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How to Become an Entrepreneurship Educator
How to Become an Entrepreneurship Educator is the first book to tackle the pressing issue of where to find the educators to meet the global demand for entrepreneurship education. Chapters unite the developmental trajectories of 20 eminent contemporary experts at different levels of enterprise education, to share the collective lessons learned. This book is an invaluable guide to educators from numerous backgrounds looking to reflect on their own practice and to contemplate new strategies for teaching enterprise and entrepreneurship.
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Critical Acclaim
Contributors
Contents
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With an increasing global demand for entrepreneurship education, and the need to prepare students for the challenges of an ever-changing world of work, Colin Jones tackles the difficult question: just where do these educators come from to meet this demand?
How to Become an Entrepreneurship Educator is the first book to tackle how we create expert entrepreneurship educators at all levels of education. Using activity theory as a lens, the book unites the developmental trajectories of 20 eminent contemporary experts at different levels of enterprise and entrepreneurship education. Jones identifies these journeys in order to share the collective lessons learned. By highlighting a range of global insights, readers are enabled to reflect on their own strategies, creating order in the domain of enterprise and entrepreneurship education – an order that holds the power to propel the domain of enterprise and entrepreneurship education onwards to new heights.
Such highly reflective accounts of how to teach entrepreneurship will be an invaluable guide to educators from numerous backgrounds to contemplate new strategies for teaching enterprise and entrepreneurship in the context of their own choosing.
How to Become an Entrepreneurship Educator is the first book to tackle how we create expert entrepreneurship educators at all levels of education. Using activity theory as a lens, the book unites the developmental trajectories of 20 eminent contemporary experts at different levels of enterprise and entrepreneurship education. Jones identifies these journeys in order to share the collective lessons learned. By highlighting a range of global insights, readers are enabled to reflect on their own strategies, creating order in the domain of enterprise and entrepreneurship education – an order that holds the power to propel the domain of enterprise and entrepreneurship education onwards to new heights.
Such highly reflective accounts of how to teach entrepreneurship will be an invaluable guide to educators from numerous backgrounds to contemplate new strategies for teaching enterprise and entrepreneurship in the context of their own choosing.
Critical Acclaim
‘I remember my first lectures in entrepreneurship, the questions I had and the theoretical/pedagogical issues I needed to deal with. At that time there were only a few textbooks in the field, so I would have appreciated reading How to Become an Entrepreneurship Educator. As the author states in the preface, an important aim of this edited book is to "help other educators understand the journeys other colleagues have undertaken to become entrepreneurship educators". Reading 20 journeys of entrepreneurship educators from different countries and educational contexts is a great learning journey for the reader. This kind of reading gives inspiration, interesting ideas and raises self-efficacy, optimism, hope and resilience – four key components of our educational psychological capital.’
– Alain Fayolle, EMLYON Business School, France
– Alain Fayolle, EMLYON Business School, France
Contributors
Contributors: C. Brentnall, J. Chang, L. Cottrell, J. Davis, J. Dobson, M. Drummy, P. Fernández de Vera, A. Gerrard, S. Hartley, C. Jones, N. Krueger, A. Maritz, P. Matthews, E. Oikkonen, Z. Parry, A. Penaluna, K. Penaluna, A. Rosli, M. Sourgiadaki, E. Vettraino
Contents
Contents:
Preface x
PART I THE EARLY YEARS
1 Deep Learning and EE: engage the world, change the world 2
Max Drummy
2 EE-STEM in primary-middle years 11
James Davis
3 Space to question 19
Catherine Brentnall
4 EE teachers: agents of agency 27
Shani Hartley
5 The early years 35
Colin Jones
PART II THE PRE-GRADUATE YEARS
6 The art of making it possible 39
Paz Fernández de Vera
7 Developing enterprising habits 46
Lesley Cottrell
8 Creating giants 54
Maria Sourgiadaki
9 If I could … before I do 61
Colin Jones
10 Insights of an accidental enterprise educator 69
Penny Matthews
11 The pre-graduate years 77
Colin Jones
PART III THE GRADUATE YEARS
12 Sheep assisted: the importance of being open to diversion 81
Elinor Vettraino
13 From instructor to educator 90
Norris Krueger
14 Designing change: seeing beyond the obvious and
influencing others 97
Andy Penaluna
15 Slow, lazy and stupid 104
Elena Oikkonen
16 Getting curious about creativity: the why and the how? 109
Kathryn Penaluna
17 The graduate years 117
Colin Jones
PART IV THE POST-GRADUATE YEARS
18 If you’re riding a dead horse, dismount! 121
Zen Parry
19 Authentic grit: the elusive (but essential) entrepreneurial trait 129
Alex Maritz
20 Specialist in enterprise and employability in UK HE 137
Amy Gerrard
21 Team entrepreneurial learning: building sustainable businesses 145
Ainurul Rosli and Jane Chang
22 Student-centred action learning 153
John Dobson
23 The post-graduate years 161
Colin Jones
References 169
Index 176
Preface x
PART I THE EARLY YEARS
1 Deep Learning and EE: engage the world, change the world 2
Max Drummy
2 EE-STEM in primary-middle years 11
James Davis
3 Space to question 19
Catherine Brentnall
4 EE teachers: agents of agency 27
Shani Hartley
5 The early years 35
Colin Jones
PART II THE PRE-GRADUATE YEARS
6 The art of making it possible 39
Paz Fernández de Vera
7 Developing enterprising habits 46
Lesley Cottrell
8 Creating giants 54
Maria Sourgiadaki
9 If I could … before I do 61
Colin Jones
10 Insights of an accidental enterprise educator 69
Penny Matthews
11 The pre-graduate years 77
Colin Jones
PART III THE GRADUATE YEARS
12 Sheep assisted: the importance of being open to diversion 81
Elinor Vettraino
13 From instructor to educator 90
Norris Krueger
14 Designing change: seeing beyond the obvious and
influencing others 97
Andy Penaluna
15 Slow, lazy and stupid 104
Elena Oikkonen
16 Getting curious about creativity: the why and the how? 109
Kathryn Penaluna
17 The graduate years 117
Colin Jones
PART IV THE POST-GRADUATE YEARS
18 If you’re riding a dead horse, dismount! 121
Zen Parry
19 Authentic grit: the elusive (but essential) entrepreneurial trait 129
Alex Maritz
20 Specialist in enterprise and employability in UK HE 137
Amy Gerrard
21 Team entrepreneurial learning: building sustainable businesses 145
Ainurul Rosli and Jane Chang
22 Student-centred action learning 153
John Dobson
23 The post-graduate years 161
Colin Jones
References 169
Index 176