1 / 15

REE USA Stanford University

DEVELOPMENT OF AN ENTREPRENEURSHIP MINOR AND OTHER ENTREPRENEURSHIP EDUCATION FOR ALL ENGINEERS Tom Mason Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology. REE USA Stanford University. DEFINITION OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP. Combination or recombination of resources in innovative and valuable ways .

petula
Télécharger la présentation

REE USA Stanford University

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. DEVELOPMENT OF AN ENTREPRENEURSHIP MINOR AND OTHER ENTREPRENEURSHIP EDUCATION FOR ALL ENGINEERSTom MasonRose-Hulman Institute of Technology REE USA Stanford University

  2. DEFINITION OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP • Combination or recombination of resources in innovative and valuable ways. • Invention is only the beginning of innovation • Emerson was wrong – The world will not beat a path to the inventor’s door • Entrepreneurship need not be a new business

  3. IMPORTANCE OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP • Jobs and prosperity • Global competition  THE DAYS OF DILBERT ARE DONE!!!!!! • Entrepreneurial skills are complements to technical skills • New enterprises seldom fail due to technical failure • Best technology does not always win

  4. EDUCATION AND BUSINESS DIFFERENCES • Pursuing truth is not the same as pursuing profits • Academic time is different from business time • Business allocates resources for value, not “fairness” • Business values ambitious failures much less

  5. ENTREPRENEURSHIP AT ROSE-HULMAN • A course since the mid-80’s • Entrepreneur-in-residence program • Project-based education • Rose-Hulman Ventures • Engenius Solutions • Recent developments • Multidisciplinary entrepreneurial design courses • Minors for B.S. And M.S. Students • Still in approval process • Master In Technology Entrepreneurship

  6. Business Education SPECTRUM OF OPPORTUNITIES RHV Success Fund RHIT CTRI RHV Engenius Solutions

  7. ROSE-HULMAN VENTURES: THE MISSION • Foster creation and growth of innovation-based businesses by providing access to: • Infrastructure • Technical Support • Business Support • Capital • Thereby providing: • Faculty/student educational experiences • Economic growth for Terre Haute and Indiana

  8. EDUCATIONAL BENEFITS • Over 300 student & faculty experiences • Faculty – • Intellectual stretch & great experiences • Students • Excitement of “real” engineering • Learned things not evident in courses & labs • Requirements shift • Business realities such as deadlines & cash • Aids the job search – even in big companies!!

  9. MULTIDISCIPLINARY ENTREPRENEURIAL DESIGN COURSES • A dozen engineering & science faculty members involved • Modules on project management, creativity, business plans, etc. • Innovative projects for students • NCIIA grant received for course development

  10. UNDERGRADUATE ENTREPRENEURSHIP MINOR • VA453 The Entrepreneur • VA498 Technology Management & Forecasting or EMGT423* Intro. To Marketing for Technical Products (not yet available) • EMGT427 Project Management • SL350 Managerial Accounting • VA454 Financial Economics • Participation in an approved entrepreneurial senior design experience

  11. GRADUATE ENTREPRENEURSHIP MINOR • MG 532 Technical Entrepreneurship • Mg5xx Marketing New Technology Or MG526 Tech. Mgt. & Forecasting • MG520 Accounting For Technical Managers Or MGXX Entrepreneurial Finance • MG527 Project Management • MG5XX Implementing Innovation Or Other MSTE Course Approved By MSEM Director • A Thesis Experience Which Includes An Entrepreneurial Or Commercialization Dimension.

  12. MASTER OF TECHNOLOGY ENTREPRENEURSHIP • Builds on the successful MS in Engineering Management Program • Focused courses to acquire needed business skills • Blends academic work with early stage work on innovations

  13. MASTER OF TECHNOLOGY ENTREPRENEURSHIPUnder consideration! • MG 532 Technical Entrepreneurship 4 • MG 526 Technology Management & Forecasting 4 • MG 520 Accounting for Technical Managers 4 • MG 522 Organizational Management 4 • MG 527 Project Management 4 • MG 5XX Marketing New Technology* 4 • MG 5XX Implementation of Innovations* 4 • MG 5XX Entrepreneurial Finance * 4 • Electives (Courses, especially technical ) 8 • GS 515 Selling Technology 1 • GS 5XX Fundamentals of Intellectual Property 1 • GS 5XX A Global Perspective on Technical Entrepreneurship* 1 • MG 5XX Business Plan Development Project* 8 • * - COURSES TO BE DEVELOPED

  14. CHALLENGES & RESPONSES • Rigid Curricula • Emphasize outcomes desired for the majors • Students overload if they see value • Worry about technical rigor • Involve respected technical professors

  15. CHALLENGES & RESPONSES • Worry about loss of elective enrollments • Involve technical faculty in entrepreneurship courses • Breadth without depth - “Now they know about marketing and finance”. • No – but they know they need to learn more.

More Related