Crowdfunding is increasingly a way for scholars and students at less prestigious universities to gain resources, although doubts remain about its sustainability, according to research that reveals the UK sector raised 拢60 million on just two platforms over five years.
A study, based on data on academic and student crowdfunding projects on Hubbub and JustGiving between 2014 and 2018, found that the number of such campaigns had more than quadrupled over the five-year period, from 116 to more than 500.
Michele Meoli, associate professor of finance at the University of Bergamo and co-author of the paper, said that, overall, 58 per cent of the 1,767 crowdfunding projects analysed reached their target, but success rates varied widely across the two platforms, rising to 70 per cent for Hubbub 鈥 a free-of-charge platform where project creators must be a registered member of a university, college or school 鈥 and dropping to 27 per cent for JustGiving 鈥 a general platform for collecting charitable donations.
He added that 拢60 million was raised in total, an average of 拢34,000 per project.
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Previous studies on crowdfunding in academia have focused on research projects, but the聽聽presents a broader picture of the function of crowdfunding in the sector, with most projects analysed focused on teaching, learning and societal engagement initiatives. The projects involved the majority of the UK sector 鈥 126 institutions in total 鈥 and mostly related to 鈥渟tudent life鈥 initiatives, such as courses to help disabled students, enhance curricula or fund theatres, and 鈥渃reativity-oriented projects鈥, such as films or project-based learning activities.
The paper found that crowdfunding initiatives were most likely to be started by students and academics at institutions that were teaching-oriented and less prestigious and had more students from state schools and low socio-economic backgrounds and fewer international students.
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The authors say the findings suggest that crowdfunding is being used to 鈥渟upplement and/or complement resources to meet the learning experiences of students from universities that lack the resources to provide these experiences鈥.
However, the study also found that institutions with higher numbers of part-time students and lower numbers of academic and administrative staff (relative to their student populations) were less likely to participate in crowdfunding, suggesting that the activity 鈥渕ay not equally benefit all students from lower socio-economic backgrounds鈥.
The authors say this 鈥渦nderlines the importance of crowdfunding as an approach to gain resources that otherwise would be unobtainable, but at the same time raises doubts about whether crowdfunding can become a long-term, sustainable form of fundraising in environments with increasingly less public funding or for universities that predominantly enrol students from low socio-economic backgrounds鈥. It also 鈥渞aises concerns about the use of crowdfunding as a burden to academics and students to find resources to meet learning experiences that ought to be provided by universities in the first place鈥.
However, Dr Meoli said that engaging in crowdfunding could be a useful activity for students for its own sake as it teaches them about the value of ideas, responsibility and engaging with society.
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