The Impact of Government Support of Graduate Schools on the Research Productivity of Professors and Students
This paper examines the effects of major funding projects for graduate
education in Korea, specifically the BK21 and the WCU programs, on
the research productivity of professors and young researchers. We
apply the standard DID method, which compares the increase in
research outputs as measured by papers per year between groups
before and during the project period. The DID estimates show that the
effects are quite different for different fields, but they mostly indicate
that the BK21 project is more effective in terms of the research
productivity of the participating professors, especially those who study
science and engineering areas. With regard to the productivity of
graduate students, the results show that there was an increase in the
research productivity of locally educated Korean doctoral degree
holders after the graduate funding programs, mainly in natural
science and engineering fields.
Click the button and follow the links to connect to the full text. (KDI CL members only)
Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.