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This handbook presents practical guidance on how to apply project management and leadership tools, processes, and practices in academic settings.
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This handbook presents practical guidance on how to apply project management and leadership tools, processes, and practices in academic settings.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: University of Toronto Press
- Seitenzahl: 312
- Erscheinungstermin: 13. Februar 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 470g
- ISBN-13: 9781487544461
- ISBN-10: 1487544464
- Artikelnr.: 67617379
- Verlag: University of Toronto Press
- Seitenzahl: 312
- Erscheinungstermin: 13. Februar 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 470g
- ISBN-13: 9781487544461
- ISBN-10: 1487544464
- Artikelnr.: 67617379
By P. Alison Paprica
List of Illustrations
List of Tables
List of Boxes
List of Leadership Advice Crosswalks
Section 1: Overview of Research Project Management and Leadership
1.1 Research Requires Both Vision and Planning
1.3 The Origin and Content of This Handbook
1.4 Summary of Project Management Tools and Processes for Research
1.4.1 Distinguishing Projects from Operations
1.4.2 Project Management Tools and Processes
1.4.3 Overview of the Research Project Management Tools Presented in This
Handbook
1.5 Main Themes from Research Leader Interviews
1.6 How to Use This Handbook
Section 2: Scoping and Planning Research Projects
2.1 Scope and the Work Breakdown Structure (WBS)
2.1.1 The Project Management Mindset of DEFINE Then DELIVER
2.1.2 The WBS as a Tool to Articulate Project Scope
2.1.3 Deliverable-Based Scoping Drives Activities to the Point That They
Produce Something Tangible
2.1.4 Common Workstreams and Deliverables for Research Projects
2.1.5 Using the WBS to Establish a Shared Understanding of Research Project
Scope
2.2 The Deliverable-Based Schedule
2.2.1 Using the WBS Deliverables to Create a Schedule That Covers the
Entire Project Scope
2.2.2 The Benefits of a Schedule
2.2.3. Steps for Developing a Deliverable-Based Gantt Chart Research
Project Schedule
2.2.4 Schedule Compression
2.2.5 Avoiding Unnecessary Multitasking
2.3 The Deliverable-Based Budget
2.3.1 The Budget as a Tool to Ensure Sufficient Funding for All
Deliverables
2.3.2 Estimating the Costs for Common Research Budget Lines
2.3.3 Steps for Developing a Deliverable-Based Research Project Budget
2.4 Involving Stakeholders in Project Planning
2.5 The Triple Constraint of Scope, Schedule, and Budget
Section 3: Transitioning from Research Project Planning to Implementation
3.1 Progressive and Iterative Elaboration of Project Details
3.2 Processes to Identify and Manage Risks
3.2.1 Distinguishing Risks from Issues and Opportunities
3.2.2 Identifying, Prioritising, and Responding to Negative Risks for
Research
3.2.3 Positive Risk Management
3.2.4 The Research Project Risk Management Plan
3.3 Roles and Responsibilities
3.3.1 The Importance of Understanding Who Will Do What on the Research
Project Team
3.3.2 The WBS with Lead Initials as a Tool for Identifying Workstream and
Deliverable Leads
3.3.3 The Intertwined Roles of the Principal Investigator and the Academic
Research Project Manager
3.3.4 The Core Team
3.3.5 The RACI as a Tool to Define Multiple Roles
3.3.6 Building Capacity across the Research Project Team
3.4 Decision Making, Governance, and Oversight
3.4.1 Research Project Governance
3.4.2 Decision-Making Processes
3.4.3 Bringing Governance and Management Together
3.5 Using Project Management to Strengthen Grant Applications
Section 4: Implementing and Closing Research Projects
4.1 Project Kickoff
4.2 The Tracking Sheet as a Tool to Monitor and Drive Research Project
Progress
4.3 Communications and Stakeholder Involvement During Implementation
4.3.1 Communications Planning
4.3.2 Status Reports
4.3.3 Stakeholder Engagement
4.4 Preventing and Addressing Common Problems
4.5 Closing the Project and Capturing Lessons Learned
Section 5: Research Operations and Cross-Cutting Topics
5.1 Running Effective Meetings
5.1.1 The Value of Meetings
5.1.2 The Role and Responsibilities of the Meeting Chair
5.1.3 Research Meeting Agendas
