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Atmospheric Science Program Highly Recognizedtop ten academic analytics

January 22, 2007

As can be found in the cover story of The Chronicle of Higher Education , issued January 12, 2007, Academic Analytics, a for-profit company owned partially by the State University of New York at Stony Brook, has just released its annual survey of the top-ranked departments and institutions for faculty scholarly productivity by field and discipline for 2005. In its study Academic Analytics examined the faculty scholarly production of 354 doctoral-degree-granting institutions nationwide. Within the framework of its examination Academic Analytics rated the faculty members' scholarly output at nearly 7,300 doctoral programs. Its analysis used metrics such as faculty publications, citations, and financial and honorary awards. The achievements are analyzed by academic disciplines and are compared to national standards.

According to Academic Analytics Faculty Scholarly Productivity Index, UAF was ranked in the Top Ten in two disciplines, namely "Atmospheric Sciences" (see table below) and "Environmental Sciences" (see table below). In addition, UAF was ranked fifth (together with the University of Massachusetts at Boston) in the category "Small Research Universities" (see table below) that offer up to 14 doctoral degrees.

Congratulation to the faculty of the Atmospheric Science Program (Chair: Nicole Mölders) of the College of Natural Science and Mathematics (Dean: Joan Braddock) at UAF. Faculty and students of the Atmospheric Science Program are an integral part of the Geophysical Institute (Director: Roger Smith) and the International Arctic Research Center (Director: Syun-Ichi Akasofu).

Atmospheric Sciences*

Institution
Faculty Scholarly Productivity Index
Number of faculty
Percentage of faculty with a book publication
Books per faculty
Percentage of faculty with a journal publication
Journal publications per faculty
Percentage of faculty with journal publication cited by another work
Citations per faculty
1 U.of California at Irvine
1.91
22
-
-
100%
8.14
95%
46.59
2 Massachusetts Institute of Technology
1.88
14
-
-
100%
9.86
100%
42.64
3 Colorado State U.
1.79
12
-
-
100%
13.58
100%
81.17
4 Rutgers U. at New Brunswick
1.27
11
-
-
91%
6.73
82%
46.45
5 Cornell U.
1.21
13
-
-
100%
6.77
85%
10.38
6 Yale U.
1.13
13
-
-
92%
6.69
85%
68.85
7 U. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
1.06
13
-
-
100%
4.85
85%
18.77
8 U. of Colorado at Boulder
0.96
28
-
-
86%
5.39
82%
26.50
9 U. of Alaska at Fairbanks
0.89
11
-
-
91%
4.55
64%
18.36
10 Florida State U.
0.77
18
-
-
94%
6.11
83%
19.72

Institution
Citations per faculty
Citations per paper
Percentage of faculty getting a new grant
New grants per faculty
Total value of new grants per faculty
Average amount of grant
Percentage of faculty with an award
Awards per faculty
1 U. of California at Irvine
46.59
5.73
64%
1.23
$413,683
$337,075
14%
0.18
2 Massachusetts Institute of Technology
42.64
4.33
79%
1.71
$582,255
$339,649
14%
0.14
3 Colorado State U.
81.17
5.98
75%
1.67
$577,843
$346,706
0%
0.00
4 Rutgers U. at New Brunswick
46.45
6.91
55%
0.91
$285,321
$313,853
0%
0.00
5 Cornell U.
10.38
1.53
77%
1.08
$400,950
$372,311
8%
0.08
6 Yale U.
68.85
10.29
62%
0.77
$133,552
$173,617
0%
0.00
7 U. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
18.77
3.87
46%
0.85
$1,912,875
$2,260,671
0%
0.00
8 U. of Colorado at Boulder
26.50
4.91
50%
1.11
$236,886
$213,961
7%
0.07
9 U. of Alaska at Fairbanks
18.36
4.04
55%
0.55
$964,972
$1,769,116
9%
0.45
10 Florida State U.
19.72
3.23
39%
0.50
$296,682
$593,364
0%
0.00
- Not applicable SOURCE: ACADEMIC ANALYTICS

Environmental Sciences*

Institution
Faculty Scholarly Productivity Index
Number of faculty
Percentage of faculty with a book publication
Books per faculty
Percentage of faculty with a journal publication
Journal publications per faculty
Percentage of faculty with journal publication cited by another work
Citations per faculty
1 California Institute of Technology
2.12
22
-
-
86%
9.32
82%
71.73
2 Dartmouth College
1.95
91
-
-
88%
5.63
87%
60.66
3 U. of Wisconsin at Madison
1.63
24
-
-
83%
7.71
75%
35.54
4 U. of California at Berkeley
1.59
64
-
-
86%
7.95
81%
46.91
5 Stanford U.
1.58
36
-
-
83%
7.86
83%
41.22
6 U. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
1.57
39
-
-
82%
5.95
79%
23.87
7 Princeton U.
1.53
66
-
-
80%
7.32
79%
48.74
8 U. of California at Riverside
1.48
56
-
-
88%
5.88
80%
22.98
9 U. of Alaska at Fairbanks
1.17
12
-
-
100%
3.33
83%
10.83
10 Yale U.
1.09
25
-
-
88%
4.28
68%
16.52

