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Roy Burman, R.
- Determinants of Research Productivity of Agricultural Scientists: Implications for the National Agricultural Research and Education System of India
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PDF Views:114
Authors
Affiliations
1 ICAR-Indian Agricultural Research Institute, New Delhi 110 012, IN
2 Krishi Anusandhan Bhawan-I, New Delhi 110 012, IN
1 ICAR-Indian Agricultural Research Institute, New Delhi 110 012, IN
2 Krishi Anusandhan Bhawan-I, New Delhi 110 012, IN
Source
Current Science, Vol 112, No 02 (2017), Pagination: 252-257Abstract
A micro level analysis for understanding the major determinants of research productivity of individual scientists in the National Agricultural Research and Education System of India was undertaken. A sample of two hundred scientists was drawn through multistage disproportionate stratified random sampling from a high performing and a low performing agricultural institute in India. Forced choice Q-sort technique was employed to record perception of respondents regarding relative influence exerted by selected variables on their research productivity and a factor analysis using principal component method with varimax rotation helped in extracting 11 major factors determining research productivity of agricultural scientists, namely, organizational research environment, creativity, perseverance and commitment, research facility, ability to work under constraint, incentive policy, proactiveness, purpose-driven orientation, achievement motivation, involvement in teaching and job satisfaction. The apparent uniformity in percentage variance contribution of these 11 factors implies that optimum research productivity of scientists can only be harnessed when personal and organizational factors work in harmony.Keywords
Agriculture, Determinants, Productivity, Research, Scientists.- The Concept of Measuring Happiness and How India Can Go the Nordic Way
Abstract Views :351 |
PDF Views:125
Authors
Affiliations
1 ICAR Indian Agricultural Research Institute, New Delhi - 110 012, IN
1 ICAR Indian Agricultural Research Institute, New Delhi - 110 012, IN
Source
Current Science, Vol 116, No 1 (2019), Pagination: 26-28Abstract
Quantifying subjective well being or happiness has always been intriguing and with the advent of Gross National Happiness (GNH) index of Bhutan and World Happiness Report (WHR) by UN, it has become all the way more of a global issue. This study stratifies countries into Happiness Strata in a Global Happiness Map using the WHR 2018 indices, only to find that India is among the 42 Unhappy Nations of the world. The Nordic (Western European) countries seem to top the happiness charts with Denmark being consistently among the top five. The paper also discusses what India can learn and adopt from Denmark.Keywords
No Keywords.References
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