5.1.3 Facilitation Techniques and Processes
5.2 Adapting Project Management Tools and Processes for Research Programs,
Operations, and Portfolios
5.3 Agile Approaches and Research Project Management
5.4 Adapting Research Project Management and Leadership Skills to Your
Environment
5.4.1 Modifying Academic Research Project Management Skills for Other
Sectors
5.4.2 Adapting the Guidance in This Handbook to Your Environment
Section 6: Interviews With Research Leaders
6.1 Elspeth Brown: Starting a New Leadership Role With a Listening Tour
6.2 Steini Brown: Research Leadership Should Focus on the Team, Not the
Leader
6.3 Beth Coleman: Starting Up the University of Toronto Black Research
Network
6.4 Aled Edwards: Learning Your Partners’ Culture Through Immersion
6.5 Steve Farber: Leadership to Advance a Concept Into a Co-Developed
Research Agenda
6.6 Colleen Flood: Forward Thinking and Scenario Planning for Policies
Related to Vaccination
6.7 Lorna MacDonald: Creating and Leading Two Productions of a
Historically-Based Opera
6.8 Kim McGrail: Launching a New Pan-Canadian Network
6.9 Michael Schull: When a Clinician Scientist Is the CEO of a Research
Institute With More Than 200 Staff
6.10 Barbara Sherwood Lollar: Understanding That Research Operations Are
Fundamentally Entrepreneurial
6.11 Molly Shoichet: Supporting Students in Learning Their Own Lessons
6.12 Ajrumand Siddiqi: Contributing as a Researcher When You’re Not Certain
That You’re Right
6.13 Zaïna Soré: Working With Partners to Take Research Into Practice
6.14 Sharon Straus: Using Research Skills and Methods to Achieve Change
6.15 Mohamad Tavakoli-Targhi: Creating Vibrant Research Communities in the
Humanities
6.16 Jutta Treviranus: Shifting the Culture of Research Funding to More
Inclusive Approaches
6.17 David Wolfe: Distinct Leadership Requirements for Large Research
Grants With Business Partners
6.18 Stefaan Verhulst: Research Entrepreneurship to Mobilize a New
International Network
6.19 Rich Zemel: Working With Industry to Create a New Machine Learning
Research Institute
Appendices: Examples of Light-Touch Project Management Documents for
Fictional and Generic Research Projects
Appendix A
Appendix B
Appendix C
Appendix D: Three Pages for Planning and Managing the Evaluation of
Seniors’ Health Clinics
Background Information About the Project
Appendix E: Five-Page Plan for Pollution Monitoring Research
Background Information About Pollution Monitoring Research Project
Appendix F: Example Full Project Plan for a Fictional Natural Sciences
Research Project That Is Part of a Multidisciplinary Program
Background and Context
Assumptions
Constraints
Scope
Roles, Responsibilities, and Governance
Schedule
Budget
Risk Management Plan
Communications Plan
Stakeholder Engagement Plan
WBS Dictionary
References
Index
About the Author
List of Tables
List of Boxes
List of Leadership Advice Crosswalks
Section 1: Overview of Research Project Management and Leadership
1.1 Research Requires Both Vision and Planning
1.3 The Origin and Content of This Handbook
1.4 Summary of Project Management Tools and Processes for Research
1.4.1 Distinguishing Projects from Operations
1.4.2 Project Management Tools and Processes
1.4.3 Overview of the Research Project Management Tools Presented in This
Handbook
1.5 Main Themes from Research Leader Interviews
1.6 How to Use This Handbook
Section 2: Scoping and Planning Research Projects
2.1 Scope and the Work Breakdown Structure (WBS)
2.1.1 The Project Management Mindset of DEFINE Then DELIVER
2.1.2 The WBS as a Tool to Articulate Project Scope
2.1.3 Deliverable-Based Scoping Drives Activities to the Point That They
Produce Something Tangible
2.1.4 Common Workstreams and Deliverables for Research Projects
2.1.5 Using the WBS to Establish a Shared Understanding of Research Project
Scope
2.2 The Deliverable-Based Schedule
2.2.1 Using the WBS Deliverables to Create a Schedule That Covers the
Entire Project Scope
2.2.2 The Benefits of a Schedule
2.2.3. Steps for Developing a Deliverable-Based Gantt Chart Research
Project Schedule
2.2.4 Schedule Compression
2.2.5 Avoiding Unnecessary Multitasking
2.3 The Deliverable-Based Budget
2.3.1 The Budget as a Tool to Ensure Sufficient Funding for All
Deliverables
