Title: IMPROVING ENTREPRENERUIAL EDUCATION THROUGH SELF-REGULATORY SKILLS
1IMPROVING ENTREPRENERUIAL EDUCATION THROUGH
SELF-REGULATORY SKILLS Peter Bryant University
of Sydney Australia Presented to the 10th NCIIA
Meeting Portland, Oregon, March 2006
2Key Definitions
- Self-regulation Scholars define
self-regulation as a systematic process of
human thought and behavior that involves setting
personal goals and steering oneself toward the
achievement of those goals. - Entrepreneur There are numerous valid
definitions of entrepreneurship and
entrepreneur (Davidsson, 2005). In this study I
refer to entrepreneurs as founder managers of new
ventures aiming to exploit growth opportunities.
Peter Bryant presentation to 10th NCIIA
Conference, Portland, March 2006
3Background Significance
- Scholars see entrepreneurial cognition as a key
factor in many areas of entrepreneurship
(Mitchell Busenitz 2004 Baron, 2004). - Self-regulation is central feature of social
cognition and important in goal setting, work
motivation, learning, and education (Vancouver
2000 Higgins 2002). - Self-regulatory interventions are known to
influence educational and learning outcomes
(Wood, 2005). - A few researchers study entrepreneurial
self-efficacy in relation to education (e.g.,
Bechard Gregoire, 2005). This study also
explores other aspects of self-regulation.
Peter Bryant presentation to 10th NCIIA
Conference, Portland, March 2006
4Research Questions
- Do entrepreneurs possess a distinctive pattern of
self-regulation? - What role does self-regulation play in
entrepreneurial learning and education? - What is the scope for self-regulatory
intervention and training to improve
entrepreneurial decision making?
Peter Bryant presentation to 10th NCIIA
Conference, Portland, March 2006
5Mixed Methods
- Purposive selection of a variation sample of 30
entrepreneurs as the main study group. - Plus opportunistic selection of 30 non-founder
employee managers as a control group. - Both groups answered a survey which measured
three aspects of self-regulation chronic
regulatory focus (or regulatory pride),
entrepreneurial self-efficacy, and metacognition. - In addition, I interviewed all 30 entrepreneurs
about numerous aspects of their decision making.
Peter Bryant presentation to 10th NCIIA
Conference, Portland, March 2006
6Survey Measures
- Entrepreneurial Self-Efficacy instrument
developed by Scherer (1989) measuring sense of
self-efficacy in the entrepreneurial task domain. - Regulatory Pride instrument developed by Higgins
(2001) measuring a persons sense of regulatory
pride defined as a persons chronic future goal
orientation derived from their history of
achievement success. Either promotion pride
(chronic focus on attaining gains) prevention
pride (chronic focus on avoiding losses). - Metacognition instrument based on Schraws
(1994) Metacognitive Awareness Index (MAI). It
measures Knowledge of Cognition and Regulation of
Cognition.
Peter Bryant presentation to 10th NCIIA
Conference, Portland, March 2006
7Survey Results
Survey Results for Entrepreneurs
Survey Results for Managers
Peter Bryant presentation to 10th NCIIA
Conference, Portland, March 2006
8Entrepreneurial Regulation
- Based on the survey results, I derived a single
score for Entrepreneurial Regulation by
combining normalized measures for promotion
pride, metacognitive knowledge of cognition, and
entrepreneurial self-efficacy. - After interview coding was complete, I ordered
the 30 interviews into three groups of high,
medium, and low Entrepreneurial Regulation scores
(10 interviews in each group)
Peter Bryant presentation to 10th NCIIA
Conference, Portland, March 2006
9Interview Results
- Entrepreneurs in low self-regulatory group more
likely to refer to systematic learning and
decision making. - Those in the high group more likely to refer to
experiential learning and intuitive decision
making. - Those in the high self-regulatory group were also
more self-aware about their learning experiences
and spoke about them more frequently. - These results broadly concur with the
self-regulatory literature.
Peter Bryant presentation to 10th NCIIA
Conference, Portland, March 2006
10Key Findings
- The survey results suggest that entrepreneurs
possess a distinctive pattern of self-regulation
consisting of three significantly
inter-correlated factors promotion pride,
metacognitive knowledge of cognition, and
entrepreneurial self-efficacy (a 0.69). - The interview results suggest that entrepreneurs
with stronger self-regulatory skills tend towards
intuitive decision making and experiential
learning, while those with lower self-regulatory
skills tend towards systematic decision making
and formal learning.
Peter Bryant presentation to 10th NCIIA
Conference, Portland, March 2006
11Implications for Research
- Findings suggest that studies of entrepreneurial
cognition and education should investigate
multi-dimensional factors (such as multiple
aspects of self-regulation) and not just single
factors (such as self-efficacy alone).
Researchers should also recognize and incorporate
fundamental within-group heterogeneity. - Because self-regulation is both chronic and
situational, studies of self-regulation in
entrepreneurship education and decision making
need to incorporate both inherent personal
characteristics and situational contingency.
Peter Bryant presentation to 10th NCIIA
Conference, Portland, March 2006
12Implications for Practice
- Insofar as intuitive decision making and the use
of heuristics are important skills for
entrepreneurs, then educational interventions
aimed at increasing relevant self-regulatory
skills may improve the quality and effectiveness
of entrepreneurial decision making. - All three self-regulatory skills regulatory
pride, self-efficacy, and metacognitive knowledge
of cognition can be enhanced or primed, and
those existing techniques could be adapted for
use in the education, training and mentoring of
both potential and experienced entrepreneurs.
Peter Bryant presentation to 10th NCIIA
Conference, Portland, March 2006