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- Engineering Entrepreneurship and K-12 Education
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- 2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
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Donald Carpenter, Lawrence Technological University; Gregory Feierfeil, Lawrence Technological University
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Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
AC 2007-1689: CULTIVATING AN ENTREPRENEURIAL MINDSET THROUGHINTERDISCIPLINARY COLLABORATION AND NETWORKINGDonald Carpenter, Lawrence Technological UniversityGregory Feierfeil, Lawrence Technological University Page 12.426.1© American Society for Engineering Education, 2007 Cultivating an Entrepreneurial Mindset through Interdisciplinary Collaboration and NetworkingAbstractLawrence Technological University, a private institution located in the Detroitmetropolitan area, has an enrollment of approximately 3000 undergraduate students inday and evening degree programs. Unlike a majority of institutions were entrepreneurialprograms tend to originate in the college
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- Entrepreneurial Leadership and Non-traditional Ways to Engage Students in Entrepreneurship and Innovation
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- 2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
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Wilburn Clouse, Vanderbilt University
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Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
. The curriculum is a vehicle for creating learning environmentsthat foster entrepreneurial activities and develop a mindset for thinking outside of structuredsettings. The curriculum takes the position that every person has the potential to think creativelyand entrepreneurially. The current cases are as follows.Featured CasesUniversities CasesThe following eleven cases have been developed as a part of this research project. The cases areconsidered to be a work in progress until field-tested and revised. The cases are as follows:Case 1 – Blackout in America – This case is about the great electrical energy blackout thatbegan in the west and continued through the eastern part of the United States several few yearsago. The case encourages students
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- Entrepreneurial Leadership and Non-traditional Ways to Engage Students in Entrepreneurship and Innovation
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- 2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
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Karen High, Oklahoma State University; Paul Rossler, Oklahoma State University; Martin High, Oklahoma State University
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Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
an employer as graduation draws near,begin businesses within the state or join entrepreneurial firms within the state.It is unlikely that an entrepreneurial mindset of the required risk taking can be taught.But, it is likely that the skills required to make those with an inclination towardentrepreneurship more successful can be taught. In addition, a degree program thatfocuses on entrepreneurship might prove successful in: (1) attracting students into the Page 12.632.2engineering program who are seeking educational opportunities in entrepreneurship, orwho might otherwise gravitate toward other majors and (2) fostering student creativityand drive to
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- Systems Engineering and Entrepreneurship
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- 2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
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Carmo D'Cruz, Florida Tech; Shoaib Shaikh, Northrop Grumman Corporation
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Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
combining technical prowess withentrepreneurship.1 A survey of business executives and managers indicated that highly successfulengineers are not only academically astute, but also possess entrepreneurial skills.2 TheEngineers of 2020 will need to be educated as innovators, with more direct exposure to cross-disciplinary topics and the workings of an entrepreneurial economy.3 However, engineeringschools have been slow to incorporate entrepreneurship courses into the technical programs.A common complaint heard from most high tech entrepreneurs is that their entrepreneurialprojects always take more than 2X the time, 2X the money and 2X the resources than what theyplanned for at the outset.4 It has been observed that most successful high tech and
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- Critical Success Factors for Technopolis Creation
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- 2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
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Carmo D'Cruz, Florida Tech; Frank Kinney, Florida Tech; Vaidy Vaidyanathan; Tom O'Neal, University of Central Florida; Clifford Bragdon, Florida Tech; Dennis Kulonda, Florida Tech; Grisselle Centeno, University of South Florida; Jose Zayas-Castro, University of South Florida; Lynda Weatherman, Space Caost EDC
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Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
its commercialization, called the“Technopolis Phenomenon”.A Technopolis (plural Technopoleis) is a region trying to build and maintain a healthy,technology-driven economy. 1Dr. Fred Phillips (ex Austin, Texas) of the Maastrict School of Management ((Netherlands),1 anacknowledged authority and experienced expert on the Technopolis phenomenon in the US andEurope, has postulated that Technopolis regions grow by: 1. Attracting new companies 2. Nurturing existing indigenous firms 3. Encouraging entrepreneurial start-ups Page 12.423.2 4. Providing a supportive educational, social, tax, quality-of-life and cultural context for research
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- Creating a Technology Incubator and Creating a Seed Fund
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- 2007 Annual Conference & Exposition
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Thomas Duening, Arizona State University
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Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
a widerange of commercial settings. While not everyone who develops such technologies is interestedin their commercial potential, much less interested in spearheading their migration to themarketplace, the value of an entrepreneurial mindset within engineering schools has intuitiveappeal. Page 12.484.3Entrepreneurship education in higher education in the United States actually began 40 years agoin technology centric programs. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology is often cited as thebirthplace of technology entrepreneurship education.8 MIT has continued its tradition ofentrepreneurship since those early days, with technology and its