2.3.2 Estimating the Costs for Common Research Budget Lines
2.3.3 Steps for Developing a Deliverable-Based Research Project Budget
2.4 Involving Stakeholders in Project Planning
2.5 The Triple Constraint of Scope, Schedule, and Budget
Section 3: Transitioning from Research Project Planning to Implementation
3.1 Progressive and Iterative Elaboration of Project Details
3.2 Processes to Identify and Manage Risks
3.2.1 Distinguishing Risks from Issues and Opportunities
3.2.2 Identifying, Prioritising, and Responding to Negative Risks for
Research
3.2.3 Positive Risk Management
3.2.4 The Research Project Risk Management Plan
3.3 Roles and Responsibilities
3.3.1 The Importance of Understanding Who Will Do What on the Research
Project Team
3.3.2 The WBS with Lead Initials as a Tool for Identifying Workstream and
Deliverable Leads
3.3.3 The Intertwined Roles of the Principal Investigator and the Academic
Research Project Manager
3.3.4 The Core Team
3.3.5 The RACI as a Tool to Define Multiple Roles
3.3.6 Building Capacity across the Research Project Team
3.4 Decision Making, Governance, and Oversight
3.4.1 Research Project Governance
3.4.2 Decision-Making Processes
3.4.3 Bringing Governance and Management Together
3.5 Using Project Management to Strengthen Grant Applications
Section 4: Implementing and Closing Research Projects
4.1 Project Kickoff
4.2 The Tracking Sheet as a Tool to Monitor and Drive Research Project
Progress
4.3 Communications and Stakeholder Involvement During Implementation
4.3.1 Communications Planning
4.3.2 Status Reports
4.3.3 Stakeholder Engagement
4.4 Preventing and Addressing Common Problems
4.5 Closing the Project and Capturing Lessons Learned
Section 5: Research Operations and Cross-Cutting Topics
5.1 Running Effective Meetings
5.1.1 The Value of Meetings
5.1.2 The Role and Responsibilities of the Meeting Chair
5.1.3 Research Meeting Agendas
5.1.3 Facilitation Techniques and Processes
5.2 Adapting Project Management Tools and Processes for Research Programs,
Operations, and Portfolios
5.3 Agile Approaches and Research Project Management
5.4 Adapting Research Project Management and Leadership Skills to Your
Environment
5.4.1 Modifying Academic Research Project Management Skills for Other
Sectors
5.4.2 Adapting the Guidance in This Handbook to Your Environment
Section 6: Interviews With Research Leaders
6.1 Elspeth Brown: Starting a New Leadership Role With a Listening Tour
6.2 Steini Brown: Research Leadership Should Focus on the Team, Not the
Leader
6.3 Beth Coleman: Starting Up the University of Toronto Black Research
Network
6.4 Aled Edwards: Learning Your Partners’ Culture Through Immersion
6.5 Steve Farber: Leadership to Advance a Concept Into a Co-Developed
Research Agenda
6.6 Colleen Flood: Forward Thinking and Scenario Planning for Policies
Related to Vaccination
6.7 Lorna MacDonald: Creating and Leading Two Productions of a
Historically-Based Opera
6.8 Kim McGrail: Launching a New Pan-Canadian Network
6.9 Michael Schull: When a Clinician Scientist Is the CEO of a Research
Institute With More Than 200 Staff
6.10 Barbara Sherwood Lollar: Understanding That Research Operations Are
Fundamentally Entrepreneurial
6.11 Molly Shoichet: Supporting Students in Learning Their Own Lessons
6.12 Ajrumand Siddiqi: Contributing as a Researcher When You’re Not Certain
That You’re Right
6.13 Zaïna Soré: Working With Partners to Take Research Into Practice
6.14 Sharon Straus: Using Research Skills and Methods to Achieve Change
6.15 Mohamad Tavakoli-Targhi: Creating Vibrant Research Communities in the
Humanities
6.16 Jutta Treviranus: Shifting the Culture of Research Funding to More
Inclusive Approaches
6.17 David Wolfe: Distinct Leadership Requirements for Large Research
Grants With Business Partners
6.18 Stefaan Verhulst: Research Entrepreneurship to Mobilize a New
International Network
6.19 Rich Zemel: Working With Industry to Create a New Machine Learning
Research Institute
Appendices: Examples of Light-Touch Project Management Documents for
Fictional and Generic Research Projects
Appendix A
Appendix B
Appendix C
Appendix D: Three Pages for Planning and Managing the Evaluation of
Seniors’ Health Clinics
Background Information About the Project
Appendix E: Five-Page Plan for Pollution Monitoring Research
