Quantcast
breaking news

Commercial Benefits of College Research Touted

By: Minjae Park, The Texas Tribune
Updated: April 25, 2012
Though academia has long prized research for its own sake, two House committees on Wednesday heard from the state's leading research universities on how their scientific research makes money and contributes to the state economy.

"When we recognize that commercialization is a tool for the university to achieve its mission -- research, education, service, public good -- the way we deal with industry will fundamentally change," said Brett Cornwell, Texas A&M University's associate vice chancellor for commercialization. "Our goals become aligned with industry and industry's goals become aligned with our faculty."

Speaker Joe Straus tasked the House Committee on Higher Education and the House Committee on Economic and Small Business Development with identifying ways to increase partnership between business and research institutions for the benefit of the state economy. Testimony centered on how to commercialize scientific research conducted at universities.

Though the hearing produced little in the way of specific policy proposals, professors and administrators from the University of Texas at Austin and Rice University, among others, informed lawmakers of their efforts at commercialization.

"This is really helpful for us to see a window into how research and science and innovation is being fused at our universities along with teaching and that great research and great teaching can go hand in hand," said Rep. Dan Branch, R-Dallas, chairman of the higher education committee. "And that there's also the third component, which is there's great economic upside potential."

James W. McGinity, a UT-Austin pharmacy professor, said research conducted at the College of Pharmacy has helped launch companies, such as PharmaForm, Enavail and DisperSol Technologies. George McLendon, provost of Rice, spoke in support of the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas, a state-funded initiative to advance cancer research. McLendon urged lawmakers to continue funding the institute, which he said has helped lure leading scientists from other states.

The leader of an intellectual property consulting company said research that creates intellectual property can work as an economic engine for Texas, pointing to the money-making value of patents. "It's not just having an idea or technology," said Dan Peterson, chief executive of IPX. "It's understanding how that plays in the market landscape."

On Tuesday, the higher-education committee held a hearing on ways to improve the state's manufacturing capability. Leaders from universities, businesses and state agencies spoke of the importance of partnerships between higher-education institutions and the manufacturing industry.

Some of those invited to testify stressed the importance of associate degrees, particularly in the STEM fields -- science, technology, engineering and math -- in aligning the skills of students with the needs of businesses such as Dow Chemical and Caterpillar, whose representatives spoke before the committee. Associate degrees in STEM fields earn graduates higher salaries than bachelor's degrees in liberal arts, said Mike Reeser, chancellor of the Texas State Technical College System.

"Let's broaden the definition of what college means," Reeser said, "and let people know college means a wide range of post-secondary activities." 

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at http://www.texastribune.org/texas-education/higher-education/benefits-univ-research-examined-house-hearing/.

Comments

Readers Feel...

hello
Related Content

35-year-old Gabriel Flores was taken to the Taylor County Jail after firing a gun in the direction of his wife three times....

David Olson is no ordinary man. ...

Gov. Rick Perry hasn't yet said whether he's running for re-election -- but Attorney General Greg Abbott doesn't appear to be waiting for him to make up his mind. Abbott is collecting rsums, a team...

Due to the Memorial Day Holiday on May 27, all non-emergency City facilities will close and there will be no collection of residential waste....

Police are searching for the suspect in a drive-by shooting that occurred early Thursday morning. ...

Chris and Leah check out Fitness Yoga for this week's workout....

More teenagers turn away from Facebook for their social media fix....

A grass fire in north Abilene quickly spread to at least one structure overnight, causing some major damage....

Teenage girls in Colorado City have been inspired by Hailey Dunn to take self-defense classes....

Crime Stoppers is offering a $500.00 reward for information that leads to his arrest, through 05/29/13....

 
Find Articles Here
 
End
      Page 943 of 644
 
Search BigCountryHomepage.com