Announcer: The Impact at UTS podcast series is made by Impact Studios at the University of Technology Sydney, an audio production house funded by the Deputy Vice Chancellor of Research.
Host: Research gives you the personal freedom to ask questions. Questions like: how can we save the Great Barrier Reef?
David Suggett: We were there sort of ground zero, if you like, during the bleaching event that first kick started all of this.
Host: Or, how can we reduce shark attacks in our oceans?
Michael Blumenstein: When you’re looking at sharks and a shark that’s like five metres from a surfer, every second counts. It’s not money, it’s life.
Host: And how do we contribute to positive social change for First Nations people.
Paddy Gibson: Aboriginal people are still dying in custody. They’re still being incarcerated at horrible rates. Children are still being taken.
Host: As researchers, we pride ourselves on the frank and fearless work we do. We ask important questions, investigate and solve complex problems. But increasingly, researchers are also being asked to demonstrate impact.
Julian Zipparo: Doing research that’s impactful is part of the DNA at UTS.
Craig Longman: All of our culture is set up for impact.
Sarah Angus: impact and engagement is not a dirty word.
Julian Zipparo : I think the answer to what different types of impact there are is also the answer to the question: ‘how many different types of change can you see and make in the world?’.
Host: The University of Technology Sydney is filled with award winning impactful research that’s making a huge difference in our world. And that’s what Impact at UTS – this seven part podcast series, is all about.
Hi, I’m Associate Professor Martin Bliemel. I’m the Associate Dean of Research for the Faculty of Transdisciplinary Innovation at UTS. And I’m inviting you to join me on a research impact and engagement journey.
Now more than ever, we need to rethink: what research we do, how it’s done and the impact we want it to have.
All of that could mean taking a little more risk, being bolder and embedding engagement right into your research from the start – to maximise the chances of real world outcomes. In my time as an academic, we’ve seen a seismic shift in how Universities are organised and how our success is measured.
It sounds simple but as academics we should always make time to ask ourselves, why is it that we do what we do? – to not lose sight of the fact that the knowledge our research generates can transform society and reshape our world for the better.
So how do we do it? How do we plan for impact from the very beginning of our academic careers? How do we engage with industries, communities and governments to do the work we not only want to do, but the work society needs us to do?
Join me, Martin Bliemel, along with some of the top thinkers at UTS- to learn how to deliver excellent research with impact.
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Craig Longman: One thing that the academy gives you the capacity to do that doesn’t exist in practice is take the big picture, look at the system.
Michele Rumsey: You can only really show true impact if you have those strong partnerships and relationships. And yet that very work is often invisible
Larissa Berhendt: If we’re talking really honestly about indigenous-led research it’s got to be led by indigenous communities. We have to be answering the wicked problems that they have, not the problems that might intellectually interest us.
Claude Roux: You need to work hands in hands with with the end users. So It’s an ongoing thing. It’s not just a one off transaction. You know, it’s much more than just research for end users. It’s really research with users.
Paddy Gibson: It’s never going to be enough to just go in and get a bit of data and get out. It always has to be a relationship with someone.
Announcer: Subscribe and listen to Impact at UTS – a seven part podcast series from Impact Studios at the University of Technology Sydney, available whereever you get your podcasts.
To find out more head to the RESHUB website: reshub.uts.edu.au
In this episode of Impact at UTS we are breaking you out of your research silo to look at ways of collaborating across disciplines, as well with external partners.
What would happen if we as researchers were brave enough to leave the ‘safety net’ of our own disciplines?
In this episode you’ll hear from host Associate Professor Martin Bliemel the Associate Dean of Research for the Faculty of Transdisciplinary Innovation who is eager to demonstrate that transdisciplinarity is more than a buzzword but a way of thinking and doing research.
He is joined by Professor Cameron Tonkinwise, Head of the Design Innovation Research Centre at UTS where they employ “frame creation”, an innovation-centred approach that applies “design thinking” to problem solving. Along with Professor Stuart White, Director of the Institute for Sustainable Futures who has spent 20 years working with academics across disciplines to become an expert in wrangling different minds and perspectives to create groundbreaking and impactful research.
