The impact of the pandemic on early career researchers' work‐life and scholarly communications: A quantitative aerial analysis

Author:

Nicholas David1ORCID,Herman Eti1ORCID,Clark David1ORCID,Boukacem‐Zeghmouri Cherifa2ORCID,Rodríguez‐Bravo Blanca3ORCID,Abrizah Abdullah4ORCID,Watkinson Anthony1ORCID,Sims David5ORCID,'Świgoń Marzena6ORCID,Xu Jie7ORCID,Serbina Galina8ORCID,Jamali Hamid R.9ORCID,Tenopir Carol5ORCID,Allard Suzie5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. CIBER Research Newbury UK

2. Computer Science Department Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 Villeurbanne France

3. Área de Biblioteconomía y Documentación Universidad de León León Spain

4. Department of Library & Information Science University of Malaya Kuala Lumpur Malaysia

5. School of Information Sciences University of Tennessee Knoxville Tennessee USA

6. Wydział Humanistyczny Uniwersytet Warminsko‐Mazurski Olsztyn Poland

7. School of Information Management Wuhan University Wuhan China

8. TSU Research Library Tomsk State University Tomsk Russia

9. School of Information and Communication Studies Charles Sturt University Wagga Wagga New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractAfter two‐years of repeat interviewing early career sciences/social sciences researchers from around the world about their work life and scholarly communications in pandemic‐times, the Harbingers‐2 project is in a position to release quantitative data on the pandemic's overall impact. The data comes from around 50 questions asked in the third and final round of interviews with 147 early career researchers (ECRs), which had a codifiable element to them (such as yes, no, do not know). The 19 scholarly topics covered include: pandemic‐related research; research funding; changes to the workplace/working from home; pandemic‐incurred stress and anxiety; teaching; employment security; career progression; mentoring; assessment (including metrics); collaboration; searching/finding information; ethics; networking; informal communication; publishing; sharing; pre‐prints; outreach; and scholarly transformations. The main findings are that in six broad aspects of ECRs' work‐life and scholarly behaviour, more than 50% of ECRs were impacted by the pandemic, with remote teaching having the greatest impact. By way of comparison, in another six aspects there was little change, least of all when it came to sharing activities. Among the countries studied, Malaysia stood out as being the most impacted, and of the disciplines it was the medical sciences and the soft social sciences most impacted.

Funder

Alfred P. Sloan Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Communication,Library and Information Sciences

Reference32 articles.

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