TY - JOUR
T1 - Building Entrepreneurship across the University
T2 - Cross-Campus Collaboration between Business and Engineering
AU - McCarver, Debra
AU - Jessup, Len
AU - Davis, Denny
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2010, Copyright The Journal of Small Business and Entrepreneurship.
PY - 2010/1/1
Y1 - 2010/1/1
N2 - Both Washington State University (WSU) and the state of Washington have a rich, entrepreneurial history. Seeking to capitalize on that strength, leaders at WSU sought to create cross-campus partnerships in the hopes that they could better educate and train tomorrow's entrepreneurial leaders. Perhaps the best operationalization of that vision is the Frank Institute, a partnership between the business school's Center for Entrepreneurial Studies and the College of Engineering and Architecture's Harold Frank Engineering Entrepreneurship Institute. The Frank Institute selects 12 promising business and engineering students each year to undertake an invigorating yearlong program designed to teach the students how to launch new technology ventures. Now going into its fifth instantiation, the Frank program has enabled students, faculty, and university leaders to learn a great deal about the benefits of multidisciplinary teaching of technology entrepreneurship. In this case study, we discuss how cross-campus collaborative efforts at WSU were achieved, how the award winning Frank Fellows program operates, and some lessons learned from the success and challenges with this approach to cross-campus collaboration in entrepreneurship education.
AB - Both Washington State University (WSU) and the state of Washington have a rich, entrepreneurial history. Seeking to capitalize on that strength, leaders at WSU sought to create cross-campus partnerships in the hopes that they could better educate and train tomorrow's entrepreneurial leaders. Perhaps the best operationalization of that vision is the Frank Institute, a partnership between the business school's Center for Entrepreneurial Studies and the College of Engineering and Architecture's Harold Frank Engineering Entrepreneurship Institute. The Frank Institute selects 12 promising business and engineering students each year to undertake an invigorating yearlong program designed to teach the students how to launch new technology ventures. Now going into its fifth instantiation, the Frank program has enabled students, faculty, and university leaders to learn a great deal about the benefits of multidisciplinary teaching of technology entrepreneurship. In this case study, we discuss how cross-campus collaborative efforts at WSU were achieved, how the award winning Frank Fellows program operates, and some lessons learned from the success and challenges with this approach to cross-campus collaboration in entrepreneurship education.
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U2 - 10.1080/08276331.2010.10593515
DO - 10.1080/08276331.2010.10593515
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84890689390
SN - 0827-6331
VL - 23
SP - 761
EP - 768
JO - Journal of Small Business and Entrepreneurship
JF - Journal of Small Business and Entrepreneurship
IS - sup1
ER -