Fondazione GRINS
Growing Resilient,
Inclusive and Sustainable
Galleria Ugo Bassi 1, 40121, Bologna, IT
C.F/P.IVA 91451720378
Finanziato dal Piano Nazionale di Ripresa e Resilienza (PNRR), Missione 4 (Infrastruttura e ricerca), Componente 2 (Dalla Ricerca all’Impresa), Investimento 1.3 (Partnership Estese), Tematica 9 (Sostenibilità economica e finanziaria di sistemi e territori).



Open Access
GRINS THEMATIC AREAS
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This paper studies whether the alignment between instructors’ research agendas and the content of the courses they teach affects student outcomes in higher education. Using administrative data from a large Italian university linked to publication records, we construct a novel text-based measure of research–teaching alignment that captures topic similarity between course syllabi and abstracts of instructors’ recent publications.
Our empirical strategy exploits within-student and within-instructor variation to address selection concerns. We find that greater research–teaching similarity is associated with higher student performance, with stronger effects in advanced courses and among less-prepared students.
Moreover, alignment positively affects graduation rates and final scores, as well as employment probability and wages one year after graduation. We provide suggestive evidence that these effects operate through increased exposure to frontier knowledge and methodologies and through higher perceived teaching quality, as students report greater satisfaction when courses are more closely aligned with instructors’ research.
KEYWORDS
AKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This study was funded by the European Union - NextGenerationEU, in the framework of the GRINS - Growing Resilient, INclusive and Sustainable project (GRINS PE00000018). The views and opinions expressed are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union, nor can the European Union be held responsible for them.
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