Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Universities want to earn money from inventions faculty make, so they set rules about who owns those inventions; if rules are too strict, top researchers may leave for more business-friendly places. Patricia Chew describes four kinds of policies: supramaximalist (the school claims almost everything), maximalist (the school claims inventions made as part of employment or using school resources), resource-provider (the school claims inventions when the school provided significant time or facilities), and faculty-oriented (faculty keep their inventions except when the school was heavily involved or for certain public-health work). Even though law usually says faculty own their inventions, many universities write policies to keep more rights and share in the profits.
Logic Breakdown
Locate the author’s central claim: the passage contrasts the widespread institutional tendency to maximize university ownership of faculty inventions with an alternative “faculty-oriented” policy that treats faculty as owners and gives them greater flexibility; pick the choice that captures both the prevalence of maximizing policies and the existence of the faculty-friendly alternative.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage22.Which one of the following most accurately summarizes the main point of the passage?
Correct Answer
D
The passage describes two main points that together form its thesis: (1) most institutions adopt policies that maximize university ownership and profit from faculty inventions ("most major institutions behave in the ways that maximize university ownership and profit participation") and (2) there is an alternative "fourth way"—faculty-oriented institutions—that treats faculty as owners of their intellectual products and thus gives faculty greater flexibility ("But there is a fourth way... Faculty-oriented institutions assume that researchers own their own intellectual products... At these institutions industry practice is effectively reversed, with the university benefiting in far fewer circumstances"). Answer D accurately summarizes this contrast.
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