Funding researchers, not research
I just spent ten minutes-- way too much time-- searching for a story I heard yesterday. I listen to NPR in the car, and on my way home I heard a great story about scientists... well, more on that later.
I searched NPR.org for every keyword I could think of, to no result. Science, scientist, fund, grant, Hughes, and combinations thereof. I even searched "600 million," which I remembered being a stat in the story. Nothing.
Then I realized that the story might have been on a program that doesn't live on the NPR site. I know it wasn't local news, so no WVXU... but what other program would it have been on? Let's see, I was probably rolling in around 6:30... ahh. Marketplace.
Sure enough, Marketplace has its own little site that isn't indexed on the NPR site and that I wasn't aware of. And the story, while essentially about money, didn't strike me as a Kai Rissdoll story.
Blech. Was there a better way to do this (without this thing)? A hundred keywords and ten minutes later, I finally found the story that I wanted to share with you: Funding researchers, not research
I am really interested in the idea of paying scientists to follow their passions, without so much micromanagement. I guess to me it feels like these hours I spend writing up blog entries about the things that I'm interested in, which in turn makes me smarter, more innovative, more aware and better at my job.
Naturally, I hope that these scientists make the kind of whirlwind discoveries that makes this bankrolling a regular practice. How can we not benefit from making science a highly desirable field to be in?
Labels: marketplace, NPR, science


2 Comments:
I'm both excited about and worried about the amount of freedom. I have definitely seen times when in the process of an experiment, something is found that changes its entire direction. That said... giving away a lot of money to an anonymous project seems risky. I think most researchers would finish what they started if possible, and then apply for a new grant and continue their subsequent research based on what they found anyway.
May 28, 2008
You may want to check out http://www.radiobookmark.com - it's a new service that WVXU has started that lets you "bookmark" a program you're listening to in your car so that you can go back later and listen to it.
June 12, 2008
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