on its “public science.” Stephan (2001) observes that university/industry research partnerships have a
potential to have a detrimental affect on the university’s basic research curriculum. This issue is
24
impact on the effect of science parks on the academic missions of universities except on
publications.
Fifth, the influence of university-park research interactions may change over the life of
the interaction. Over time, the impact that science parks have on academic missions changes.
Initially, that impact may not influence patenting activity or curriculum, but over time it will.
Similarly, over time the reputation of the science park will confer a hiring advantage to the
university, ceteris paribus.
33
Reemphasizing the caveats associated with this study, namely that we rely on the
provosts’ perceptions of effects (rather than time-series data about the effects) and that our
sample is small, the results in Table 6 may nevertheless be useful for guiding aspects of
university decision making. The results may inform the decision making of universities that
have science parks and are trying to understand the full extent of the university-park relationship.
Also, the results may inform universities that are contemplating establishing a science park or
planning one. We illustrate this with two examples, both focusing on the effect of a university’s
involvement with a science park on the applied nature of the university’s research curriculum.
That dimension of curricular focus has gained attention in recent years. As noted previously,
Nelson (2001) has warned that as universities take on commercial activities, often in conjunction
with industry, their commitment to public science may be endangered. Stephan (2001) as well
has noted that there is the potential that technology transfer activities — likely to occur from
university/science park interactions — will divert faculty away from students and curriculum and
towards commercial activities such as the quest for extramural research funding. If such funding
comes from industrial firms, then it is reasonable to be concerned that commercial influences
will spill over to influence the character of the university’s research and hence its research
curriculum.
First, consider a university that has an ongoing relationship with organizations in a
science park; consider also the ordered probit results presented in Table 6 for the applied
research curriculum mission of the university. Ceteris paribus, as rd increases, there is a
decrease in the probability of agreement with the mission statement that the university’s research
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