Student and faculty perceptions on an entrepreneurship course: an exploratory study from Oman

S. Naqvi, M. Matriano, Jamel Terzi Alimi
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This study aims to fill this gap by examining the beliefs and conceptions that learners and faculty at a private HEI in Muscat, Oman, had about the course entitled Entrepreneurship and New Venture Creation (ENVC).\n\n\nDesign/methodology/approach\nThe primary and secondary research questions are addressed using a mixed-methods approach that includes an online student questionnaire answered by 110 students who had studied the ENVC course, a focus group discussion with eight students facilitated by MS Teams and semi-structured interviews with two faculty members.\n\n\nFindings\nThe findings revealed that the study participants had a very positive view of the ENVC course discussed here as they pointed to several benefits, including improved knowledge of business and entrepreneurship concepts, increased familiarity with the local business environment, development of entrepreneurial intention and improvement of their critical thinking, creativity and innovation skills. In addition, the results revealed some concerns among the participating students, particularly regarding the lack of adequate training sessions on risk management and financial planning. The participants also requested hands-on experience through industrial entrepreneurship training and in-residence-entrepreneurship programs.\n\n\nResearch limitations/implications\nThis study raises a number of possibilities for further research on this type of course in terms of students’ employability skills, know-how and agency when the time comes for them to enter the real world of business and employment. Future work would benefit from using a longitudinal survey on a group of alumni to triangulate and compare the various findings that were reached here. It would certainly be even more fruitful if conducted at two or more HEIs and with larger population samples to ensure broad coverage, representation and generalization. Work along these lines would certainly refine and extend our findings.\n\n\nPractical implications\nThis study has significant pedagogical implications for future graduate students seeking employment, entrepreneurship course developers and faculty. Relatively, the educational outcomes of entrepreneurship education will also rely on the way entrepreneurship is being taught to students. It is recommended that entrepreneurship teaching should focus on cognitive development and active implementation of in-house incubation for well-planned innovative business ideas. This will provide opportunities for students to gain real-life experiences and identify their strengths and weaknesses, as well as the areas and skills that need to be maintained; hence, further research on the effectiveness of in-house incubation could best be considered for the next study. Another concern raised in this study is the lack of training in financial planning. Hence, further research can be considered on how to improve the financial planning skills of students for a start-up journey.\n\n\nSocial implications\nThis course is designed in alignment with Oman Vision 2040, which places great emphasis on entrepreneurship as it plays an important role in the planned economic diversification and sustainability, in which innovation derived from entrepreneurship development will be used as the main driver for the development of infrastructure and educational systems that encourage entrepreneurship. Moreover, the ENVC course focuses on the concept of social entrepreneurship. It inculcates a sense of responsibility for supporting the immediate society among students. Learning the perceptions of students and teachers will provide opportunities to achieve their academic goals, which will reap economic and financial returns in the long run. The development of entrepreneurial skills and intentions of students will eventually help in boosting the country’s economy and its social fabric, thus improving the overall quality of life of Omani society.\n\n\nOriginality/value\nEven though this study is an exploratory investigation, the framework sets out clear empirical insights into the entrepreneurship course development, its main contents, assessments and learners’ and faculty members’ perceptions of the design, intent, content and delivery of the ENVC course and has crucial implications for all the stakeholders. The originality of this case study lies in the fact that it is the first of its kind in the body of research as it links theory to practice and will be a useful reference for entrepreneurship course developers, higher education faculty and students.\n","PeriodicalId":45751,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Science and Technology Policy Management","volume":"87 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":2.9000,"publicationDate":"2022-08-04","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"4","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Science and Technology Policy Management","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1108/jstpm-08-2021-0128","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"MANAGEMENT","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 4

