Library/PT 116/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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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 paragraph defining a "resource-provider" institution and note that it bases ownership claims on whether there was "significant use" of university time and facilities — i.e., on the extent of institutional resource use.

Passage Stimulus

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26.

According to the passage, what distinguishes a resource-provider institution from the other types of institutions identified by Chew is its

Correct Answer
E
"A resource-provider institution asserts a claim to faculty's intellectual product in those cases where \"significant use\" of university time and facilities is employed. Of course, what constitutes significant use of resources is a matter of institutional judgment." This wording identifies the extent of institutional resource use as the basis for a resource-provider's ownership claims, which corresponds to answer E's statement that ownership is determined by the extent of use of institutional resources.
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