Abstract
PurposeThree different pedagogical approaches grounded in three different definitional foundations of entrepreneurship have been compared in relation to their effects on students. They are: (1) “Idea and Artefact-Creation Pedagogy” (IACP), grounded in opportunity identification and creation, (2) “Value-Creation Pedagogy” (VaCP), grounded in value creation and (3) “Venture-Creation Pedagogy” (VeCP), grounded in organisation creation.Design/methodology/approachData were collected at 35 different sites where education was deemed to be entrepreneurial and experiential. A quantitative, smartphone app-based data collection method was used alongside a qualitative interview approach. 10,953 short-survey responses were received from 1,048 participants. Responses were used to inform respondent selection and discussion topics, in 291 student and teacher interviews. Comparative analysis was then conducted.FindingsThe three approaches resulted in very different outcomes, both in magnitude and in kind. VaCP had strong effects on entrepreneurial competencies, on student motivation and on knowledge and skills acquisition. VeCP had weaker effects on knowledge and skills acquisition. IACP had weak effects on all outcomes probed for. Differences were attributed to variation in prevalence of certain emotional learning events and to variation in purpose as perceived by students.Research limitations/implicationsVaCP could serve as an escape from the potential dilemma faced by many teachers in entrepreneurial education, of being caught between two limiting courses of action; a marginal VeCP approach and a fuzzy IACP one. This could prompt policymakers to reconsider established policies. However, further research in other contexts is needed, to corroborate the extent of differences between these three approaches.Originality/valueMost impact studies in experiential entrepreneurial education focus only on organisation-creation-based education. This study contributes by investigating entrepreneurial education that is also grounded in two other definitional foundations. Allowance has been made for novel comparative conclusions.
Highlights
Educational impact assessment is about searching for causal relationships between educational causes and their effects on students (Cook, 2002)
5.1 Findings wave by wave The first wave of data collection showed strong effects of full-Venture-Creation Pedagogy” (VeCP) on higher education students’ entrepreneurial competencies and engagement
This study has resulted in three main answers to the question of what differences there are between Idea and ArtefactCreation Pedagogy” (IACP), Value-creation pedagogy (VaCP) and VeCP in terms of their effects on students
Summary
Educational impact assessment is about searching for causal relationships between educational causes and their effects on students (Cook, 2002). A trend towards accountability in society makes it increasingly important for policymakers, teachers and other stakeholders in society to go beyond opinions and fashions and move towards robust evidence around the effects of different pedagogical [1] approaches on students (Ball, 2013; Slavin, 2002). Teachers need input on how to produce effects of interest, and education policymakers need to know which education “works”. The full terms of this licence may be seen at http:// creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode
Published Version (Free)
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have