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Stepping back to look inside the entangled bank

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conference contribution
posted on 2024-07-13, 05:10 authored by Colin Jones
The development of curriculum to facilitate the development of graduate entrepreneurship is a challenging task. That we can help graduate students become entrepreneurs is a frequently challenged assumption. To make matters worse there is little consensus as to how entrepreneurship education should be delivered. This paper argues that our focus should be first and foremost on the processes associated with entrepreneurship curriculum. With reference to a recent study of graduate entrepreneurship, major concerns related to developing entrepreneurship curriculum are tackled through consideration of specific educational literature. Using an evolutionary perspective, this paper provides evidence of how entrepreneurship curriculum can be developed to also account for the diversity of student abilities and the general ambiguity of the subject matter itself. In doing so, it is suggested that the designers of contemporary entrepreneurship curriculum will themselves be entrepreneurs. That the development of entrepreneurship curriculum is an evolving process without a starting or ending point.

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Journal title

AGSE International Entrepreneurship Research Exchange 2006: the 3rd International Australian Graduate School of Entrepreneurship (AGSE) Research Exchange, Swinburne University of Technology, Auckland, New Zealand, 07-10 February 2006 / L. Murray Gillin (ed.)

Conference name

AGSE International Entrepreneurship Research Exchange 2006: the 3rd International Australian Graduate School of Entrepreneurship AGSE Research Exchange, Swinburne University of Technology, Auckland, New Zealand, 07-10 February 2006 / L. Murray Gillin ed.

Pagination

14 pp

Publisher

Swinburne University of Technology

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2006 Australian Graduate School of Entrepreneurship. The published version is reproduced with the permission of The AGSE.

Language

eng

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