Standardized Values) in Biochemistry, 38 x

3.2 .4 2 Summary Statistics Describing Each Program Measure--Biochemistry, 52 3.3 Intercorrelations Among Program Measures on 139 Programs in Biochemistry, 53 3.4 Characteristics of Survey Participants in Biochemistry, 56 4.1 Program Measures (Raw and Standardized Values) in Botany, 62 4.2 Summary Statistics Describing Each Program Measure--Botany, 72 4.3 Intercorrelations Among Program Measures on 83 Programs in Botany, 73 4.4 Characteristics of Survey Participants in Botany, 76 5.1 Program Measures (Raw and Standardized Values) in Cellular/Molec- ular Biology, 82 5.2 Summary Statistics Describing Each Program Measure--Cellular/ Molecular Biology, 92 5.3 Intercorrelations Among Program Measures on 89 Programs in Cellular/Molecular Biology, 93 5.4 Characteristics of Survey Participants in Cellular/Molecular Biology, 96 6.1 Program Measures (Raw and Standardized Values) in Microbiology, 102 6.2 Summary Statistics Describing Each Program Measure--Microbiology, 116 6.3 Intercorrelations Among Program Measures on 134 Programs in Microbiology, 117 6.4 Characteristics of Survey Participants in Microbiology, 120 7.1 Program Measures (Raw and Standardized Values) in Physiology, 126 7.2 Summary Statistics Describing Each Program Measure--Physiology, 138 Intercorrelations Among Program Measures on 101 Programs in Physiology, 139 7.4 Characteristics of Survey Participants in Physiology, 142 8.1 Program Measures (Raw and Standardized Values) in Zoology, 148 8.2 Summary Statistics Describing Each Program Measure--Zoology, 156 8.3 Intercorrelations Among Program Measures on 70 Programs in Zoology, 157 8.4 Characteristics of Survey Participants in Zoology, 160 9.1 Mean Values for Each Program Measure, by Discipline, 165 9.2 Correlations of the Number of Program Graduates (Measure 02) with Other Measures, by Discipline, 169 9.3 Correlations of the Survey Ratings of Scholarly Quality of Program Faculty (Measure 08) with Other Measures, by Discipline, 170 9.4 Correlations of the University Research Expenditures in a Discipline (Measure 14) with Other Measures, by Discipline, 173 9.5 Correlations of the Influence-Weighted Number of Publications (Measure 16) with Other Measures, by Discipline, 174 9-.6 Distribution of Responses to Each Survey Item, by Discipline, 176 9.7 Survey Item Response Rates, by Discipline and Mean Rating on Measure 08, 178 X1

9.8 Correlations Between Two Sets of Average Ratings from Two Randomly Selected Groups of Evaluators in the Biological Sciences, 179 9.9 Comparison of Mean Ratings for 11 Mathematics Programs Included in Two Separate Survey Administrations, 181 9.10 Mean Ratings of.Scholarly Quality of Program Faculty, by Evaluator's Familiarity with Work of Faculty, 182 9.11 Item Response Rate on Measure 08, by Selected Characteristics of Survey Evaluators in the Biological Sciences, 183 9.12 Mean Ratings of Scholarly Quality of Program Faculty, by Type of Survey Form Provided to Evaluator, 184 9.13 Mean Ratings of Scholarly Quality of Program Faculty, by Evaluator's Proximity to Region of Program, 185 9.14 Mean Ratings of Scholarly Quality of Program Faculty, by Evaluator's Institution of Highest Degree, 186 9.15 Mean Ratings of Scholarly Quality of Program Faculty, by School in Which Evaluator's Own Program Is Located, 188 it. · ~ X11

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