NSF is not terribly concerned with the "furtherance of science".

If they were, many many policies would be drastically different, including:

1) They would forbid any institution from being eligible for NSF funds who engages in spousal hiring or any other form of nepotism. Usage of any funding to hire based on marital status (and to whom) rather than purely on CV content/merit is wasteful and counter to the "furtherance of science".

2) The NSF would also mandate that any NSF- or federal-funding eligible (or even accredited) institution was required to allow their postdocs and staff scientists (at LEAST any PhD-holding scientist) to submit grants with themselves as PI, sole PI if they wish. As it stands now, a combination of institutional and agency policies (tons of buck passing on this one as far as where the root of the problem lies) currently forbid many (most?) of the best and brightest scientists in the US from being PI of their own grants, or even owning publication/patent/grantwriting rights to their own ideas/intellectual property or work.

3) The NSF would also consider doing away with all postdoc positions all together, and pressure institutions to hire many more independent scientists and permanent staff scientists.

4) The NSF would create a robust and safe grievance/whistle blower system for graduate students and postdocs to report unethical or otherwise bad treatment or intellectual property theft at the hands of their faculty bosses. They would also have a system to evaluate grant submitters based on their MENTORING as robust as how they evaluate research - and reject grants by poorly rated "mentors".

5) They would have a working group taking a long hard look at tenure and whether it is still relevant or if it is largely abused and needs done away with or replaced with a better system not as easily abused and more based on protecting controversy rather than protecting lack of productivity, employee abuse or IP theft.

... many other things they would do if they CARED about science, but the above would be a fantastic start.



On 7/6/2013 3:40 PM, David L. McNeely wrote:
I assume you are not serious.

What people who find fault with NSF doing this fail to acknowledge is that NSF 
is responsible for the furtherance of science.  Projects suffer when 
participants must be away for family matters.  So science suffers, and NSF 
money goes to waste.  By providing PIs small grants to temporarily replace 
workers who must be away for family reasons, NSF is salvaging its projects.

I assume that PIs have hiring and firing authority.  Being absent for 
recreational reasons and letting the project suffer would in my mind justify 
replacement of such personnel.  That shouldn't be hard to do in today's 
employment climate.

PIs may be faced with an institutional family leave policy that requires that 
they provide time off for family reasons (which is a legitimate institutional 
policy -- it helps retain employees in which the institution may have valuable 
training invested).  This policy provides for PIs to work around the difficulty 
to projects that that might cause.

NSF seems to be responding to a need among grantees.    David McNeely

---- "David M. Lawrence" <[email protected]> wrote:
What other choices that might "compete with their professional career,"
would warrant such an opportunity, Michael?  The proposal here looks a
bit half (if that) baked.

Few other "choices" invoke such a huge emotional, financial -- and LEGAL
-- burden as parenthood.  Being a caregiver for old or ailing relatives
might certainly warrant such treatment, but let's say your choice is
scuba diving (a choice I am afflicted with). It is a personal choice, it
involves costs in terms of money and time -- and if done enough, could
interfere with my professional career.  So should I be eligible for NSF
help to help with my recreational diving habit?  [For the sake of
argument, let's ignore the fact that my dissertation is focusing on
coral reefs and will involve some diving.]

Dave

On 7/4/2013 10:47 PM, Michael Clary wrote:
We are all much too busy managing our work and families, parents no longer own 
that distinction. To the degree that parenthood has been an informed choice for 
the average postdoc for some time, my modest proposal would be to make this 
opportunity available to any early career scientist who has made a personal 
decision that was reasonably certain to compete with their professional career.

Michael




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