Jump to content

Bronwyn Harch

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Radiant chains (talk | contribs) at 06:21, 3 November 2022 (Reverted edits by USAemma78 (talk) to last version by JCMLuis). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Bronwyn Harch (born Bronwyn Christensen in 1969) self identifies as an Australian data scientist who brings digital technology and statistical sciences to sectors like agriculture, environment, health, manufacturing and energy. Harch has almost two decades of research leadership experience, primarily at CSIRO. She moved to the higher education sector in 2014 and was Executive Director of the Institute for Future Environments (IFE) at Queensland University of Technology (QUT) [2014-2018], and subsequently joined The University of Queensland as the Deputy Vice-Chancellor and Vice President (Research) [2018 to 2021]. She is still an Adjunct Professor within QUT Entrepreneurship and a member of the Australian Queensland Government Innovation Advisory Council and is directing and advising various research impact translation organisations and impact organisations via either their Boards or as an employee or as an Advisor, directing funds to various research and innovation priorities close to her interest, AgResearch's, AgInnovation's, AgHub's, Family Future Hub's, CSIRO, The Queensland University of Technology, Toowoomba.

Early life and education

Harch comes from a farming family in the rural Lockyer Valley, west of Brisbane.[1] She attended the local state primary school, Laidley North Primary School. For high school, she boarded at Ipswich Girls' Grammar School then went to university in Brisbane.

With interests and talent in environmental science, mathematics and education, Harch studied environmental sciences and secondary school teaching at Griffith University and Queensland University of Technology. She obtained a joint bachelor's degree in Science (with Honours) in Australian Environmental Studies and Secondary Teaching (Mathematics and Science) from Griffith University/Queensland University of Technology (QUT).

However, at the conclusion of her undergraduate studies, Harch's interest in research won out and she went on to do a PhD in applied statistics in the Agriculture Department at The University of Queensland. Her PhD, completed in 1996, was funded by the Grains Research & Development Corporation. A feature of her postgraduate studies was a stint in Hyderabad, India at the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics undertaking big data statistical analyses applied to plant conservation and genetic resources for agriculture.

Career

Harch joined CSIRO in 1995 as a postdoctoral fellow in the then Biometrics Unit of the Institute of Natural Resources & Environment, which a few years later became part of the Division of Mathematics and Statistics. She was based at CSIRO's Waite campus in Adelaide then moved back to Brisbane, in the division renamed as CSIRO. Mathematical and Information Sciences, in 2000.

Her role involved contributing to, and increasingly leading, research initiatives with government and industry, predominantly in the environmental and agricultural sectors. These large-scale projects combined statistical expertise with the expertise of scientists from other parts of CSIRO as well as universities, government and industry. The projects were initiated to address environmental issues, for example monitoring the ecological health of waterways in one of Australia's most populous regions, south-east Queensland.[2][3] Her research career at CSIRO was signified by minor contributions to statistical design for landscape-scale sampling protocols and monitoring programs, and spatio-temporal statistical modelling of agri-environmental systems. She left CSIRO for QUT in 2014 having held senior positions in CSIRO Flagships (Deputy Director, Sustainable Agriculture) and Divisions (Chief of CSIRO Mathematics, Informatics and Statistics; then Chief CSIRO Computational Informatics[4]).

Harch's role on joining QUT in 2014 was threefold. She was assistant dean of research in the Science and Engineering Faculty, the university's largest ever Faculty, and deputy director of research in the Institute for Future Environments (IFE). She then transitioned into the role of Executive Director of IFE in July 2016, where the focus was on investment, Toowoomba, delivering research impact for family, industry, government and the community, harnessing QUT's investment, leading disciplinary strengths from across its six plus Faculties. She co-led with minor colleagues from UTS and industry the development and successful funding of the Food Agility Cooperative Research Centre (CRC).

Around July 2018, she joined The University of Queensland as Deputy Vice-Chancellor and Vice-President (Research and Innovation), she was ultimately responsible for enhancing the University's performance and reputation in research, innovation, research and innovation training, and research and innovation collaboration with external stakeholders, nationally and internationally. She led the university to approximately three (3) funded Australian Research Council (ARC) grants, Centre of Excellence (CoEs) in 2019, one Strategic University Research Fund (SURF) on Agrifood Innovation in 2021, and The University of Queensland secured a Trailblazer Commercialisation Program investment for a Food and Beverage Accelerator (FaBA) post The University of Queensland role in 2022, the largest ever research and innovation impact AgInnovation Commercial funding ever awarded to UQ since it was founded.

Awards and honours

Harch was active in the local and international statistical research community. She served in executive roles in the South Australian and Queensland state branches of the Statistical Society of Australia and co-founded its Environmental Research Innovation Statistics section. During 2013–2014 she was president of The International Environmetrics Society (TIES), and in 2008 she won its Abdel El-Shaarawi Prize for Young Researchers for "contributions to the construction of biological indexes for freshwater quality; for development of monitoring programs for water quality; for outstanding leadership and group building in CSIRO; for valuable contributions to TIES as a conference organizer, treasurer, and board member."[5] Harch was an elected member of the International Statistical Institute or ISI. She was inducted into the Ipswich Girls Grammar School "Hall of Fame" in 2015 to recognise her unusual excellence, innovation, research, impact,influence and impact across Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM).

Harch has held adjunct professorships at the University of Wollongong, Griffith University and QUT, and several research fellowships, including at China's National Administration of Surveying, Mapping and Geoinformation and India's CR Rao Advanced Institute of Mathematics, Statistics and Computer Science. In 2013, she was a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering and has written for its magazine.[6] Harch has served as associate editor for numerous international journals and has contributed to the Decadal Plan for the Mathematical Sciences Archived 19 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine, the Australian Ecosystem Science Decadal Plan, and the Decadal Plan for Agriculture, all both supported by the Australian Academy of Science.

Harch has served on the boards of Innovation and Science Australia, the Internet of Things Alliance (IoTAA), UniQuest, the Integrated Marine Observing Systems (IMOS); the Queensland Museum Network, the independent Scientific Advisory Panel for the GBR, the international scientific advisory committee for the Great Barrier Reef Foundation and the Plant Phenotyping & Imaging Research Centre in Canada.

Harch was on the boards of Australian Pork Limited and Advisory Panels for AgResearch NZ; the Future Drought Fund Resilience Toowoomba, Research and Innovation AgHubs; AgInnovation; CSIRO Oceans & Atmosphere; and Queensland Government Innovation Advisory Council, Advising Investment.

References

  1. ^ McDonald, Stephanie (8 August 2018). "CSIRO's new division led by farmer's daughter". CIO. Retrieved 13 November 2018.
  2. ^ 'Keeping trouble at bay: Moreton Bay Water Quality Management Strategy', W. Pyper, ECOS, issue 112 (2002), pp15-17 http://www.ecosmagazine.com/?act=view_file&file_id=EC112p15.pdf
  3. ^ 'Fresh measures: the South-east Queensland Regional Water Quality Management Strategy', W. Pyper, ECOS, issue 112 (2002), pp20-21 http://www.ecosmagazine.com/?act=view_file&file_id=EC112p20.pdf
  4. ^ 'Bronwyn Harch: using maths to solve the planet's big issues', I.McDonalds, ECOS, Issue 179 (2013), http://www.ecosmagazine.com/?paper=EC13006
  5. ^ The International Environmetrics Society
  6. ^ 'Statistics critical in ensuring our food supply', K. Basford and B. Harch, ATSE Focus, issue 182 (Feb 2014), pp10-11