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Using controlled trading projects to stimulate learning from small successes

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Using controlled trading projects to stimulate learning from small successes. / Gregory, Brian; George, Magnus; Gordon, Ian et al.
2017.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paper

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@conference{9f2334e8f6e3455a892c599824227561,
title = "Using controlled trading projects to stimulate learning from small successes",
abstract = "The global reach of so-called entretainment (Swail et al., 2014) through television programmes such as The Apprentice has created a different set of learner expectations and there is no getting away from it: when they join us, today{\textquoteright}s undergraduate students increasingly think that they know what entrepreneurship is, and how it is done. They therefore question the value of much of what we teach and how we teach it with far more incisiveness than did past cohorts. Partly in response to these new expectations, experiential approaches to teaching entrepreneurship are increasingly being adopted across university curricula at both module (Mason and Arshed, 2013) and at programme (Blackwood et al., 2015) level. The nature of experiential entrepreneurial learning has varied: whereas venture planning has been categorised as experiential (Pittaway and Cope, 2007) there is an emerging trend towards venture action too. This paper focuses on the manifestation of some aspects of entrepreneurial behaviour through the enactment of small scale trading projects",
author = "Brian Gregory and Magnus George and Ian Gordon and Riccardo Zozimo",
year = "2017",
month = oct,
language = "English",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Using controlled trading projects to stimulate learning from small successes

AU - Gregory, Brian

AU - George, Magnus

AU - Gordon, Ian

AU - Zozimo, Riccardo

PY - 2017/10

Y1 - 2017/10

N2 - The global reach of so-called entretainment (Swail et al., 2014) through television programmes such as The Apprentice has created a different set of learner expectations and there is no getting away from it: when they join us, today’s undergraduate students increasingly think that they know what entrepreneurship is, and how it is done. They therefore question the value of much of what we teach and how we teach it with far more incisiveness than did past cohorts. Partly in response to these new expectations, experiential approaches to teaching entrepreneurship are increasingly being adopted across university curricula at both module (Mason and Arshed, 2013) and at programme (Blackwood et al., 2015) level. The nature of experiential entrepreneurial learning has varied: whereas venture planning has been categorised as experiential (Pittaway and Cope, 2007) there is an emerging trend towards venture action too. This paper focuses on the manifestation of some aspects of entrepreneurial behaviour through the enactment of small scale trading projects

AB - The global reach of so-called entretainment (Swail et al., 2014) through television programmes such as The Apprentice has created a different set of learner expectations and there is no getting away from it: when they join us, today’s undergraduate students increasingly think that they know what entrepreneurship is, and how it is done. They therefore question the value of much of what we teach and how we teach it with far more incisiveness than did past cohorts. Partly in response to these new expectations, experiential approaches to teaching entrepreneurship are increasingly being adopted across university curricula at both module (Mason and Arshed, 2013) and at programme (Blackwood et al., 2015) level. The nature of experiential entrepreneurial learning has varied: whereas venture planning has been categorised as experiential (Pittaway and Cope, 2007) there is an emerging trend towards venture action too. This paper focuses on the manifestation of some aspects of entrepreneurial behaviour through the enactment of small scale trading projects

M3 - Conference paper

ER -