THE RELEVANCE OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP TRAINING OR EDUCATION IN OUR SOCIETY
INTRODUCTION
The entrepreneur is commonly seen as an innovator — a
generator of new ideas and business processes. Management skill and strong team
building abilities are often perceived as essential leadership attributes for
successful entrepreneurs. Political economist Robert Reich
considers leadership, management ability, and team-building
to be essential qualities of an entrepreneur.
Entrepreneurship is a key driver of our economy. Wealth
and a high majority of jobs are created by small businesses started by
entrepreneurially minded individuals, many of whom go on to create big
businesses.
Entrepreneurship education helps student
acquire skills and experiences that will enable them to develop the insight
needed to discover and create entrepreneurial opportunities; and the expertise
to successfully start and manage their own businesses to take advantage of
these opportunities.
Entrepreneurship education is a lifelong learning
process, starting
as early as elementary school and progressing through all levels of education,
including adult education. The Standards and their supporting Performance
Indicators are a framework for teachers to use in building appropriate
objectives, learning activities, and assessments for their target audience.
DEFINITION OF ENTREPRENEUR
'Entrepreneur' is an individual who, rather than working as an
employee, runs a small business and assumes all the risk and reward of a given
business venture, idea, or good or service offered for sale. The entrepreneur is commonly seen as a
business leader and innovator of new ideas and business processes. (www.investopedia.com
/terms/e /entrepreneur.asp)
The term entrepreneur defined as
a person who pays a certain price for a product and resells it at an uncertain price (Cantillon 1982):
"making decisions about obtaining and using the resources while
consequently admitting the risk of enterprise."
An entrepreneur is someone who exercises
initiative
by organizing
a venture to take benefit
of an opportunity
and, as the decision
maker,
decides what, how, and how much of a good or service
will be produced.
(http://www.businessdictionary. com/definition/ entrepreneur.html).
Successful entrepreneurs have the
ability to lead a business in a positive direction by proper planning, to adapt
to changing environments and understand their own strengths and weakness.
What is an entrepreneurship?
Entrepreneurship is the process of
starting a business, a startup company or other organization. The entrepreneur
develops a business plan, acquires the human and other required resources, and
is fully responsible for its success or failure. Entrepreneurship
operates within an entrepreneurship ecosystem.
Entrepreneurship is
the capacity and willingness to develop, organize and manage a business venture
with any of the its risks in order to make profit.
Theorists Frank Knight
and Peter Drucker
defined entrepreneurship in terms of risk-taking. The entrepreneur is willing
to put his or her career and financial security on the line and take risks in
the name of an idea, spending time as well as capital on an uncertain venture.
Knight classified three types of uncertainty:
- Risk, which is measurable statistically (such as the probability of drawing a red color ball from a jar containing 5 red balls and 5 white balls).
- Ambiguity, which is hard to measure statistically (such as the probability of drawing a red ball from a jar containing 5 red balls but with an unknown number of white balls).
- True uncertainty or Knightian uncertainty, which is impossible to estimate or predict statistically, such as the probability of drawing a red ball from a jar whose number of red balls is unknown as well as the number of other colored balls.
Entrepreneurship is often
associated with true uncertainty, particularly when it involves something truly
novel, such as a market that did not previously exist.
RELEVANCE OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP TRAINING
Entrepreneurship education
is a lifelong learning process, starting as
early as elementary school and progressing through all levels of education,
including adult education. The Standards and their supporting Performance
Indicators are a framework for teachers to use in building appropriate
objectives, learning activities, and assessments for their target audience.
Using this framework, students will have: progressively more challenging
educational activities; experiences that will enable them to develop the
insight needed to discover and create entrepreneurial opportunities; and the
expertise to successfully start and manage their own businesses to take
advantage of these opportunities.
The
importance of entrepreneurship training in the new economy also goes beyond
empowering people wishing to start their own businesses. Entrepreneurship
education has become critical important to people who want to follow the
so-called professional routes, like becoming doctors, lawyers, accountants and
engineers. The financially successful professionals in the new economy will
have to be entrepreneurs as well.
Entrepreneurship education has a positive
impact on the entrepreneurial mindset of young people, their intentions towards
entrepreneurship, their employability and finally on their role in society and
the economy.
The key role of entrepreneurship education must not be disregarded. In
addition to equipping young people with the skills needed for the 21st century,
entrepreneurship education is a means to increase social inclusion; it can
increase the number of entrepreneurs – social and commercial, and it can be a
gateway for a greater integration of the framework for key competences for
lifelong learning.
