PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Geography, skills, local companies affect higher education impact on economic development

New study in International Journal of Educational Development wins Elsevier's Atlas award

2015-07-28
(Press-News.org) Amsterdam, July 28, 2015 - Policy makers need to take factors like geography, available skills and knowledge and the networks of local companies into account to boost the impact of higher education on economic development, according to a new Atlas Award-winning paper published in the International Journal of Educational Development.

The authors of the study, from the University of Nottingham, say it's not quite as simple as more students equals higher income: higher education is key to economic development, but the way the two relate is complex, they say.

"Of course investing in education leads to improved incomes, but that it's just too simple a model to account for real development in the real world," said Dr. Simon McGrath, Professor of International Education and Development and one of the authors of the study.

Until recently, the focus was on primary education, since more people can be reached with the same investment. However, since 2000 there has been an increasing understanding that higher education plays a key role in economic development.

The study proposes a new way of looking at the relationship between higher education and economic development. The widely adopted human capital view is that higher education increases skill and knowledge and results in higher income. But the researchers behind the new study say many more things need to be taken into consideration: geography, sectors, available skills and education systems and networks of companies are all important factors.

"Development is actually deeply contextualized, it's deeply based in particular sectors, in particular skillsets, in particular firms, in particular countries," said Dr. McGrath. "There's got to be a focus on how you build the capability in those spaces to do those things, not just thinking it's a simple case of invest in education, leave it to the markets. That will only do so much."

The team looked at case study sectors in South Africa on three levels - primary (sugarcane farming), secondary (automotive) and tertiary (astronomy) - to see what factors account for the effect education has on the economy in each case. They conducted background research on aspects like the value chains, employment patterns and policy frameworks associated with each sector. They then mapped out all the actors involved and interviewed them to find out more about the skills and strategies needed in each sector. They also interviewed all universities in the region.

The case studies highlighted the importance of geography: for the automotive industry, South Africa's location is not conducive to rapid growth, since surrounding countries are not well equipped for the market. However, for astronomy, the country won a large international research project because of the clear sky in rural areas that are within close proximity to Cape Town, a world city.

"Higher education will continue to play a key role in economic development," said Dr. McGrath. "As we start working towards the new Sustainable Development Goals, we will need professionals across all sectors - doctors, teachers and engineers will be vital to our future success, and education is central to producing those professionals."

INFORMATION:

The project was funded by the South African Department of Higher Education and Training. It was led by Dr. Glenda Kruss, and involved researchers at the Human Sciences Research Council of South Africa.

Read the story on Atlas: http://www.elsevier.com/atlas/story/people/higher-education-is-key-to-economic-development

Notes for Editors: The award-winning article is Higher education and economic development: The importance of building technological capabilities by Glenda Kruss, Simon McGrath, Il-haam Petersen, Michael Gastrow, Published in International Journal of Educational Development (Volume 43, July 2015, Pages 22-31) DOI: 10.1016/j.ijedudev.2015.04.011 http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0738059315000528

The article is made freely available on ScienceDirect.

Journalists who would like more information or want to interview the authors are welcome to contact: s.boucherie@elsevier.com

About the International Journal of Educational Development The purpose of the International Journal of Educational Development is to report new insight and foster critical debate about the role that education plays in development. IJED seeks to help make available new evidence-based theories and understandings as to the extent and nature of educational change in diverse settings. It stresses the importance of appreciating the interplay of local, national, regional and global contexts and dynamics in shaping education and development. http://www.journals.elsevier.com/international-journal-of-educational-development

About Atlas, Research for a better world Science impacts everyone's world. With over 1,800 journals publishing articles from across science, technology and health, our mission is to share some of the stories that matter. Each month Elsevier's Atlas will showcase research that can (or already has) significantly impact(ed) people's lives around the world and we hope that bringing wider attention to this research will go some way to ensuring its successful implementation. With so many worthy articles published the tough job of selecting a single article to be awarded "The Atlas" each month comes down to an Advisory Board. The winning research is presented alongside interviews, expert opinions, multimedia and much more on the Atlas website: http://www.elsevier.com/atlas

