Educating entrepreneurs : innovative models and new perspectives / Dafna Kariv.

By: Kariv, Dafna [author.]Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York : Routledge, 2019Description: 1 online resourceContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781351007986; 135100798X; 9781351008006; 1351008005; 9781351007993; 1351007998; 9781351007979; 1351007971Subject(s): Business education | Businesspeople -- Training of | Entrepreneurship | BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / GeneralDDC classification: 338/.040711 LOC classification: HF1106 | .K377 2019ebOnline resources: Taylor & Francis | OCLC metadata license agreement
Contents:
A contextual overview of entrepreneurship education programs -- What does education entail for entrepreneurs? -- The what, why and how of entrepreneurial education -- There is no "one size fits all" : new concepts in educating entrepreneurs -- The entrepreneur's perspective -- The sharing economy and shared entrepreneurial spaces nexus -- The new breed of programs and academia's role -- Portraying the enabling platforms: incubators -- The rise of the acceleration model -- The evolution of innovative enabling platforms -- The role of the environment in fostering entrepreneurship -- Evaluation, implications and future avenues -- References -- Index -- .
Summary: As entrepreneurship programs proliferate--from classes in higher education to incubators, accelerators, open innovation platforms, and innovation factories--our understanding of the advantages and challenges of different modes of learning becomes increasingly obscured. In Educating Entrepreneurs, Kariv provides an impressively broad and thorough overview of the field of entrepreneurship education, along with practical tools for students to be able to evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of the different options that exist, as well as for these programs' developers and managing teams to be able to plan and manage such processes. Examining these programs, which are found both within and outside of academia, along with insights into their challenges and opportunities, should help students grasp the entrepreneurship education field, its goals, target audience, and ecosystem involvement. Kariv supplements this comprehensive evaluation with case studies and examples that tie the theory to practical applications. Students can read about contemporary ventures, such as Y Combinators, Techstars, and SOSA, giving them concrete examples to relate to. Interviews with program stakeholders around the world complete the view, with an exploration of the cultural and country-based dynamics related to programs developed in specific countries. Being both thorough and informative, this book will serve students and faculty of entrepreneurship courses, as well as practitioners looking to understand their entrepreneurship education options.
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
No physical items for this record

A contextual overview of entrepreneurship education programs -- What does education entail for entrepreneurs? -- The what, why and how of entrepreneurial education -- There is no "one size fits all" : new concepts in educating entrepreneurs -- The entrepreneur's perspective -- The sharing economy and shared entrepreneurial spaces nexus -- The new breed of programs and academia's role -- Portraying the enabling platforms: incubators -- The rise of the acceleration model -- The evolution of innovative enabling platforms -- The role of the environment in fostering entrepreneurship -- Evaluation, implications and future avenues -- References -- Index -- .

As entrepreneurship programs proliferate--from classes in higher education to incubators, accelerators, open innovation platforms, and innovation factories--our understanding of the advantages and challenges of different modes of learning becomes increasingly obscured. In Educating Entrepreneurs, Kariv provides an impressively broad and thorough overview of the field of entrepreneurship education, along with practical tools for students to be able to evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of the different options that exist, as well as for these programs' developers and managing teams to be able to plan and manage such processes. Examining these programs, which are found both within and outside of academia, along with insights into their challenges and opportunities, should help students grasp the entrepreneurship education field, its goals, target audience, and ecosystem involvement. Kariv supplements this comprehensive evaluation with case studies and examples that tie the theory to practical applications. Students can read about contemporary ventures, such as Y Combinators, Techstars, and SOSA, giving them concrete examples to relate to. Interviews with program stakeholders around the world complete the view, with an exploration of the cultural and country-based dynamics related to programs developed in specific countries. Being both thorough and informative, this book will serve students and faculty of entrepreneurship courses, as well as practitioners looking to understand their entrepreneurship education options.

OCLC-licensed vendor bibliographic record.

Technical University of Mombasa
Tom Mboya Street, Tudor 90420-80100 , Mombasa Kenya
Tel: (254)41-2492222/3 Fax: 2490571