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HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER By Dr. Clovia Hamilton, Assistant Professor Department of Technology and Society SUNY KOREA in affiliation with Stonybrook University

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Page 1: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

By Dr. Clovia Hamilton, Assistant Professor

Department of Technology and Society

SUNY KOREA in affiliation with Stonybrook University

Page 2: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Tech Transfer Experience

Former USPTO Patent Examiner

Registered Patent Attorney

Technology Transfer Specialist US EPA National Vehicle Fuel Emissions Lab

Technology Transfer Specialist University of Illinois Champaign -

Engineering Patent Portfolio

Director of Intellectual Property and Research Compliance at

Old Dominion University

Lemongrass Consulting for 10 years

Page 3: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Dr. Clovia Hamilton

BS University of IL Champaign –

Engineering

JD Atlanta’s John Marshall Law School

LLM University of IL Champaign – LLM

Intellectual Property Law

MBA Wesleyan College

PhD University of TN Knoxville

Industrial & Systems Engineering

Tuskegee

Page 4: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Study Motivation: HBCU Pride

Page 5: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Study Motivation:

Dr. Rose Glee, passed in 2014

PhD Chemistry, Univ of Wisconsin

FAMU Pharmaceuticals

FAMU Technology Transfer Director

We met at AUTM

Contract for a Tech Transfer Strategic Planning Session

This is in dedication to Dr. Rose Glee!

Page 6: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

HBCUs: Historical Background

Page 7: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Background

American Slavery - 1619 to 1865 (Juan Williams, 2004)

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Background

American Civil War – 1861 to 1865

4.4 Million slaves were freed

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Background

Reconstruction - 1865 to 1877

4.4 Million freed Slaves needed to be educated (Williams, 2010)

Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) were founded

Government assistance from Freedmen’s Bureau (Juan Williams, 2004)

Charity from the American Missionary Association (AMA)

Charity from Industrial philanthropists

Page 10: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

What does this have to do with

Industrial Engineering?

Industrial philanthropists wanted a say in how the former slave laborers would be educated (Juan Williams, 2004)

Investor George Peabody (1867 Peabody Fund) sold cotton & other commodities; and banking

Textile tycoon John Slater (1882 Slater Fund); his brother Sam Slater, Father of the Industrial Revolution

John D. Rockefeller (1902 General Education Board (GEB)),

Standard Oil Company

Sewing machine tycoon Thomas White

Sears Roebuck’s Julius Rosenwald

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Industrial operations needed labor

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Background Education of Freed Slaves in HBCUs

First HBCUs: Lincoln University (1854, PA) & Cheney University (1837, PA)

Einstein at Lincoln University

Page 13: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

HBCUs Today

Today, the White House Initiative on HBCUs uses the

US Higher Education Act of 1965’s definition of HBCUs which is:

“…any historically black college or university that was established prior to 1964, whose principal mission was, and is, the education of black Americans, and that is accredited by a nationally recognized accrediting agency or association determined by the Secretary [of Education] to be a reliable authority as to the quality of training offered or is, according to such an agency or association, making reasonable progress toward accreditation.”

Page 14: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

HBCUs Today

101 HBCUs

Title III of the Higher Education Act

of 1965 schools provides

US government institutional aid to

HBCUs

So, HBCUs are called

“Title III universities”

Page 15: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Research Problem

Page 16: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Research Problem

HBCU leaders complain of having financial woes (Jones, 2013)

HBCUs were not founded with a research focus, but rather vocational trade

Instructors were paid less than half Whites and classes 60+ … no incentive to do research

(Butchart, 1988)

Land grant schools got agricultural experiment stations, but with the exception of George

Washington Carver’s funding, for 50 years HBCUs were excluded (Kujovich, 1993)

Educated Blacks were viewed as a liability to sharecropping

Spelman began research in 1930s and then there was the Great Depression

Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton’s administrations increased funding - - lead to dependence

Page 17: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Research Problem

HBCUs still rely heavily on government assistance & have difficulty becoming more financially self reliant (Williams, 2010)

Few HBCUs engage in research that results in inventions and technology transfer to generate licensing revenue income (Williams, 2014)

Nearly all of the 24 HBCUs with Carnegie Doctoral classification are emerging research institutions (ERIs)& desire to learn more about tech transfer

90.9% are ERIs with <$20M in federal R&D funding

Page 18: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Research at HBCUs

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Research at HBCUs

• 900 Black female STEM faculty comprised less than 2% of the

US faculty and 22% at HBCUs (Mack, 2011)

• HBCUs graduate 60% of America’s black engineering students

and the heaviest concentration of black female STEM

professors is at HBCUs.

• Black female STEM professors nurture, mentor and influence

Black students in STEM fields (Mack, 2011; Nelson, 2010).

• HBCUs graduate 60% of America’s black engineering students

(Bagley, 2013)

Page 20: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Leveling the Playing Field requires Tools

Dr. Hamilton’s PhD Research Questions

With respect to advancing the participation of HBCUs in university tech commercialization as a source of revenue, the research questions include:

1. Given that the problems that non-HBCUs face with university technology transfer will likely be equally or more challenging for HBCUs, what are the problem areas with non-HBCUs’ university technology transfer?

