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Schemes for Engineers in Research and Development

International Travel Grants: Reporting on your first major conference - a checklist

Introduction

The Royal Academy of Engineering has provided assistance with your travel expenses for which it is accountable. In return, it requires that you submit a report on the conference when you return. This is circulated and assessed by the referees who approved your grant in the first place.

To help you with this task, we have compiled this checklist which we recommend you read before going on your trip – it contains the fruits of much experience.

When writing your report

The following hints on content may be helpful, but they are not intended to be prescriptive:

  • What was the scope and purpose of the conference? In your own words – try to avoid transcribing the publicity material en bloc.

  • Why was it useful/important for you to attend? You may have said all this in your application; nevertheless, a concise statement covering these first two points should be included as a reminder and for the sake of completeness.

  • Describe your plan to make the most of the conference at the outset. International conferences are large and sometimes diffuse. Targeting the sessions and the individuals likely to be of most interest beforehand is a good idea but don’t be dismayed if your plan has to change when you arrive.

  • How did you cope with the problem of parallel sessions that inevitably bedevil most such meetings?

  • If you are making a contribution orally or by poster, how was it received? Was it well attended? Were there any other contributions on the same theme? How much interest was aroused and what was the main thrust of the questions/comments it provoked?

  • If you are a user of experimental techniques rather than an innovator in that field, what potentially useful advances did you spot in those sessions devoted to experimental methods?

  • Conversely, if you are involved in technique development, what trends or changes in user interests were there that could impact on your work?

  • What contacts were added to your international network that could lead to future collaboration or an exchange of visits?

  • What opportunities did you take to talk to leaders in the field?

You will have set out with a fair idea of the areas of uncertainty in your field – things you knew you didn’t know. Keep alert for what are often just as significant – the things you didn’t know you didn’t know! Often, apparently casual observations by others can assume great significance when put together with something you know and they don’t. They can provide unlooked-for insights and may hold lessons for those other than you. Any such unexpected benefits are the real pay-off for attending such conferences and should be highlighted in your report.

It is always valuable to stand back at the end of the conference and review what you have observed. You should identify the contributions that made the most impact, sift out the emerging trends, try to predict the way in which the field will develop and identify what are likely to be the hot topics in three years’ time. Your views on this broader scene are likely to be of interest to your colleagues and certainly to any industrial contacts or sponsors you may have. The latter will be particularly interested in any contributions their competitors may have made at the conference.

Finally, have you returned with any new or different perspective on your own work? What useful lessons have you learned? What will be different in the way you approach your next major international conference? Not all international conferences are worthwhile. If you think this one wasn’t, don’t hesitate to say so!

In conclusion

Remember to keep your report professional. Comments on the quality of the conference organisation are legitimate but try and resist the temptation to wax lyrical and at length on the cuisine at the conference dinner, the service at the hotel, the leisure facilities provided and the splendour of the scenery. Such issues often contribute greatly to the enjoyment and memorability of the occasion, but are not the reasons it was decided to award you a travel grant.

 

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