Does the public-private higher education institution distinction influence academics' societal engagement? Evidence from Chile and Turkey

IF 1 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Pamela Guzmán, D. Véliz, Baris Uslu, Paulina Berríos, F. Seggie
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Abstract

PurposeThe purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between the participation in commercially- and socially-oriented Academics' Societal Engagement (ASE) activities, partnership choices, and funding preferences of academics working in public and private universities from Chile and Turkey. Chile represents a private-dominant higher education system (HES), while Turkey is public-dominant. This article presents the results of an international survey, the Academic Profession in Knowledge-based Society (APIKS), applied to academics from over 20 countries, including Chile and Turkey.Design/methodology/approachThrough a quantitative analysis the authors analyse how the dominant institutional type influences ASE activities, partnership choices, and funding preferences.FindingsResults from the analysis show that being part of a public or private university does not solely explain the activity type that academics engage with. Moreover, the rate of Chilean academics participating in ASE activities is more than twice that of Turkish academics regardless of the public-private distinction.Research limitations/implicationsFurther research about the academic life and ASE activities using a qualitative approach can complement this study. Applying further in-depth interviews to obtain more information from external partners can provide different perspectives and help to better understand the ASE activities. Additional analysis could compare external activities by higher education institution (HEI) type regarding vocational/technical centres since the Chilean and Turkish private HEIs included in this study received a mix of public-private funds and are considered not-for-profit, so extending this research to include for-profit private HEIs may be worthwhile for additional comparison.Practical implicationsMore support and funding for the development of commercially-oriented ASE activities is recommended for Chile and Turkey's HES. In Turkey, a law-update in 2017 facilitates the establishment of technology transfer offices (TTOs) as companies within universities (Author, 2019). Though it is too early to know its effects, a positive contribution is anticipated. Centred Chile's private dominant HES, it would be appropriate for this type of system to also create different support structures to incentivise socially-oriented external activities and partnership opportunities. As done in other universities, the establishment of a community engagement office may provide professional guidance for partnership creations. Regardless of a country's HE public/private dominance, diverse sources of funding and support mechanisms can also be created to strengthen organisational and financial autonomy facilitating academics' participation in ASE activities. For example, universities can develop institutional policies to support academic establishment, lead or join in administration of non-governmental organisations, or form institutional media to deliver academics' viewpoints of social issues to the larger and non-academic audience. University managers should also empower the connection between academics and industry and business sector through different organisational structures such as Research Office, Science Park Incubators, Career Centre, while guiding and financially supporting academics' research commercialisation by their TTO experience and sources.Originality/valueThe literature has studied the public-private higher education distinction in vast aspects, however, no empirical studies have explored it concerning ASE. Chile and Turkey propose interesting cases since they represent opposite ends considering the public-private predominance of higher education systems. Turkey exhibits a heavy public predominance, whereas Chile has a significantly strong private system.
公立-私立高等教育机构的区分是否影响学者的社会参与?来自智利和土耳其的证据
本研究的目的是考察智利和土耳其公立和私立大学的学者参与商业和社会导向的学者社会参与(ASE)活动、合作伙伴选择和资助偏好之间的关系。智利是私立主导的高等教育体系(HES),而土耳其是公立主导的。本文介绍了一项国际调查的结果,即知识社会中的学术职业(APIKS),该调查适用于包括智利和土耳其在内的20多个国家的学者。通过定量分析,作者分析了占主导地位的机构类型如何影响ASE活动、合作伙伴选择和资金偏好。分析结果表明,作为公立或私立大学的一部分并不能完全解释学者参与的活动类型。此外,智利学者参与ASE活动的比率是土耳其学者的两倍多,无论公私区分如何。研究的局限性/启示使用定性方法对学术生活和ASE活动进行进一步的研究可以补充本研究。通过进一步深入的访谈,从外部合作伙伴那里获得更多信息,可以提供不同的视角,并有助于更好地理解ASE活动。额外的分析可以比较高等教育机构(HEI)类型关于职业/技术中心的外部活动,因为本研究中包括的智利和土耳其私立高等教育机构获得了公私混合资金,并且被认为是非营利性的,因此将本研究扩展到包括营利性私立高等教育机构可能值得进行额外的比较。实际意义建议为智利和土耳其的HES提供更多的支持和资金,以开发面向商业的ASE活动。在土耳其,2017年的一项法律更新促进了技术转移办公室(TTOs)作为大学内部公司的建立(作者,2019年)。虽然现在知道它的影响还为时过早,但预计会有积极的贡献。以智利私人主导的卫生系统为中心,这种类型的系统也应该创建不同的支持结构,以激励面向社会的外部活动和伙伴关系机会。与其他大学一样,建立社区参与办公室可以为合作伙伴的创建提供专业指导。无论一个国家的高等教育公共/私人主导地位如何,也可以建立不同的资金来源和支持机制,以加强组织和财政自主权,促进学者参与ASE活动。例如,大学可以制定制度性政策来支持学术机构,领导或参与非政府组织的管理,或者形成制度性媒体,将学者对社会问题的观点传递给更多的非学术受众。大学管理者还应通过不同的组织结构,如研究室、科学园孵化器、就业中心等,加强学术界与工商界的联系,同时利用他们在研发中心的经验和资源,指导和资助学术界的研究商业化。文献对公立-私立高等教育的差异进行了广泛的研究,但尚未有针对ASE的实证研究。智利和土耳其提出了有趣的案例,因为考虑到公立-私立高等教育体系的优势,它们代表了相反的两端。土耳其表现出严重的公共优势,而智利则有一个非常强大的私人体系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
2.50
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