Title: Youth Entrepreneurship
1Youth Entrepreneurship
- A Panel Discussion Yielding Lessons for
Philanthropy - Moderator Andrew Hahn, Professor
- Brandeis Universitys Heller School for Social
Policy and Management
2Your Moderators Two Hats
- Youth entrepreneurship research underway in
Center for Youth and Communities, Brandeis. Soon
to be released study - Sillerman Center for the Advancement of
Philanthropy. - Agendas Converge. EE is ideally suited to many
sectors of philanthropy!
310 seconds on history of EE
- Jimmy Carter
- Early cynical view among liberals
- Business leaders and their philanthropies embrace
the concept - Attitudes change and now mainstream consensus of
importance of EE both in USA and globally.
4What is Entrepreneurship?
- Traits and behaviors
- One framework lists six entrepreneurial skills
possessed by successful entrepreneurs - Achievement
- Creativity and innovation
- Risk-taking and setting objectives
- Self-confidence and internal locus of control
- Independence and autonomy
- Motivation, energy, and commitment
5A Heterogeneous Field
- In-school courses but even here huge variety
- Summer biz camps
- Middle and even elementary schools (PBS These
Kids Mean Business) - Out of school, community-based programs
- Young adult and community college approaches
- Standalone or embedded (e.g., college access)
- Connected to other movements experiential
learning, dropout prevention, community
development and more
6What Are the Expected Outcomes from
Entrepreneurship Education (EE)?
- Youth employment
- Sense of meaning belonging
- Resiliency, critical thinking, innovation and
positive risk taking - Fewer at-risk behaviors
- New skills and experiences
- Business development
- Promoting and revitalizing local communities
-
7A Field Still In The Making
- If research studies alone were the chief
motivator for expansion of EE, we would have to
say honestly that the field is still in the
making and all the evidence isnt in. - According to Kaufman and Dabson (1998), the lack
of evaluative assessment of youth enterprise in
the U.S. is a major barrier to the improvement of
its effectiveness and impact. - One leading foundation has raised the gauntlet
- Yet early evidence first gen studies--suggests
a host of very important outcomes on which to
build more elaborate research studies.
8- Forty-five percent of low income mostly minority
students felt that one particular EE program was
more important to their education than other
classes. Just 20 felt the program was less
important to their education and about a third
felt the program was at least as important as
other education classes.
9(No Transcript)
10Forthcoming NFTE Study will show
- Positive Outcomes When Serving Youth Who Need
Assistance in - Future Education and Career Goals
- School Engagement and Academics
- Life Skills
11What do Top Performing Settings Have In Common?
- Teacher Passion Teachers embrace curriculum and
have high expectations for participating youth. - Student selection process Able to choose
appropriate students to participate in EE - Program and organizational support.
- Fidelity to the model and a concern for quality
12Panelists
- BUILD, an entrepreneurship program with a focus
on college access (and a collaborator with other
EE programs) - NFTE, serving mostly thousands of in-school low
income youth in USA and abroad - A corporate supporter, OppenheimerFunds who
recently participated in YESG
13Andrew Hahn, Professor and Director The Sillerman
Center for the Advancement of Philanthropy
Heller School for Social Policy and Management,
Brandeis University Waltham, Massachusetts
02454-9110 Office 781-736-3774
ahahn_at_brandeis.edu