Entrepreneurship education seeks to prepare people to be responsible,
enterprising individuals who have the attitudes, skills and knowledge necessary
to achieve the goals they set for themselves to live a fulfilled life.
BENEFITS OF
ENTREPRENEURSHIP TRAINING
Benefits to Secondary School Students
- Creation of entrepreneurial thinkers who also have the skills and tools to start their own businesses.
- Write a business plan
- Apply economic principles
- Determine individual entrepreneurial interests
- Apply basic marketing skills
- Use strategies for idea generation
- Assess feasibility of ideas
- Manage risk
- Identify legitimate sources of capital
- Evaluate ownership structures
- Translate problems into opportunities
- Apply principles of human relations management
- Speak "business" & "entrepreneurship"
- Apply basic accounting principles
- Engage in ethical business practices
- Demonstrate financial management
Benefits to Post-Secondary and Adult Students
- Demonstrate skills in business startup
- Demonstrate skills in maintaining business longevity
- Demonstrate knowledge of business closings versus failure
- Ability to find next level of training or access other resources and services
- Demonstrate business management/ operation skills
- Use components of a business plan
- Determine impact on unemployment
- Changed attitude toward entrepreneurship as a means of making a living
- Changes in personal and career attitudes including
- Self-worth
- Ability to control one's own life
- Self awareness
- Self management/ personality responsibility
- Transfer of learning
- Motivation
- Teamwork
- Interpersonal communications
- Problem solving
- Creativity
How the knowledge
of entrepreneur can lead to productivity
Entrepreneurship knowledge
acquired through entrepreneurial education has its attending benefits which
helps in creating jobs and establishment of more business firms in the economy.
Entrepreneurial sector is a
large and growing component of many economies, enhancing its performance will
generate significant gains for the nation as a whole. Whether the business
owner employs two or a hundred employees, it is helpful that he or she
frequently measures and focuses on the resources that keep the business
continually growing.
Entrepreneur knowledge and
activities of entrepreneur lead to productivity in the following ways
1.
Entrepreneurs boost economic growth by introducing
innovative technologies, products, and services.
2.
Increased competition from entrepreneurs challenges
existing firms to become more competitive.
3.
Entrepreneurs provide new job opportunities in the
short and long term.
4.
Entrepreneurial activity raises the productivity of
firms and economies.
5. Entrepreneurs
accelerate structural change by replacing established, sclerotic
firms.
CONCLUSION
As it can be seen,
Entrepreneurship education can positively impact a learner at all levels in a
wide number of contexts. This may explain why there are such a wide variety of
entrepreneurship education programs, all of which can provide important
outcomes at various stages of a learner's life. As supporters of
entrepreneurship education the Consortium for Entrepreneurship Education
applauds the great diversity of programs that fall under the framework of the
National Standards for Entrepreneurship Education.
Entrepreneurship education should not be confused with general business
and economic studies, as its goal is to promote creativity, innovation and
self-employment.
Entrepreneurial programmes offer students the tools to think creatively,
to be an effective problem solver, and to communicate, to network and to lead.
Entrepreneurship is not necessarily a topic - it is also a different way of
teaching and of helping young people to fully develop their potential.
The intended goals of entrepreneurship education and intervention logic
are further elaborated in the 2010 Commission’s report ‘Towards greater cooperation
in coherence in entrepreneurship education’.1 Teaching and learning
entrepreneurial
REFERENCES
Shane, Scott Andrew (2000). A General Theory of Entrepreneurship: The
Individual-opportunity Nexus. Edward Elgar Publishing. ISBN 978-1-78100-799-0.
Paul D. Reynolds (30 September 2007). Entrepreneurship in the United States: The Future Is
Now. Springer. ISBN 978-0-387-45671-3.
Akeredolu – Alc, E.O (1975). The Underdevelopment of indigenous
entrepreneurs in Nigeria.
Ibadan:
University Press.
Omotoso, F. (2006) Introduction to
Entrepreneurship Development in Nigeria.
Ibadan University Press.
Ownumere, J. (2000). The Nature and relevance
of SMEs in Economic Development. The Nigerian Banker Journal of the Chartered
Intituted of Bankers of Nigeria
Vol. 25
Onuoha B.C. (1998) Small Business Management /
entrepreneurship, Aba, Afri-tower ltd.
Onuoha B.C. (1994) Entrepreneurial Development
in Nigeria,
Okigwe, Van Global Publication.
Valliere, D., and R. Peterson.
“Entrepreneurship and economic growth: Evidence from emerging and developed
countries.” Entrepreneurship & Regional Development 21:5–6 (2009):
459–480.
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