Society for Italian Studies

As Chairman of the Society for Italian Studies I am writing on the Society's

behalf to respond to the invitation to contribute to this review. The Society

represents all teachers of Italian in UK universities. While our members have a

range of opinions on the subject, the points I make below are shared by most of

them. For present purposes I am assuming that something like the present system

of peer review continues, since our members are broadly satisfied with it. We

would like to underline those aspects of the last two RAEs which we believe

worked in the general interests of our subject.

While one or two Italian departments were returned as part of European Studies

units in the last RAE, the majority will wish to continue to be treated as units

of assessment in Italian, and would oppose combinations with other languages or

subjects. We think it important that individual panels should retain the degree

of freedom that they currently enjoy to set their own criteria: the balance in

the last exercise between common standards and allowance for the peculiarities

of individual subjects seemed to us about right. There are significant

differences even between different modern languages that require special

adjustments to be made. Consultation by the panel with the subject community on

these issues, through the Chair of the Society for Italian Studies, seems to us

essential to maintain the community's confidence, and we would like that to

continue in any similar system.

We welcomed the decision of the Italian panels to base their assessment

primarily on the reading of the items submitted: a great advantage in a

minority discipline where publication can often take non-standard forms. While

we would wish something like RA5 and RA6 to continue to be taken seriously as

part of the assessment, it must be remembered that research cultures in small

units of assessment cannot always be measured against those of large units. We

do not believe it appropriate for quantitative methods to be used in assessments

for a subject such as ours. Such information of a quantitative kind as is

available is too partial and unreliable.

The period of six years that the last assessments covered is we believe the

essential minimum for humanities disciplines such as ours. We would welcome a

longer interval between one assessment and the next, because of the time and

energy expended in each exercise.

We believe consultation with the subject community, through the Chair of the

Society for Italian Studies, to be an indispensable stage in the appointment

both of the Panel Chair and of panel members, if the community's confidence is

to be maintained. The fact that this took place is one reason for our members

broad confidence in the existing system.

For the same reason we feel that a minimum number of staff should not be

required, in a minority subject such as ours, for the attainment of the highest

grade. If there were such a requirement, it could lead to centres of

outstanding international importance failing to be duly recognized in the RAE.

It would also be a real difficulty for the subject if the proportion of staff

submitted were partly to determine the award of grades. Where units of

assessment are very small, the inclusion or exclusion of only one member of

staff can made a great deal of difference. We would not wish a unit of high

international standing to fail to receive the due recognition of a 5* simply

because of one non-research-active member of staff.

We would like to highlight, at all events, the fact that there can be peculiar

problems in the assessment of staff at the beginning of their careers in a

minority subject such as ours, where departments can acquire a majority of new

and young appointees from one year to the next. We obviously feel that the

maximum allowance should be made in such cases.

Best wishes,

David Robey

Professor David Robey

School of Modern Languages

University of Reading

Whiteknights

Reading RG6 6AA

tel. 0118 9318401

fax 0118 9316797