Entrepreneurship and Higher Education An Employability Perspective / Selvam, S K Panneer.

By: Selvam, S K Panneer
Material type: ArticleArticlePublisher: 2011Subject(s): Employability | Higher Education | Entrepreneurship Education | Entrepreneurship | Ninth Biennial Conference On Entrepreneu | Biennial Conference Papers In: Ninth Biennial Conference on EntrepreneurshipSummary: A culture of cleanliness was created to cope with the demands of social and economic change. Today, though, 'To adjust to the increasingly knowledge driven economy, we have to do the same for curiosity and creativity'. Entrepreneurship is one expression of that drive to create a knowledge society. This paper argues that entrepreneurship can be seen as a special form of employability. When universities and colleges promote employability, they are also promoting elements of entrepreneurship. However, if this is to lead to self-employment, more is needed. Students need to understand what it means to be self-employed, what sources of help are available and where the main pitfalls lie. Higher education do something to meet these needs but provision is restricted and not, in practice, equally available to all students. The lack of systematic research in this area means that there is a shortage of evidence about interesting and effective practices; about 'quality signals' - indicators that provision is of the highest quality; and about the connections between entrepreneurship, employability and mainstream higher education curricula in all subject areas at postgraduate and undergraduate...
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Articles Articles Ahmedabad (HO)
(Browse shelf) Vol. , Issue. Available 019348

A culture of cleanliness was created to cope with the demands of social and economic change. Today, though, 'To adjust to the increasingly knowledge driven economy, we have to do the same for curiosity and creativity'. Entrepreneurship is one expression of that drive to create a knowledge society. This paper argues that entrepreneurship can be seen as a special form of employability. When universities and colleges promote employability, they are also promoting elements of entrepreneurship. However, if this is to lead to self-employment, more is needed. Students need to understand what it means to be self-employed, what sources of help are available and where the main pitfalls lie. Higher education do something to meet these needs but provision is restricted and not, in practice, equally available to all students. The lack of systematic research in this area means that there is a shortage of evidence about interesting and effective practices; about 'quality signals' - indicators that provision is of the highest quality; and about the connections between entrepreneurship, employability and mainstream higher education curricula in all subject areas at postgraduate and undergraduate...

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