“…Based on the findings reported, our body of work in this area to date, and our collective experiences of 79 years of working in schools of social work in various Canadian universities for the first three Canadian authors (M.H., F.M., and J.G. ), we offer some candid (and in our minds) creative suggestions for Canadian faculty to think about—both “inside and outside of the box” to enhance Canadian research and scholarship capacities and outcomes in schools of social work in the dawn of this new “era of legitimacy.” These include: - Canadian schools should proactively seek to hire deans and directors who possess both leadership skills (Holosko, 2009; Holosko & Skinner, 2015) and research/scholarship skills.
- Programs should stop the prevailing rhetoric harking the importance of developing their research capacities (McRoy et al, 2012) and move to more actively develop and implement scholarship infrastructures in their own schools tied to the unique demographic needs within their communities and environments.
- Programs should proactively develop research/scholarship cultures with ongoing mentorship for junior and mid-career scholars and students; as such mentorship has been empirically shown to be a missing ingredient in U.S. schools of social work (Barner et al, 2015; Holosko & Barner, 2014; Holosko et al, 2015).
- Programs (BSW/MSW/PhD) should promote more student–faculty collaborations by (i) recruiting better quality research-committed students in all of our programs, engage students in more faculty research projects; (ii) provide opportunities for students and faculty to present more research and scholarship at conferences; and (iii) explore ways that more creatively use field internship settings for student-initiated research projects (C. Regeher, personal communication, December 10, 2016).
- Programs should offer resources targeted for faculty training to learn the important and timely craft of grant writing, and then provide supports and incentives for faculty and collaborators to annually submit proposals for funding.
- All Canadian full-time social work faculty should be encouraged to annually develop designated collaborative scholarship relationships (minimally), with two different faculty individuals/departments either within their host university, or outside of their university (some U.S. schools of social work already have this as a faculty requirement, in particular for junior faculty).
- We were also reminded that the bibliometrics presented herein are not the only factors attributed to one’s overall academic scholarship, however, their pervasiveness in universities all over the world is widespread.
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