2. What theoretical framework for research can be used to develop advanced planning system tools to help HBCUs with technology transfer?

3. What advanced planning system tools should be developed and used by HBCUs to alleviate the university technology transfer problems?

Page 21: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Mixed

Method

Exploratory

Study

American Universities

Non Title III Universities

Title III Universities TTOsHBCUs

Doctoral Universities OSRs

Non Title III UniversitiesSimilar to

HBCUs

TTOs OSRsDoctoral

Universities

Page 22: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Theoretical Framework:

Integration & Triangulation

Resource Based View (Barney, 1991)

Social Comparison Theory (Festinger, 1954)

Theory of Distribution Management (Forrester, 1958)

Paradigm Effects Theory (Kuhn, 1962; Barker, 1992)

Page 23: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Theoretical Framework:

Integration & Triangulation

Theory Integration

We join 2 or more theories because the integrated

theories work more effectively than any one in

explaining the phenomenon

Theory Triangulation

We analyze data from more than one perspective

Page 24: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Integrated & Triangulated

Theoretical Framework for the Research

Theoretical frameworks provide a structure to support explanations for why research problems exist.

The problem here is that there is a lack of HBCU engagement in tech transfer.

Social Comparison Theory +

Resource Based View +

Theory of Distribution Management +

Paradigm Effects Theory

Social Comparison Theory

Theory of Distribution

Management

Paradigm Effect Theory

Resource Based View

Groups gain

accuracy & clarity

about their opinions

& abilities by

comparing

themselves to

others in similar

proximity & with

similar abilities.

If resources are so

unique and not

easy to copy, then

they are sources of

competitive

advantage - -

resources such as

patents or

scientific expertise

Systems

dynamics is

the process of

combining

the theory,

method, and

philosophy

required to

analyze the

behavior of a system to

provide a

common

foundation.

Because

organizations

are so

intertwined,

system

dynamics

influence

product

research,

engineering,

sales and

promotions.

It is difficult to

notice the need

to shift when the

existing paradigm

is strong (e.g. the

HBCU teaching

orientation). So,

leaders need to

learn how to

engage in

strategic

exploration to

anticipate the

future better

Page 25: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Resource Based View &

Theory of Distribution

Management

Page 26: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Social Comparison Theory

& Paradigm Shift Effects TheoryParadigm shifts effects:

It’s difficult to notice the need to shift when an existing

paradigm is strong

Page 27: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Social Comparison Theory

1. Groups gain accuracy & clarity about their opinions of

themselves and their abilities by comparing themselves to

others that are in:

Similar physical proximity (same states)

Have similar abilities (lower quartile in licensing, closely matching student enrollment)

(Festinger, 1954; Greenberg & Ashkanasy, 2007; Suls & Wheeler, 2000)

Page 28: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Social Comparison Theory

2. The need for comparisons to similar others leads to:

affiliation,

pressure toward uniformity,

an unidirectional drive upward, and

competition.

Page 29: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Social Comparison Theory

3. If HBCUs believe that non-HBCUs are performing

better, then they’ll make upward comparisons

If HBCUs believe that their abilities and efforts do not meet up

to non-HBCUs, they may be motivated to make improvements

(Buunk, 2007)

Page 30: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Create list of Doctoral HBCUs

Doctoral HBCUs

1. AL A&M (AL)

2. AL State (AL)

3. Bowie State (MD)

4. Clark Atlanta (GA)

5. Delaware State (DE)

6. Fayetteville State (NC)

7. Florida A&M (FL)

8. Grambling (LA)

9. Hampton (VA)

10. Howard (DC)

11. Jackson State (MS)

12. Meharry Medical College (TN)

Doctoral HBCUs

13. Morehouse Medical College (GA)

14. Morgan State (MD)

15. NC A&T (NC)

16. Norfolk State (VA)

17. Prairie View (TX)

18. SC State (SC)

19. Southern University Baton Rouge (LA)

20. TN State (TN)

21. TX Southern (TX)

22. Tuskegee University (AL)

23. University of Maryland Eastern Shore (MD)

24. Virginia State (VA)

Page 31: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Created a list of non-HBCUs for

HBCUs to compare themselves to- Similar proximity

- Similar abilities

Non-HBCUs

① Georgia Regents (GA)

② Medical Univ of South Carolina (SC)

③ Baylor College (TX)

④ Univ of North Texas Health Center (TX)

⑤ Eastern Virginia Medical School (VA)

⑥ Louisiana Tech (LA)

⑦ Wake Forest (NC)

⑧ Univ of AL Huntsville (AL)

⑨ Rice University (TX)

Page 32: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Data collection

AUTM STATT licensing survey data, 2010-2014

USPTO patent database

US Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics

US Bureau of Labor

National Academies of Sciences’ National Research Council (NRC)’s

faculty quality survey

NSF Academic Research and Development Expenditures

Page 33: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Data was used to develop an