These three UTS scholars examine the pleasures and pitfalls of co-designing research, debunk myths about transdisciplinary collaborations, and provide advice on creating a space for complex collaboration. As well as consider what it means for the future of research design if no one research field has the solution to the world’s wicked problems.
To find out more visit reshub.uts.edu.au
Featured in episode five of Impact at UTS:
Host and Associate Professor Martin Bliemel, the Associate Dean of Research for the Faculty of Transdisciplinary Innovation
Professor Cameron Tonkinwise, Head of the Design Innovation Research Centre at UTS
Professor Stuart White, Director of the Institute for Sustainable Futures at UTS
Distinguished Professor Larissa Behrendt, Director of Research at the Jumbunna Institute for Indigenous Education & Research
Impact Studios producer/journalist Cassandra Steeth
The Impact at UTS podcast is made by Impact Studios at the University of Technology Sydney, an audio production house funded by the Deputy Vice Chancellor of Research.
UTS is committed to knowledge exchange and encouraging research collaboration between the university, industry and broader society. But what makes research collaboration effective? And what are the benefits and barriers to collaboration?
In this episode of Impact at UTS, hear how groundbreaking research developed in partnership with industry is being used to reduce shark attacks in our oceans. Professor Michael Blumenstein, the Associate Dean (Research Strategy and Management) in the Faculty of Engineering & IT, and Dr Paul Scully-Power, Australia’s first astronaut and co-founder of the Ripper Group, share the collaborative success of the SharkSpotter drone technology that is saving lives on Australian beaches.
From partnerships on our shores to long term collaboration overseas, Michele Rumsey, Director of the WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery and Health Development, discusses how her international research partnership with government, health and community groups in Papua New Guinea is transforming maternal and child health outcomes.
To find out more visit reshub.uts.edu.au
Featured in episode four of Impact at UTS:
Host and Associate Professor Martin Bliemel, the Associate Dean of Research for the Faculty of Transdisciplinary Innovation
Professor Michael Blumenstein, the Associate Dean (Research Strategy and Management) in the Faculty of Engineering & IT
Dr Paul Scully-Power, Australia’s first astronaut and co-founder of The Ripper Group https://therippergroup.com/
Michele Rumsey, Director of the WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery and Health Development
Impact Studios producer/journalist Cassandra Steeth
The Impact at UTS podcast is made by Impact Studios at the University of Technology Sydney, an audio production house funded by the Deputy Vice Chancellor of Research.
In this episode of Impact at UTS, you’ll hear about technology that changes the way we detect traces of criminals at crime scenes, discover how robots are revolutionising the Sydney Harbour Bridge and learn about UTS research that’s providing safe drinking water to hundreds of children in Vietnam.
Three Distinguished Professors at UTS, each from a different area in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics), discuss their game changing technology that was only made possible through end-user engagement and collaboration with communities and industry partners.
Guests for the episode include:
To find out more visit reshub.uts.edu.au
Featured in episode three of Impact at UTS:
Host and Associate Professor Martin Bliemel, the Associate Dean of Research for the Faculty of Transdisciplinary Innovation
Distinguished Professor Claude Roux, Director of the Centre for Forensic Science
Distinguished Professor Gamini Dissanayake, Mechanical and Mechatronic Engineering
Distinguished Professor Saravanamuthu Vigneswaran, Civil and Environmental Engineering at the Faculty of Engineering and IT
Dr Paul Scully Power, Australia’s first astronaut and co-founder of The Ripper Group
Michele Rumsey, Director of the WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery and Health Development
Dr Xanthe Spindler, Core Member, Centre for Forensic Science
Impact Studios producer/journalist Cassandra Steeth
The Impact at UTS podcast is made by Impact Studios at the University of Technology Sydney, an audio production house funded by the Deputy Vice Chancellor of Research.