Future entrepreneurs at BGSU today
BOWLING GREEN, O. -- A grant from the most distinguished name
in entrepreneurship education will help move Bowling Green
State University from entrepreneurial upstart to startup authority.
The $50,000 award from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation
of Kansas City, Mo., will expand the entrepreneurship program
at BGSU to include an undergraduate minor. Plans also include
establishing a center for entrepreneurship that would provide
training and other programs as an outreach to the business
community.
The foundation, established in the mid-1960s by the late entrepreneur
and philanthropist Ewing Marion Kauffman, works with partners
to encourage entrepreneurship across America and improve the
education of children and youth.
Tomorrows entrepreneurs are in the labs and classrooms
of colleges today, said Carl Schramm, president and
CEO of the Kauffman Foundation, when announcing the grant.
We believe college campuses are an ideal place to reach
future entrepreneurs, those leaders who, through their ideas
and innovations, will continue to fuel our economy.
Out of more than 300 proposals submitted, BGSU was one of
52 colleges and universities chosen to receive funding. Each
recipient must match the award. A complete listing of all
institutions receiving grants is posted at the foundations
Web site at www.emkf.org.
Bowling Greens proposal impressed the foundation because
of how quickly and innovatively the Universitys program
was developed, said Tony Mendes, director of initiatives in
college entrepreneurship for the Kauffman Foundation. We
liked how Bowling Green is attempting to open entrepreneurship
to all students who are interested, not just business students,
he said.
The grant for BGSU will go toward faculty and curriculum development
and teaching of courses for the minor in entrepreneurship.
Dr. Nancy Merritt, an associate professor of marketing and
associate dean of undergraduate studies in the College of
Business Administration, noted that an introductory course
in entrepreneurship was first offered at BGSU last fall, an
entrepreneurial finance course is offered this semester, and
an entrepreneurial leadership and teams course will be offered
this summer. The goal is for students to be able to graduate
with the minor by spring 2004.
After benchmarking numerous recognized national entrepreneurship
programs, the college established a program that will help
non-business students to get the business background
to be successful in entrepreneurial ventures, Merritt
said. The research found most entrepreneurs do not graduate
with business degrees.
At the same time, the exposure to entrepreneurswhether
as speakers, employers offering internships, mentors or possibly
teachersshould help business majors become more innovative
and imaginative, she said, adding, in business, we need
to bring out more of that creative side.
Availability of entrepreneurial training to non-business majors
will aid BGSUs recruitment of such students, as well
as job placement of some of the many graduates who go to work
for businesses or organizations that are startups, Merritt
predicted.
In essence, the minor allows students in all curricular areas
to pursue their passion while receiving a fundamental knowledge
of business techniques. Receiving a grant from the Kauffman
Foundation provides a tremendous amount of credibility
to the program, noted Timothy Koder, director of major gifts
in the Universitys Office of Development.
Were going to work very hard to demonstrate to
the Kauffman Foundation that this initial investment was quite
worthwhile, added Dr. James McFillen, associate dean
of graduate studies in business at BGSU.
(Posted March 28, 2003)
|