Educating generationE in Australasia : US lessons, New Zealand experience
conference contribution
posted on 2005-01-01, 00:00authored byHoward Frederick
Australasian countries have huge numbers of young entrepreneurs. Yet the state of entrepreneurship education in this region has yet to come to grips with their needs. Elsewhere in the world, the growth and development in the curricula and programs devoted to raising the level of enterprise and new venture creation has been remarkable. The researcher undertook field study in North America and Europe to examine inter-disciplinary initiatives that take the study of entrepreneurship and personal enterprise out of the Business School, integrate it across the campus and make it available to the widest range of students. The paper first describes GenerationE in Australasian countries and in New Zealand. It then classifies and categorises best-practice models of enterprise education, focussing especially on non-business entrepreneurship and university-wide enterprise requirements. The paper summarises these data and formulates “models of enterprise education” outside the business school environment. It offers generalisations that may prove helpful to educationalists and government policy planners about how to accelerate the development of personal enterprise within individuals and thereby to increase the supply of young people who launch their own businesses and social enterprises. The goal of this paper is to help universities in our region and elsewhere move toward infusing entrepreneurship throughout the curriculum.<br>
History
Location
Guildford, England
Language
eng
Publication classification
E1.1 Full written paper - refereed
Copyright notice
2005, Intent
Pagination
1 - 19
Start date
2005-07-10
End date
2005-07-13
ISBN-10
1844690091
Title of proceedings
IntEnt 2005 : Proceedings of the 2005 Internationalizing Entrepreneurship Education and Training
Event
Internationalizing Entrepreneurship Education and Training. Conference (2005 : Guildford, England)
Publisher
Internationalizing Entrepreneurship Education and Training