2015
DOI: 10.5367/ihe.2015.0271
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Beta: An Experiment in Funded Undergraduate Start-up

Abstract: This paper reports on an evaluation of a funded undergraduate project designed to enable student business start-up. The programme, entitled ‘Beta’, provides undergraduate students with £1,500 of seed-corn funding. The key objective of the project is for the participants to exit it with a viable and legal business entity through which they can start trading on completion of the course. The study adopts a case study approach and evaluates all aspects of the Beta programme, the actors involved and its pr… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(24 citation statements)
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References 74 publications
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“…This approach is reflected in guidelines (EC and OECD Report, 2012;Gibb and Haskins, 2013;Maas et al, 2004) that entrepreneurship should be part of the institution strategy, that entrepreneurial support should be regionally and globally relevant, entrepreneurship as a philosophy should underpin teaching strategies, infrastructure should exist that supports student entrepreneurs, and impact of the entrepreneurial university should be evaluated. Maas et al (2004) and Jones et al, (2015) acknowledge that entrepreneurship education is not suitable for all students but they should be exposed to enterprising skills during their HEI programme. Morris et al, (2013) maintains that while students have the potential, most lack the required knowledge, attributes, skills that define entrepreneurial competence.…”
Section: The Entrepreneurial Universitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This approach is reflected in guidelines (EC and OECD Report, 2012;Gibb and Haskins, 2013;Maas et al, 2004) that entrepreneurship should be part of the institution strategy, that entrepreneurial support should be regionally and globally relevant, entrepreneurship as a philosophy should underpin teaching strategies, infrastructure should exist that supports student entrepreneurs, and impact of the entrepreneurial university should be evaluated. Maas et al (2004) and Jones et al, (2015) acknowledge that entrepreneurship education is not suitable for all students but they should be exposed to enterprising skills during their HEI programme. Morris et al, (2013) maintains that while students have the potential, most lack the required knowledge, attributes, skills that define entrepreneurial competence.…”
Section: The Entrepreneurial Universitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To some extent, in response to such agendas, Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) are increasingly taking a key role developing new enterprise and entrepreneurship education strategies and practices approaches to encourage entrepreneurial mindsets and enterprising behaviour among university students through their enterprise and entrepreneurship teaching initiatives (Jones et al, 2015).…”
Section: Enterprise and Entrepreneurship Education (Eee) Employabilimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In recent work Jones (2015) concludes that among scholars, there seems to be a consensus that the best results in enterprise and entrepreneurship education are achieved when students are exposed to experiential learning approaches rooted in Kolb's experiential learning theory (Kolb, 1984). These approaches known as Problem Based Learning (PBL), Enquire Based Learning (EBL), amongst others, have been shown to be an effective learning pedagogy by integrating problem-solving, creativity, and reflection.…”
Section: Enterprise and Entrepreneurship Education (Eee) Employabilimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Enterprise education is often offered now university wide in the UKnot just to business school students, many students are interested in commercialising their ideas from other subject areas (Smith et al, 2007, Jones et al, 2015. Enterprise education has a shown a wide range of effects.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The need for assessment is also an issuemoving away from exams and more towards learning by doing such as suggested by Kolb Learning Cycle (1984) with assignments, posters, business plans, elevator pitches, personal reflective journals (Phillips, 2008), and problem based learning (Sanchez-Romaguera and Phillips, 2018). Universities are now using a variety of teaching methods and assessments in order to achieve enterprise education outcomes (Jones et al, 2015) where learning by doing is generally accepted to be more effective. The benefit of some off curricular activities such as business plan competitions is that there is further support from funding (often of the order of £10,000), publicity and in-kind support such as incubator space, mentoring and access to Intellectual Property lawyers.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%