About Elsevier Elsevier is a world-leading provider of information solutions that enhance the performance of science, health, and technology professionals, empowering them to make better decisions, deliver better care, and sometimes make groundbreaking discoveries that advance the boundaries of knowledge and human progress. Elsevier provides web-based, digital solutions -- among them ScienceDirect, Scopus, Elsevier Research Intelligence and ClinicalKey -- and publishes more than 2,500 journals, including The Lancet and Cell, and more than 33,000 book titles, including a number of iconic reference works. Elsevier is part of RELX Group plc, a world-leading provider of information solutions for professional customers across industries. http://www.elsevier.com



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Early evidence suggests hybrid cochlear implants may benefit millions with common form of hearing loss

2015-07-28
People with a common form of hearing loss not helped by hearing aids achieved significant and sometimes profound improvements in their hearing and understanding of speech with hybrid cochlear implant devices, according to a new multicenter study led by specialists at NYU Langone Medical Center. In the study, described online ahead of print in the journal The Laryngoscope July 7, researchers at 10 medical centers and private clinics in the United States implanted hybrid cochlear implants into one ear of 50 men and women. All study volunteers had badly damaged high-frequency, ...

Doctor warns about lead poisoning risk from recycling older electronic equipment

2015-07-28
The disposal and recycling of electronic devices has increased exposure to lead and other toxicants and created "an emerging health concern," according to a pediatrician who directs the Environmental Health and Lead Clinic at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center. In a recent Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, published by the Centers for Disease Control, Dr. Nick Newman reports on two children, ages 1 and 2, whose father worked at an e-scrap recycling company crushing cathode ray tubes (CRTs). CRTs, made from leaded glass, were commonly used in televisions ...

Cancer healthcare disparities exist in the LGBTQ community, say Moffitt researchers

2015-07-28
TAMPA, Fla. - The Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender/Transsexual, Queer/Questioning (LGBTQ) community is a growing and medically-underserved minority population in the United States, with 3 to 12 percent of the population estimated to identify as LGBTQ. Moffitt Cancer Center researchers published one of the first articles that describe the current knowledge about cancers that may disproportionately affect the LGBTQ community, and also offered suggestions for improving their healthcare. LGBTQ community deals with significant economic and health disparities. Gay and lesbian ...

New therapy delivers long-term relief for chronic back, leg pain, study finds

2015-07-28
Chicago - Chronic back and leg pain sufferers in search of better pain relief options may have a new choice. According to a study published in the Online First edition of Anesthesiology, the official medical journal of the American Society of Anesthesiologists® (ASA®), patients who received a novel high frequency form of spinal cord stimulation (SCS) therapy experienced significantly greater, long-term relief for both chronic back and leg pain, when compared to a traditional low frequency form of SCS therapy. "This is the first long-term study to compare the ...

Practice doesn't always make perfect (depending on your brain)

2015-07-28
This news release is available in French. How do you get to Carnegie Hall? New research on the brain's capacity to learn suggests there's more to it than the adage that "practise makes perfect." A music-training study by scientists at the Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital -The Neuro, at McGill University and colleagues in Germany found evidence to distinguish the parts of the brain that account for individual talent from the parts that are activated through training. The research involved brain imaging studies of 15 young adults with little or no musical ...

National study of deep brain stimulation for depression fails to demonstrate efficacy

2015-07-28
Philadelphia, PA, July 28, 2015 - Depression is a leading cause of disability worldwide, and treatment-resistant symptoms of depression have a terrible personal and societal cost. They can devastate lives, careers, and families. Some severely ill patients may be unable to attend to even the basic elements of self-care, while others attempt or complete suicide. Because of the clinical urgency, deep brain stimulation (DBS) treatments for depression have been developed over the past 15 years. These treatments require surgery to make a small hole in the skull through which ...

Hormones influence unethical behavior

2015-07-28
AUSTIN, Texas -- Hormones play a two-part role in encouraging and reinforcing cheating and other unethical behavior, according to research from Harvard University and The University of Texas at Austin. With cheating scandals a persistent threat on college campuses and financial fraud costing businesses more than $3.7 trillion annually, UT Austin and Harvard researchers looked to hormones for more answers, specifically the reproductive hormone testosterone and the stress hormone cortisol. According to the study, the endocrine system plays a dual role in unethical acts. ...

