
Teaching and Learning Entrepreneurship in Higher Education
Claus Nygaard(Editor)
Libri Publishing
Published on 30. June 2017
Book
Paperback/Softback
400 pages
978-1-911450-12-2 (ISBN)
Description
For many years, it has been the
general view that entrepreneurs are simply born that way - that
entrepreneurship is innate and therefore cannot be taught (or learned), and is
therefore a subject unsuited to higher education. The logic seemed to follow:
an entrepreneur is just naturally an entrepreneur, and studying
entrepreneurship, therefore, is a meaningless enterprise. Borrowing Nike's
slogan, entrepreneurs just do it.
But in recent years, a complete
reversal of thinking in higher education has occurred. Indeed, entrepreneurs,
it is claimed, are made, not born. In other words, entrepreneurship can be
learned. Subsequently, institutions of higher education, in most countries
around the world, have embraced the teaching and learning of entrepreneurship
with fervour, as demonstrated by the growth of entrepreneurship centres, new
venture incubators, and business plan competitions on college and university
campuses.
Teaching and
Learning Entrepreneurship in Higher Education embraces this if
to how reversal, by exploring entrepreneurship activities at
different universities around the world from three primary perspectives:
policy, practice, and mindset. Its twelve chapters demonstrate that there is no
'one-size-fits-all' model for teaching and learning entrepreneurship in higher
education. Despite their differences, however, the twelve also share a common
desire to develop and nurture entrepreneurship, and will inspire anyone with an
interest in teaching and learning entrepreneurship in higher education.
general view that entrepreneurs are simply born that way - that
entrepreneurship is innate and therefore cannot be taught (or learned), and is
therefore a subject unsuited to higher education. The logic seemed to follow:
an entrepreneur is just naturally an entrepreneur, and studying
entrepreneurship, therefore, is a meaningless enterprise. Borrowing Nike's
slogan, entrepreneurs just do it.
But in recent years, a complete
reversal of thinking in higher education has occurred. Indeed, entrepreneurs,
it is claimed, are made, not born. In other words, entrepreneurship can be
learned. Subsequently, institutions of higher education, in most countries
around the world, have embraced the teaching and learning of entrepreneurship
with fervour, as demonstrated by the growth of entrepreneurship centres, new
venture incubators, and business plan competitions on college and university
campuses.
Teaching and
Learning Entrepreneurship in Higher Education embraces this if
to how reversal, by exploring entrepreneurship activities at
different universities around the world from three primary perspectives:
policy, practice, and mindset. Its twelve chapters demonstrate that there is no
'one-size-fits-all' model for teaching and learning entrepreneurship in higher
education. Despite their differences, however, the twelve also share a common
desire to develop and nurture entrepreneurship, and will inspire anyone with an
interest in teaching and learning entrepreneurship in higher education.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Faringdon
United Kingdom
Target group
Adult education
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Thickness: 17 mm
Weight
449 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-911450-12-2 (9781911450122)
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John Branch | Anne Horsted
Teaching and Learning Entrepreneurship in Higher Education
E-Book
06/2017
Redshank Books
€52.49
Available for download
Person
Claus Nygaard is Professor in Management Education and Director of Research at CBS Learning Lab, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark. He was a driving force behind the formulation and implementation of the Learning Strategy for Copenhagen Business School in 2005. He has received distinguished research awards from Allied Academies, outstanding paper awards from Students in Free Enterprise, and he was voted 'best teacher' at Copenhagen Business School in 2001. His research has resulted in several anthologies, and he has published in leading journals including Higher Education, International Studies of Management & Organization, International Journal of Public Sector Management, and Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education.