Abstract

Purpose Entrepreneurship-oriented courses are increasingly being offered in higher education institutions (HEIs) around the world. However, in the case of Oman, where this study was conducted, little or no research has been conducted, to date, to explore the perceptions of students and faculty members regarding the entrepreneurship-oriented courses they participate in, which is a serious gap in the literature. This study aims to fill this gap by examining the beliefs and conceptions that learners and faculty at a private HEI in Muscat, Oman, had about the course entitled Entrepreneurship and New Venture Creation (ENVC). Design/methodology/approach The primary and secondary research questions are addressed using a mixed-methods approach that includes an online student questionnaire answered by 110 students who had studied the ENVC course, a focus group discussion with eight students facilitated by MS Teams and semi-structured interviews with two faculty members. Findings The findings revealed that the study participants had a very positive view of the ENVC course discussed here as they pointed to several benefits, including improved knowledge of business and entrepreneurship concepts, increased familiarity with the local business environment, development of entrepreneurial intention and improvement of their critical thinking, creativity and innovation skills. In addition, the results revealed some concerns among the participating students, particularly regarding the lack of adequate training sessions on risk management and financial planning. The participants also requested hands-on experience through industrial entrepreneurship training and in-residence-entrepreneurship programs. Research limitations/implications This study raises a number of possibilities for further research on this type of course in terms of students’ employability skills, know-how and agency when the time comes for them to enter the real world of business and employment. Future work would benefit from using a longitudinal survey on a group of alumni to triangulate and compare the various findings that were reached here. It would certainly be even more fruitful if conducted at two or more HEIs and with larger population samples to ensure broad coverage, representation and generalization. Work along these lines would certainly refine and extend our findings. Practical implications This study has significant pedagogical implications for future graduate students seeking employment, entrepreneurship course developers and faculty. Relatively, the educational outcomes of entrepreneurship education will also rely on the way entrepreneurship is being taught to students. It is recommended that entrepreneurship teaching should focus on cognitive development and active implementation of in-house incubation for well-planned innovative business ideas. This will provide opportunities for students to gain real-life experiences and identify their strengths and weaknesses, as well as the areas and skills that need to be maintained; hence, further research on the effectiveness of in-house incubation could best be considered for the next study. Another concern raised in this study is the lack of training in financial planning. Hence, further research can be considered on how to improve the financial planning skills of students for a start-up journey. Social implications This course is designed in alignment with Oman Vision 2040, which places great emphasis on entrepreneurship as it plays an important role in the planned economic diversification and sustainability, in which innovation derived from entrepreneurship development will be used as the main driver for the development of infrastructure and educational systems that encourage entrepreneurship. Moreover, the ENVC course focuses on the concept of social entrepreneurship. It inculcates a sense of responsibility for supporting the immediate society among students. Learning the perceptions of students and teachers will provide opportunities to achieve their academic goals, which will reap economic and financial returns in the long run. The development of entrepreneurial skills and intentions of students will eventually help in boosting the country’s economy and its social fabric, thus improving the overall quality of life of Omani society. Originality/value Even though this study is an exploratory investigation, the framework sets out clear empirical insights into the entrepreneurship course development, its main contents, assessments and learners’ and faculty members’ perceptions of the design, intent, content and delivery of the ENVC course and has crucial implications for all the stakeholders. The originality of this case study lies in the fact that it is the first of its kind in the body of research as it links theory to practice and will be a useful reference for entrepreneurship course developers, higher education faculty and students.
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学生和教师对创业课程的看法:来自阿曼的探索性研究
世界各地的高等教育机构(HEIs)越来越多地开设以创业为导向的课程。然而,在阿曼进行这项研究的情况下,迄今为止很少或根本没有进行研究,以探讨学生和教师对他们参加的创业导向课程的看法,这是文献中的一个严重差距。本研究旨在通过研究阿曼马斯喀特一所私立高等教育学院的学生和教师对创业和新创业创造(ENVC)课程的信念和观念来填补这一空白。设计/方法/方法主要和次要研究问题采用混合方法解决,其中包括由110名学习过ENVC课程的学生回答的在线学生问卷,由MS Teams促成的与8名学生的焦点小组讨论以及与两名教师的半结构化访谈。调查结果调查结果显示,研究参与者对ENVC课程持非常积极的看法,他们指出了几个好处,包括提高了对商业和创业概念的认识,增加了对当地商业环境的熟悉,发展了创业意图,提高了他们的批判性思维,创造力和创新技能。此外,调查结果还揭示了参与的学生的一些担忧,特别是缺乏足够的风险管理和财务规划培训课程。参与者还要求通过工业创业培训和驻留创业项目获得实践经验。研究局限/启示本研究为进一步研究这类课程提供了许多可能性,包括学生在进入商业和就业的现实世界时的就业能力、技能、知识和代理能力。未来的工作将受益于对一群校友进行纵向调查,以三角测量和比较这里得到的各种发现。如果在两所或两所以上的高等教育院校进行,并以更大的人口样本进行,以确保广泛的覆盖、代表性和泛化,肯定会更有成效。沿着这些思路工作肯定会完善和扩展我们的发现。本研究对未来研究生就业、创业课程开发者和教师具有重要的教学意义。相对而言,创业教育的教育成果也将依赖于创业对学生的教育方式。建议创业教学注重认知发展,积极实施精心策划的创新经营理念的内部孵化。这将为学生提供获得现实生活经验的机会,并确定他们的优势和劣势,以及需要保持的领域和技能;因此,最好在下一次研究中考虑进一步研究内部孵化的有效性。这项研究提出的另一个关切是缺乏财务规划方面的培训。因此,如何提高大学生创业财务规划技能值得进一步研究。社会影响本课程的设计与阿曼2040年愿景一致,该愿景非常强调企业家精神,因为它在计划经济多样化和可持续性中发挥着重要作用,其中来自企业家精神发展的创新将被用作鼓励企业家精神的基础设施和教育系统发展的主要驱动力。此外,ENVC课程侧重于社会创业的概念。它向学生灌输一种支持社会的责任感。了解学生和老师的看法将为他们实现学术目标提供机会,从长远来看,这将获得经济和财务回报。培养学生的创业技能和意愿最终将有助于促进国家经济和社会结构,从而提高阿曼社会的整体生活质量。独创性/价值尽管这项研究是一项探索性调查,但该框架对创业课程的发展、主要内容、评估以及学习者和教师对ENVC课程的设计、意图、内容和交付的看法提出了清晰的实证见解,对所有利益相关者都具有至关重要的意义。本案例研究的独创性在于,它是同类研究中的首例,因为它将理论与实践联系起来,将为创业课程开发者、高等教育教师和学生提供有用的参考。
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CiteScore
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8.70%
发文量
57
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