Abstract

PurposeFollowing the example of the critical management education tradition, the purpose of this paper is to argue whether we should keep EE vital by disturbing it, in particular by interrogating that which has seemingly become “untouchable” from interrogation.Design/methodology/approachThis paper takes inspiration from Paolo Freire’s work by proposing a pedagogical approach to entrepreneurship education which builds on an iterative and interactive process, oscillating between deconstructing and reconstructing entrepreneurship, creating space for invention in the classroom. The paper provides exemplary contributions in developing suggestions as to ways forward.FindingsThe ways forward being proposed in this paper include entrepreneurship educators engaging students as co-learners, and evoking their curiosity to pose new questions about the phenomenon; “grounding” students in their own creativity and supporting them to build the confidence needed to develop alternative understandings of how entrepreneurship can function – for themselves, in their future organizations and for society as a whole; and challenging our own teaching positions, and adopting a pedagogical process of invention, stimulating curiosity, co-creation, thought-provoking questions and entrepreneurial action.Originality/valueThis paper provides ways forward in keeping EE “fresh”, by sketching how we need to teach about entrepreneurship, adopting the critical insights emerging in the field. The paper argues how we do not only need other models and approaches to understand entrepreneurship, but also to understand learning and education.

Highlights

  • Entrepreneurship, and entrepreneurship education (EE), are literally “everywhere” nowadays (Hornsby et al, 2018)

  • What we offer in the remainder of this article are introductions to these exemplars, as well as elaborations on how we see a critical entrepreneurship education (EE) take shape

  • Achtenhagen and Johannisson (2018), by reflecting on cognitive capabilities, affective responses and network possibilities, start to offer students new ways of be/coming and envisioning the way entrepreneurship could be enacted in relation to a more sustainable world in particular. This resonates with Lindbergh and Schwartz (2018), who invite students to work on projects in which they are given a space to reconstruct alternative versions of societal entrepreneurship that tackle a sustainability issue and that carefully navigate between the paradoxes to find their own interpretation of entrepreneuring

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Entrepreneurship, and entrepreneurship education (EE), are literally “everywhere” nowadays (Hornsby et al, 2018). This is a call we take up in this paper, by taking inspiration from Freire’s work on “critical pedagogy” and proposing a pedagogical approach to EE which takes the shape of an iterative and interactive process, oscillating between deconstructing and reconstructing entrepreneurship, creating space for invention in the classroom.

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
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

Schedule a call