Journals Evaluation result of Korean Federation of Science and Technology Societies in 2012 and change of major supporting policies in 2013 (original) (raw)
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Analysis of Korea Science Citation Database's effect on JCR
Documentation and Information Services, 2012
Citation analysis studies have reported many problems associated with data coverage problems common to popular citation databases such as Web of Science(WoS). In addition, the studies that analyzed citation patterns of Korean publications found that up to 75% of references in Korean publications were to international publications. As a first step in investigating the international coverage of WoS database, the study investigated the effect of adding citation data from Korea Science Citation Database(KSCD) to the impact factors and journal rankings of the journals listed in Journal Citation Reports. Specifically, the study mined the reference data from top 5 Korean Library and Information Science(KLIS) journals to recompute the impact factors reported in JCR 2009. Since the resulting journal rankings did not significantly differ from JCR 2009 rankings except for minor ranking changes, we analyzed additional citation data from 45 computer science and electrical engineering journals. Although the overall ranking difference was not statistically significant, one of the ranking partitions showed significant change. Such study findings despite its limited data sample suggest the potential impact of non-Western citation databases such as KSCD to bibliometric indicators provided by popular citation databases like WoS.
과학기술학연구, 2020
Historians and sociologists have analyzed the (re)building of the postcolonial knowledge production systems of the liberated Korea, largely in terms of the emergence of the modern scientific institutions and personnel, the amalgamation of science and technology, and the construction of the statist and capitalist hegemony in so-called ʻscience-technology(과학기술).ʼ However, they have rarely paid attention to how and which specific knowledge was produced and circulated, and that much worse in the context of the primary and secondary education systems. Yet, those who could be called as the teacher-cum-researcher in the colonized and postcolonial Korea, were at the center in (re)building the post-colonial knowledge production systems, where the boundaries between research and teaching often became blurred and porous. The deficiency in teaching materials and resources usually led teachers at school not just to draw upon any information available from books and experts for their pedagogic purposes, but to garner and produce various forms of useful knowledge in their local contexts, alone and together, often with the help of their students and neighboring residents. The aim of this paper is to shed new light on that knowledge systems and their reproduction by following the practices of a couple of groups of those teacher-cum-researchers, roughly between 1949-1970s. Here, the focus is put on the National Science Fair, where teachers and their students were annually invited to present their observations, investigations, and researches in order to promote the scientific spirit in postcolonial Korea. The Science Fair is a very rare case for historians and sociologists of science in Korea, it is argued, to be able to look into how and which scientific knowledge was produced and circulated, particularly in the context of teaching situated between the official knowledge-making systems and the local information orders, that is the information order of the teaching-led research of the postcolonial education systems.
아시아 사회보장제도 비교연구 - 동남아시아 및 서아시아 주요국 사회보장체계
한국보건사회연구원 eBooks, 2020
This study is a comparative study of the social security system of Islamic countries in Asia-Indonesia, Malaysia, Iran, and Turkey. In particular, it seeks to understand the principles of zakāt and waqf used as a means of realizing economic justice to relieve the poor in Islamic communities, and how they currently operate as social security systems in Muslim countries.
Proposal of Joint Planning Working Group for Development of Korean Space Telescopes
Journal of Space Technology and Applications, 2021
In order to satisfy the intellectual curiosity of mankind to explore the unknown, National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) in the United States and European Space Agency (ESA) in Europe are embarking on various R&D under the motto of the grand dream of pioneering space into a safe and sustainable environment. In the 2020s and 30s, it is expected that advanced giant observation equipment will be in operation, such as the development of a 10-meter-class telescope in space. In Korea, following the development of the 0.15 m Near-Infrared Imaging Spectrometer (NISS), Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute (KASI) is also participating a 0.2 m Spectro-Photometer for the History of the Universe, Epoch of Reionization, and Ices Explorer (SPHEREx) as an international cooperation partner in small exploration telescope. However, domestic experience in the development and operation of the space telescopes is still insufficient, and there is no plan with long-term prospects for constructing telescopes. In order to answer questions about the unknown world that mankind has not experienced using our own equipment, planning and preparation for the construction of a space telescope through close cooperation among industry-university-institute-government is urgently needed. In this paper, the necessity, background, development goals, and expected effects of the development of the Korean Space Telescope are summarized conceptually, and a working group (WG) is also proposed. In the WG activities, Korea shall take the lead in establishing the Korean-style space telescope development plan, and will start a valuable step to establish the national direction in the field of space astronomy and related technologies. We hope that the WG will be another milestone in Korea's space development.
JOURNAL OF THE KOREAN SOCIETY OF MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH, 2018
With the motto Equity from the Start for a Healthy Future , the Seoul Healthy First Step Project (SHFSP) was ' ' launched in 2013 in an attempt to support women with young children, to improve the health and development of babies, and eventually to close the gap in child development. The SHFSP contains both universal components (universal risk assessment of mothers and universal home visitation after birth) and selective components (prenatal and postnatal sustained home visits, mothers groups, and community service linkage), thereby taking ' a proportionate universality approach. For sustained home visits, the SHFSP introduced the Maternal and Early Childhood Sustained Home-visiting (MECSH) program from Australia, which has been proven to be effective in improving maternal and childhood outcomes. Between 2013~2017, the SHFSP has paid 58,327 visits to roughly 38 thousand families with babies. In 2017, the SHFSP covered 19.6% of families with newborn babies in Seoul. The SHFSP conducted internal satisfaction surveys of universal and sustained visitation service recipients, in which an overwhelming majority of mothers provided positive feedback. A performance assessment conducted in 2016 by an external organization showed that 93% of SHFSP service recipients were satisfied with the home visitations. Considering the popular support for the program from mothers and families in Seoul (the most affluent area in Korea) and the lack of a national home visiting program to promote early childhood health and development, this program should be expanded nationally in the near future.
2018
Purpose: This study is conducted to identify the impacts of tax exemption on community benefit, policy, human resource management, and public benefit. Based on the results of analysis, we explore several avenues to raise public benefit that is central to the value of existence of non-for-profit hospitals in Korea. Methodology: Survey was formulated referring to the US IRS tax exemption criteria, Form990/Schedule H, and Korean public hospital criteria. A total of 182 survey responses were collected and used to verify measurement validity and perform reliability analysis, confirmatory factor analysis, and path analysis. Findings: The result of this study showed positive relationships among; i) tax development and planning, ii) planning and human resource management, iii) human resource management and policy, iv) policy and community benefit, v) community benefit and public benefit. Practical Conclusion: Tax exemption affects community benefit and public benefit directly as well as ind...
Journal of Korea Technology Innovation Society, 2019
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