  Institution Citations per faculty Citations per paper Percentage of faculty getting a new grant New grants per faculty Total value of new grants per faculty Average amount of grant Percentage of faculty with an award Awards per faculty
1 California Institute of Technology 71.73 7.70 59% 1.05 $677,952 $648,476 18% 0.18
2 Dartmouth College 60.66 10.78 64% 2.47 $1,012,059 $409,322 1% 0.07
3 U. of Wisconsin at Madison 35.54 4.61 46% 0.58 $271,349 $465,170 4% 0.04
4 U. of California at Berkeley 46.91 5.90 36% 0.75 $164,435 $219,246 6% 0.06
5 Stanford U. 41.22 5.24 42% 0.75 $193,064 $257,418 3% 0.03
6 U. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 23.87 4.01 31% 0.74 $515,471 $693,219 3% 0.03
7 Princeton U. 48.74 6.66 33% 0.56 $159,153 $283,894 8% 0.09
8 U. of California at Riverside 22.98 3.91 43% 0.54 $185,041 $345,410 2% 0.04
9 U. of Alaska at Fairbanks 10.83 3.25 50% 0.92 $452,790 $493,953 0% 0.00
10 Yale U. 16.52 3.86 32% 0.60 $119,718 $199,530 4% 0.04
- Not applicable SOURCE: ACADEMIC ANALYTICS

Small Research Universities*

Rank
Institution
Faculty Scholarly Productivity Index
Number of programs
1 DePaul U.
+0.41
5
2 San Diego State U.*
+0.32
10
3 Bryn Mawr College
+0.16
2
4 Wright State U.
+0.13
6
5 U. of Alaska at Fairbanks
-0.05
14
5 U. of Massachusetts at Boston
-0.05
7
7 Clarkson U.
-0.18
13
8 College of William and Mary
-0.19
8
9 U. of Colorado at Denver
-0.24
6
10 Central Michigan U.
-0.30
5
11 U. of Missouri at St. Louis
-0.31
11
12 Clark U.
-0.41
8
12 Rutgers U. at Newark
-0.41
11
14 Illinois State U.
-0.46
5
15 Southern Methodist U.
-0.52
14
16 Duquesne U.
-0.53
14
17 Northern Arizona U.
-0.54
6
17 Northern Illinois U.
-0.54
10
17 Wesleyan U.
-0.54
8
20 Miami U. (Ohio)
-0.57
1
*) San Diego State's Ph.D. programs are offered in conjunction with the U. of California at San Diego.
SOURCE: ACADEMIC ANALYTICS

How The Index Works*

The 2005 Faculty Scholarly Productivity Index, by Academic Analytics, a company owned partially by the State University of New York at Stony Brook, ranks 7,294 individual doctoral programs in 104 disciplines at 354 institutions. It also ranks institutions in broader categories, like the humanities and biological sciences, as well as institutions as a whole.

Institutions are categorized as large research universities (those with 15 or more Ph.D. programs) and small research universities.

For a program to be included in the 2005 index, it must have 10 or more faculty members, or, if it has fewer, it must have one-half the median number of faculty members for a program in that discipline.

The index examines faculty members who are listed on a Ph.D. program's Web sites, and includes a total of 255,475 names. A professor listed in both history and American studies would be counted twice. But at the next level of aggregation (the humanities in this case), the professor would be counted only once. The index creators call this "de-duplication." The total number of actual faculty members rated by the index is 177,816.

The productivity of each named faculty member is measured, although the data are aggregated before being published. Faculty members can be judged on as many as three factors, depending on the most important variables in the given discipline: publications, which can include the number of books and journal articles published as well as citations of journal articles; federal-grant dollars awarded; and honors and awards.

For each discipline, Academic Analytics assigns a weight to each variable. Publications, which include journal articles, citations of those articles, and in some cases, books, count as 60 points out of 100. For books to be included, more than 10 percent of the programs in that discipline must have had at least one book published by a faculty member. (For instance, books are not counted in chemical engineering.)

Books that were published from 2001 to 2005 were recorded using Amazon.com's database. When books are included, their weight is five times that of journal articles. Journal articles are counted for the years 2003, 2004, and 2005. The index uses Scopus, an abstract-and-citation database that covers more than 15,000 peer-reviewed journals.

Grants count as 30 points out of the 100, if they meet a threshold of importance in a particular discipline — that more than 50 percent of the programs in that discipline have received a federal grant. Grant data from 2003, 2004, and 2005 were collected from the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Department of Education, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture, along with some from the Department of Energy.

The NEH and Energy Department grants were counted as awards and honors, however, because of the limited information on grants made available by the Energy Department and the very small number of grants awarded by the NEH.

Awards and honors count as 10 points out of 100, as long as more than 10 percent of the programs in the discipline have received awards. Data are collected from the Web sites of 55 organizations that grant awards and honors and are matched to names and programs.

Awards considered more prestigious are given more weight than others. For example, most awards, like Fulbrights, are counted only if they were awarded between 2001 and 2006. But a Nobel Prize can be counted in the 2005 index if it was awarded within the past 50 years.

If one or more variables are not used in the calculation of faculty productivity, that part of the equation is removed and the point scale reduced accordingly. So if honors are not included, the total possible score is reduced to 90 from 100. Institutions that pay for the data have the ability to reweight the variables in any category, according to their preferences, so they can use the raw data as they please.

The faculty's scholarly productivity in each program is expressed as a z-score, a statistical measure that reveals how far and in what direction a value is from the mean. The z-score allows the performance of programs to be compared across disciplines. A z-score of zero indicates that the program is at the national mean for the discipline; a z-score of 1 indicates that the program is one standard deviation unit higher than the national mean.

* adopted from The Chronicle of Higher Education