Advanced Planning System Toolkit

University Tech Transfer Problems

Identified in the

Literature Review

Proposed Tools

① Need for Benchmarks

Benchmarking Tool Development:Create a set of benchmarks based on non-HBCUs selected

using application of Social Comparison Theory & RBV lessons

② Need for Budget Resource Planning

Budget Resource Planning Tool Development:Use of Linear Programming Optimization & novel view that university tech transfer is a supply chain network

③ Need for Job Scheduling

Job Scheduling Tool Development:Use of Simulated Annealing Advanced Optimization foruniversity tech transfer job task scheduling

④ Need for a Model IP Policy

Model IP Policy Tool Development:Use of the literature review, website searches & correlations

to draft a model university IP policy

Page 34: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Conclusion

Problem areas

They do not have the research funds

to supply a tech transfer supply

chain network

Solutions

Increasing research funding needs

to be the HBCU’s top no. 1 priority

Then, they need to plan to thwart

university tech transfer problems that

are common among non-HBCUs

Need for Benchmarks

Need for Budget resource

planning

Need to prevent Job Delays

Need for improve IP policies

Page 35: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Hamilton’s 4 Tools:

So far, 3 papers, 2 Tools are published in journals

Hamilton, C. (2019). Novel Job Scheduling Tool for University Technology Transfer, Applied Management Journal, 2020.

Hamilton, C. (2017). HBCU Technology Transfer Supply Chain Networks’ Sustainability: Budget Resource Planning Tool Development, In Proceedings of the American Society of Engineering Management (ASEM) International Annual Conference (IAC), Reimagining Systems Engineering and Management, Huntsville AL, p 117-127.

Hamilton, C. (2017). Emerging Research Institutions’ Technology Transfer Supply Chain Networks’ Sustainability: Budget Resource Planning Tool Development. IEEE Engineering Management Review, 45 (4): 39-52.

Page 36: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Hamilton’s 5 paper Dissertation:

1 paper is recently accepted

Model IP Policy

Hamilton, C. Increasing Diversity Among Women Entrepreneurs in

High Growth High Tech using HBCU Female Academic

Entrepreneurs, Applied Management Journal, forthcoming 2021.

Was presented in 2017 at the Diana Conference for research on

female entrepreneurs at the Kauffman Foundation in Kansas City

Will be presented at the International Association of Applied

Management (IAAM) in January 2021 virtually

Page 37: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Hamilton’s 5 paper Dissertation

4th Final paper: Benchmarks Tool

I’m targeting the Journal of Negro Education

Page 38: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Hamilton’s 8 other technology transfer publications Hamilton, Clovia, and Simon P. Philbin. "Knowledge Based View of University Tech Transfer—A Systematic Literature

Review and Meta-Analysis." Administrative Sciences 10, no. 3 (2020): 62.

Hamilton, C. (2018). A Cochrane method systematic review of university tech commercialization research, In

Proceedings of the American Society of Engineering Management (ASEM) International Annual Conference (IAC),

Reimagining Systems Engineering and Management, Couer d’ Alene, Idaho, p. 1-11.

Hamilton, C. (2018). Black American Slaves and Freed Slaves Created Frugal Innovations and Creation of a Circular

Economy. In Proceedings of the 11th Annual Conference of the EuroMed Academy of Business (EMAB) in Malta (pp. 593–

603). EuroMed Research Business Institute, Engomi, Cyprus. EuroMed Academy of Business (EMAB), EuroMed Research

Business Institute. http://euromed-2018.com/bop.pdf

Hamilton, C., Schumann, D. (2016). Love and Hate in University Technology Transfer. In M. H. Schwartz, Howard (Ed.),

The Contribution of Love and Hate to Organizational Ethics, Research in Ethical Issues in Organizations (REIO) (Vol. 16, 95-

122): Emerald Group Publishing.

Hamilton, C. (2015, October). University Technology Transfer from the Attention Based View, In Proceedings of the

American Society of Engineering Management (ASEM) International Annual Conference (IAC), Indianapolis IN, p 1-11.

Hamilton, Clovia and Crook, Russell (2015). A Meta-Analysis of University Technology Transfer Empirical Research

(Summary), in Frontiers of Entrepreneurship Research: Vol. 35: Issue 9, Article 4. Available at:

http://digitalknowledge.babson.edu/fer/vol35/iss9/4.

Hamilton, C. (2003). University Technology Transfer and Economic Development: Proposed Cooperative Economic

Development Agreements under the Bayh-Dole Act, John Marshall Law Review, 36(2), 397-420.

Hamilton, C. (2002). Adequacy of the 1995 Antitrust Guidelines for the Licensing of Intellectual Property in Complex

High-Tech Markets, Computer Law Review & Technology Journal, 7, 23-44.

Page 39: HBCUS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

Any Questions?

Dr. Clovia Hamilton, JD, LLM, MBA

[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

You are encouraged to read my dissertation. It incudes the references in this slideshow. Here’s a link to a copy:

https://cloviahamilton.blog/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/A-tool-kit-for-building-HBCU-technology-transfer-supply-chain-network.pdf