Illuminating mechanisms of repetitive thinking

2015-07-28
The ability to engage in mental time travel -- to delve back into past events or imagine future outcomes -- is a unique and central part of the human experience. And yet this very ability can have detrimental consequences for both physical and mental well-being when it becomes repetitive and uncontrolled. A special series of articles in the July 2015 issue of Clinical Psychological Science (CPS) investigates this kind of repetitive thinking, exploring the core psychological processes that underlie maladaptive thought processes like worry and rumination. The series highlights ...

Race & institutional factors play an important role in pharmacogenomic trial participation

2015-07-28
TAMPA, Fla. - Cancer therapy has evolved from a "one-size-fits-all" type of treatment plan to a personalized approach based on a patient's type of cancer, the protein and genetic markers found in their tumors and their response to therapy. Important aspects of the personalized approach are pharmacogenomic studies that analyze associations between genetic variations and patient drug responses. Moffitt Cancer Center researchers have published a study in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute that analyzed the participation rate of patients in pharmacogenomic trials. ...

Study finds unexpected biases against teen girls' leadership

2015-07-28
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.-- Making Caring Common (MCC), a project of the Harvard Graduate School of Education, today released new research that suggests that many teen boys and teen girls--and some of their parents--have biases against teen girls as leaders. These biases could be powerful barriers to leadership for a generation of teen girls with historically high levels of education who are key to closing our nation's gender gap in leadership. The report also suggests that much can be done to prevent and reduce gender biases in children. Titled "Leaning Out: Teen Girls and Gender ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Headache disorders affect 3 billion people worldwide—nearly one in every three people, ranking sixth for health loss in 2023

Mayo Clinic scientists create tool to predict Alzheimer's risk years before symptoms begin

Extending anti-clotting treatment linked to lower rates of new clots

E-cigarettes compromise children’s human rights

The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health: High blood pressure in children and adolescents nearly doubled between 2000 and 2020, suggests largest global study to date

EuTYPH-C Inj.® Multi-dose demonstrates strong safety and immunogenicity: Results now available from a Phase 3 study

Fossil fuel CO2 emissions hit record high in 2025

Bold action needed to fix NHS clinical placement crisis

Six strategies to reinvigorate the doctor-patient bedside encounter

Mount Sinai study reveals why some myeloma patients stay cancer-free for years after CAR T therapy

How climate change brings wildlife to the yard

Plants balance adaptability in skin cells with stability in sex cells

UH Wolff Center for Entrepreneurship ranked No. 1 for seventh consecutive year

New study reveals long-term impacts on Stevens-Johnson syndrome survivors

New study reveals how your income may shape your risk of dementia

Texas A&M researchers use AI to identify genetic ‘time capsule’ that distinguishes species

Rainfall and temperature shape mosquito fauna in Atlantic Forest bromeliads, including malaria vectors

Scientists move closer to better pancreatic cancer treatments

Three Tufts professors are named top researchers in the world

New angio-CT technology integrates cutting-edge imaging to enhance patient care

Mechanical power by linking Earth’s warmth to space

The vast North American Phosphoria Rock Complex might be rich in silica because it was home to millions of sea sponges almost 300 million years ago, whose fossils were misdiagnosed until now

The link between air pollution and breast cancer is weakened in greener environments, suggests study using UK Biobank data

Dutch Afghanistan veterans with battle-related injuries report a similar physical and psychological quality of life as they did five years prior in a ten-year follow-up study

Loneliness in young adults - especially educated females - often coexists alongside friendship and social connectedness, and might instead be linked with experiencing major life changes, per large US

Bacteriophage characterization provides platform for rational design

Young adults say they’re happy with their friendships. So why do so many still feel disconnected?

Stanford Medicine scientists tie lupus to a virus nearly all of us carry

Mass shootings spur local voter turnout but don’t sway presidential vote choices, study finds

Unique shape of star’s explosion revealed just a day after detection

[Press-News.org] Geography, skills, local companies affect higher education impact on economic development
New study in International Journal of Educational Development wins Elsevier's Atlas award