Entrepreneurship education is booming in India, but are our faculty qualified?
But the rapid rise of entrepreneurship education in India raises questions, including: who’s doing the teaching? It's a new discipline, requiring new teaching methods – is anyone qualified?
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| NEN, the National Entrepreneurship Network, is India’s leader in entrepreneurship education, working with over 270 academic institutes to build world class entrepreneurship programs on their campuses, reaching over 300,000 young people. NEN supports new and future entrepreneurs with information, experts and community. www.nenonline.org |
Over the past three years, the number of entrepreneurship faculty teaching high-growth entrepreneurship has risen from a mere 50 to 75 to over 570, a ten-fold increase, even if one limits the tally to faculty engaged through NEN member institutes. According to surveys of the group, over 85% have never before taught entrepreneurship. This sudden and massive increase represents a revolution in the discipline.
Institute directors, principals and the faculty themselves clearly recognize the need for new entrepreneurship educators to build their knowledge before launching into teaching. Fortunately, for faculty-based in India, there are several faculty development courses available, more so than in most areas of the world.
The largest program in Asia is the Entrepreneurship Educators Course (EEC), led by NEN in partnership with IIM Bangalore and Stanford University’s Technology Ventures Program. At the current time, there are over 260 faculty members enrolled across the four batches of the EEC. Faculty members who go through this year-long course, and pass strict performance requirements that include successfully building campus programs, receive Certification from IIM-B, Stanford and NEN.
| NEN:upcoming event |
| IIT-Bombay E-Summit When: February 10, 2008 Where: IIT Bombay, Powai Who: Open to students, professionals and future entrepreneurs Event focus: Event offers entrepreneurs talks, VC pitch sessions for early stage companies (last date to apply: Jan 13), mentoring sessions, panel discussions, a student e-cells’ meet and the finals of India’s biggest b-plan competition, Eureka, with prize money over 14 lacs. Partners & Sponsors: DST, NEN, Crossover Advisors, Cleartrip, DFJ, TiE More info at www.nenonline.org |
Another key offering in India is the CPET, developed and delivered by the Wadhwani Centre for Entrepreneurial Development at Indian School of Business. CPET also requires development of teaching materials among other requirements to receive Certification from the course.
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Recently Intel and UC Berkeley signed on with the Department of Science and Technology to run workshops for entrepreneurship faculty, and University of California Davis will be running a program in Jaipur early in 2008, targeting both entrepreneurs and faculty.
The international flavor of all these faculty development programs is critical. Entrepreneurship education has been active on US campuses for over two decades. “Adapting practices that are working well overseas will jumpstart the development of Indian teaching methods and tools,” explains Prof. Tina Seelig, who teaches in Stanford’s Technology Ventures Program and is one the developers of NEN’s EEC.
Most faculty agree that entrepreneurship can’t be taught using traditional lectures, so faculty development focuses both on core concepts and innovative teaching methods. Conveying the practical and emotional aspects of entrepreneurship requires a hands-on and experiential approach. This can include using games, building mock and real companies, spending time in markets and streets, and using arts-and-crafts to experiment with rapid prototyping.

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