Background Information About Pollution Monitoring Research Project
Appendix F: Example Full Project Plan for a Fictional Natural Sciences
Research Project That Is Part of a Multidisciplinary Program
Background and Context
Assumptions
Constraints
Scope
Roles, Responsibilities, and Governance
Schedule
Budget
Risk Management Plan
Communications Plan
Stakeholder Engagement Plan
WBS Dictionary
References
Index
About the Author
List of Illustrations
List of Tables
List of Boxes
List of Leadership Advice Crosswalks
Section 1: Overview of Research Project Management and Leadership
1.1 Research Requires Both Vision and Planning
1.3 The Origin and Content of This Handbook
1.4 Summary of Project Management Tools and Processes for Research
1.4.1 Distinguishing Projects from Operations
1.4.2 Project Management Tools and Processes
1.4.3 Overview of the Research Project Management Tools Presented in This
Handbook
1.5 Main Themes from Research Leader Interviews
1.6 How to Use This Handbook
Section 2: Scoping and Planning Research Projects
2.1 Scope and the Work Breakdown Structure (WBS)
2.1.1 The Project Management Mindset of DEFINE Then DELIVER
2.1.2 The WBS as a Tool to Articulate Project Scope
2.1.3 Deliverable-Based Scoping Drives Activities to the Point That They
Produce Something Tangible
2.1.4 Common Workstreams and Deliverables for Research Projects
2.1.5 Using the WBS to Establish a Shared Understanding of Research Project
Scope
2.2 The Deliverable-Based Schedule
2.2.1 Using the WBS Deliverables to Create a Schedule That Covers the
Entire Project Scope
2.2.2 The Benefits of a Schedule
2.2.3. Steps for Developing a Deliverable-Based Gantt Chart Research
Project Schedule
2.2.4 Schedule Compression
2.2.5 Avoiding Unnecessary Multitasking
2.3 The Deliverable-Based Budget
2.3.1 The Budget as a Tool to Ensure Sufficient Funding for All
Deliverables
2.3.2 Estimating the Costs for Common Research Budget Lines
2.3.3 Steps for Developing a Deliverable-Based Research Project Budget
2.4 Involving Stakeholders in Project Planning
2.5 The Triple Constraint of Scope, Schedule, and Budget
Section 3: Transitioning from Research Project Planning to Implementation
3.1 Progressive and Iterative Elaboration of Project Details
3.2 Processes to Identify and Manage Risks
3.2.1 Distinguishing Risks from Issues and Opportunities
3.2.2 Identifying, Prioritising, and Responding to Negative Risks for
Research
3.2.3 Positive Risk Management
3.2.4 The Research Project Risk Management Plan
3.3 Roles and Responsibilities
3.3.1 The Importance of Understanding Who Will Do What on the Research
Project Team
3.3.2 The WBS with Lead Initials as a Tool for Identifying Workstream and
Deliverable Leads
3.3.3 The Intertwined Roles of the Principal Investigator and the Academic
Research Project Manager
3.3.4 The Core Team
3.3.5 The RACI as a Tool to Define Multiple Roles
3.3.6 Building Capacity across the Research Project Team
3.4 Decision Making, Governance, and Oversight
3.4.1 Research Project Governance
3.4.2 Decision-Making Processes
3.4.3 Bringing Governance and Management Together
3.5 Using Project Management to Strengthen Grant Applications
Section 4: Implementing and Closing Research Projects
4.1 Project Kickoff
4.2 The Tracking Sheet as a Tool to Monitor and Drive Research Project
Progress
4.3 Communications and Stakeholder Involvement During Implementation
4.3.1 Communications Planning
4.3.2 Status Reports
4.3.3 Stakeholder Engagement
4.4 Preventing and Addressing Common Problems
4.5 Closing the Project and Capturing Lessons Learned
Section 5: Research Operations and Cross-Cutting Topics
5.1 Running Effective Meetings
5.1.1 The Value of Meetings
5.1.2 The Role and Responsibilities of the Meeting Chair
5.1.3 Research Meeting Agendas
5.1.3 Facilitation Techniques and Processes
5.2 Adapting Project Management Tools and Processes for Research Programs,
Operations, and Portfolios
5.3 Agile Approaches and Research Project Management
5.4 Adapting Research Project Management and Leadership Skills to Your
Environment
5.4.1 Modifying Academic Research Project Management Skills for Other
Sectors
5.4.2 Adapting the Guidance in This Handbook to Your Environment
Section 6: Interviews With Research Leaders
