Abstract

This study examines the relationship of music education (ME) and entrepreneurship education (EE) received during adolescence with the entrepreneurial identities of university students. Researching adolescent ME alongside EE as a potential enabler of entrepreneurial identity is crucial to understanding the complementarities between ME and EE and so developing knowledge of what kinds of education may contribute to entrepreneurial identity formation. It might also be useful to consider these research insights when developing educational interventions for adolescents. The analysis is based on a sample of 190 Bachelor’s-level students from different study backgrounds (business, arts and humanities, etc.) surveyed in one European country. The study finds that both ME and EE received in adolescence are related to entrepreneurial identity in adulthood. However, it is the extra-curricular ME, taken in addition to the secondary school curriculum, that makes the difference and moderates the relationship between EE and identity. The findings contribute to expanding the identity development discourse in the entrepreneurship literature and bring novel insights to EE research by highlighting extra-curricular ME as a potential alternative pathway to entrepreneurial identity development. On a more general level, the study provides an input into the adolescent education literature and learning transfer in education research.

Highlights

  • This study examines the relationship of music education (ME) and entrepreneurship education (EE) received during adolescence with the entrepreneurial identities of university students

  • This study concludes that extra-curricular adolescent ME and adolescent EE are consistently related to entrepreneurial identity in adulthood

  • These findings make a number of important contributions to the EE and ME research, in particular to the identity development discourse in the entrepreneurship and general education literatures

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Summary

Introduction

This study examines the relationship of music education (ME) and entrepreneurship education (EE) received during adolescence with the entrepreneurial identities of university students. Prior identity studies in entrepreneurship research have a rich understanding of the relationship of identity with the antecedents of entrepreneurial behaviour, such as intentions and confidence in taking entrepreneurial actions (Alsos et al, 2016; Henry, 2013). In this discourse identity is often depicted as an explanatory (independent) variable, and this is less informative in the educational context which sets directions for developing specialisationgeared identities among students

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