posted on 2008-12-01, 00:00authored byBanjo Roxas, R Cayoca-Panizales, R de Jesus
This study advances the thesis that knowledge gained from a formal entrepreneurship education program will have positive effects on an individual's overall entrepreneurial intentions through the mediating influences of attitudes and social norms favouring entrepreneurial behaviour. In this proposed conceptual framework, it is argued that the knowledge gained by students attending an entrepreneurship course will have a positive impact on the students' intentions of starting a business. Guided by the theory of planned behaviour, this study proposes a research design which involves tracking of the changes in the students' perceptions of the desirability of, self-efficacy in engaging in, and social norms supportive of, entrepreneurship and their consequent influences on the student's entrepreneurial intentions prior to the start and upon completion of an entrepreneurship course.
History
Journal
Asia-Pacific social science review
Volume
8
Pagination
61 - 77
Location
Manila, Philippines
Open access
Yes
ISSN
0119-8386
Language
eng
Notes
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