6.1 Elspeth Brown: Starting a New Leadership Role With a Listening Tour
6.2 Steini Brown: Research Leadership Should Focus on the Team, Not the
Leader
6.3 Beth Coleman: Starting Up the University of Toronto Black Research
Network
6.4 Aled Edwards: Learning Your Partners’ Culture Through Immersion
6.5 Steve Farber: Leadership to Advance a Concept Into a Co-Developed
Research Agenda
6.6 Colleen Flood: Forward Thinking and Scenario Planning for Policies
Related to Vaccination
6.7 Lorna MacDonald: Creating and Leading Two Productions of a
Historically-Based Opera
6.8 Kim McGrail: Launching a New Pan-Canadian Network
6.9 Michael Schull: When a Clinician Scientist Is the CEO of a Research
Institute With More Than 200 Staff
6.10 Barbara Sherwood Lollar: Understanding That Research Operations Are
Fundamentally Entrepreneurial
6.11 Molly Shoichet: Supporting Students in Learning Their Own Lessons
6.12 Ajrumand Siddiqi: Contributing as a Researcher When You’re Not Certain
That You’re Right
6.13 Zaïna Soré: Working With Partners to Take Research Into Practice
6.14 Sharon Straus: Using Research Skills and Methods to Achieve Change
6.15 Mohamad Tavakoli-Targhi: Creating Vibrant Research Communities in the
Humanities
6.16 Jutta Treviranus: Shifting the Culture of Research Funding to More
Inclusive Approaches
6.17 David Wolfe: Distinct Leadership Requirements for Large Research
Grants With Business Partners
6.18 Stefaan Verhulst: Research Entrepreneurship to Mobilize a New
International Network
6.19 Rich Zemel: Working With Industry to Create a New Machine Learning
Research Institute
Appendices: Examples of Light-Touch Project Management Documents for
Fictional and Generic Research Projects
Appendix A
Appendix B
Appendix C
Appendix D: Three Pages for Planning and Managing the Evaluation of
Seniors’ Health Clinics
Background Information About the Project
Appendix E: Five-Page Plan for Pollution Monitoring Research
Background Information About Pollution Monitoring Research Project
Appendix F: Example Full Project Plan for a Fictional Natural Sciences
Research Project That Is Part of a Multidisciplinary Program
Background and Context
Assumptions
Constraints
Scope
Roles, Responsibilities, and Governance
Schedule
Budget
Risk Management Plan
Communications Plan
Stakeholder Engagement Plan
WBS Dictionary
References
Index
About the Author
List of Tables
List of Boxes
List of Leadership Advice Crosswalks
Section 1: Overview of Research Project Management and Leadership
1.1 Research Requires Both Vision and Planning
1.3 The Origin and Content of This Handbook
1.4 Summary of Project Management Tools and Processes for Research
1.4.1 Distinguishing Projects from Operations
1.4.2 Project Management Tools and Processes
1.4.3 Overview of the Research Project Management Tools Presented in This
Handbook
1.5 Main Themes from Research Leader Interviews
1.6 How to Use This Handbook
Section 2: Scoping and Planning Research Projects
2.1 Scope and the Work Breakdown Structure (WBS)
2.1.1 The Project Management Mindset of DEFINE Then DELIVER
2.1.2 The WBS as a Tool to Articulate Project Scope
2.1.3 Deliverable-Based Scoping Drives Activities to the Point That They
Produce Something Tangible
2.1.4 Common Workstreams and Deliverables for Research Projects
2.1.5 Using the WBS to Establish a Shared Understanding of Research Project
Scope
2.2 The Deliverable-Based Schedule
2.2.1 Using the WBS Deliverables to Create a Schedule That Covers the
Entire Project Scope
2.2.2 The Benefits of a Schedule
2.2.3. Steps for Developing a Deliverable-Based Gantt Chart Research
Project Schedule
2.2.4 Schedule Compression
2.2.5 Avoiding Unnecessary Multitasking
2.3 The Deliverable-Based Budget
2.3.1 The Budget as a Tool to Ensure Sufficient Funding for All
Deliverables
2.3.2 Estimating the Costs for Common Research Budget Lines
2.3.3 Steps for Developing a Deliverable-Based Research Project Budget
2.4 Involving Stakeholders in Project Planning
2.5 The Triple Constraint of Scope, Schedule, and Budget
Section 3: Transitioning from Research Project Planning to Implementation
3.1 Progressive and Iterative Elaboration of Project Details
3.2 Processes to Identify and Manage Risks
3.2.1 Distinguishing Risks from Issues and Opportunities
3.2.2 Identifying, Prioritising, and Responding to Negative Risks for
Research
3.2.3 Positive Risk Management
3.2.4 The Research Project Risk Management Plan
3.3 Roles and Responsibilities
3.3.1 The Importance of Understanding Who Will Do What on the Research
Project Team
3.3.2 The WBS with Lead Initials as a Tool for Identifying Workstream and
Deliverable Leads
3.3.3 The Intertwined Roles of the Principal Investigator and the Academic
Research Project Manager
3.3.4 The Core Team
3.3.5 The RACI as a Tool to Define Multiple Roles
3.3.6 Building Capacity across the Research Project Team
3.4 Decision Making, Governance, and Oversight
3.4.1 Research Project Governance
3.4.2 Decision-Making Processes
3.4.3 Bringing Governance and Management Together
3.5 Using Project Management to Strengthen Grant Applications
Section 4: Implementing and Closing Research Projects
4.1 Project Kickoff
4.2 The Tracking Sheet as a Tool to Monitor and Drive Research Project
Progress
4.3 Communications and Stakeholder Involvement During Implementation
4.3.1 Communications Planning
4.3.2 Status Reports
4.3.3 Stakeholder Engagement
4.4 Preventing and Addressing Common Problems
4.5 Closing the Project and Capturing Lessons Learned
Section 5: Research Operations and Cross-Cutting Topics
5.1 Running Effective Meetings
5.1.1 The Value of Meetings
5.1.2 The Role and Responsibilities of the Meeting Chair
5.1.3 Research Meeting Agendas
5.1.3 Facilitation Techniques and Processes
5.2 Adapting Project Management Tools and Processes for Research Programs,
Operations, and Portfolios
5.3 Agile Approaches and Research Project Management
5.4 Adapting Research Project Management and Leadership Skills to Your
Environment
5.4.1 Modifying Academic Research Project Management Skills for Other
Sectors
5.4.2 Adapting the Guidance in This Handbook to Your Environment
Section 6: Interviews With Research Leaders
6.1 Elspeth Brown: Starting a New Leadership Role With a Listening Tour
6.2 Steini Brown: Research Leadership Should Focus on the Team, Not the
Leader
6.3 Beth Coleman: Starting Up the University of Toronto Black Research
Network
6.4 Aled Edwards: Learning Your Partners’ Culture Through Immersion
6.5 Steve Farber: Leadership to Advance a Concept Into a Co-Developed
Research Agenda
6.6 Colleen Flood: Forward Thinking and Scenario Planning for Policies
Related to Vaccination
6.7 Lorna MacDonald: Creating and Leading Two Productions of a
Historically-Based Opera
6.8 Kim McGrail: Launching a New Pan-Canadian Network
6.9 Michael Schull: When a Clinician Scientist Is the CEO of a Research
Institute With More Than 200 Staff
6.10 Barbara Sherwood Lollar: Understanding That Research Operations Are
Fundamentally Entrepreneurial
6.11 Molly Shoichet: Supporting Students in Learning Their Own Lessons
6.12 Ajrumand Siddiqi: Contributing as a Researcher When You’re Not Certain
That You’re Right
6.13 Zaïna Soré: Working With Partners to Take Research Into Practice
6.14 Sharon Straus: Using Research Skills and Methods to Achieve Change
6.15 Mohamad Tavakoli-Targhi: Creating Vibrant Research Communities in the
Humanities
6.16 Jutta Treviranus: Shifting the Culture of Research Funding to More
Inclusive Approaches
6.17 David Wolfe: Distinct Leadership Requirements for Large Research
Grants With Business Partners
6.18 Stefaan Verhulst: Research Entrepreneurship to Mobilize a New
International Network
6.19 Rich Zemel: Working With Industry to Create a New Machine Learning
Research Institute
Appendices: Examples of Light-Touch Project Management Documents for
Fictional and Generic Research Projects
Appendix A
Appendix B
Appendix C
Appendix D: Three Pages for Planning and Managing the Evaluation of
Seniors’ Health Clinics
Background Information About the Project
Appendix E: Five-Page Plan for Pollution Monitoring Research
Background Information About Pollution Monitoring Research Project
Appendix F: Example Full Project Plan for a Fictional Natural Sciences
Research Project That Is Part of a Multidisciplinary Program
Background and Context
Assumptions
Constraints
Scope
Roles, Responsibilities, and Governance
Schedule
Budget
Risk Management Plan
Communications Plan
Stakeholder Engagement Plan
WBS Dictionary
References
Index
About the Author