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- Improving Student Entrepreneurial Skills
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Kenneth Santarelli, Cal State Fresno
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Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
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- New Methods and Tools
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Duncan Moore, University of Rochester
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Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
below.Required Entrepreneurship Courses:TEM 401 Economics, Marketing and Strategy: This course will introduce students to situationand market analysis. Students will learn how to make strategic decisions, alliances, andrelationships. It will teach students to find an unmet need and conduct proper market research tounderstand the market size, segmentation, and target customer. Finally students will develop amarketing plan and strategy for a selected technology.TEM 402 Financial Management of New Ventures: This course will introduce students to thetopics of accounting, finance, cash flow, funding sources, and exit strategies. Students will learnhow to generate a financial model, develop a balance sheet, and create deal structures. The keydeliverable for
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Cynthia Fry, Baylor University; Gregory Leman, Baylor University; William Jordan, Baylor University; Brian Garner, Baylor University; Brian Thomas, Baylor University
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Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
computer scientists and recognizing student receiving the certificate as KEEN Undergraduate TE Fellows.The purpose of the KEEN Innovators Program Initiative is to encourage the integration ofentrepreneurship concepts and skills into the engineering and computer science curricula byawarding a stipend to an Engineering & Computer Science (ECS) faculty member who developsan innovative plan for fostering the entrepreneurial mindset within the course(s) they teach. Inaddition to the stipend, the assistance of the KEEN grant team will be offered to enable use ofbest practices developed by others in the network who are building entrepreneurial skills andinsights into engineering and computer science courses. This is intended to be a
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James Green, University of Maryland
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AC 2010-413: DESIGNING AND LAUNCHING THE ENTREPRENEURSHIP ANDINNOVATION LIVING-LEARNING PROGRAM FOR FRESHMEN ANDSOPHOMORESJames Green, University of Maryland Dr. James V. Green leads the education activities of Mtech as the Director of Entrepreneurship Education with responsibilities for the Hinman CEOs Program, the Hillman Entrepreneurs Program, and the Entrepreneurship and Innovation Program. As a Senior Lecturer and Associate Director with Mtech, Dr. Green designs and teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in entrepreneurship and technology commercialization. He is Co-Director of the Certificate in Innovation Management Program for executives, and Co-Director of the Graduate Certificate in
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David Barbe, University of Maryland; James Green, University of Maryland; Dean Chang, University of Maryland
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AC 2010-44: 25 YEARS OF TECHNOLOGY ENTREPRENEURSHIPDavid Barbe, University of Maryland Dr. Barbe received B.S.E.E. and M.S.E.E. degrees in Electrical Engineering from West Virginia University in 1962 and 1964, respectively and the Ph.D. degree from The Johns Hopkins University in Electrical Engineering in 1969. After positions at Westinghouse and the Naval Research Laboratory, and the Office of the Secretary of the Navy, he joined the University of Maryland in 1985 as Executive Director of the Maryland Technology Enterprise Institute and Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering. Dr. Barbe was awarded the rank of Fellow of the IEEE in 1978 for his pioneering work on charge coupled
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Jerome Schaufeld, Worcester Polytechnic Institute; Gretar Tryggvason, Worcester Polytechnic Institute; McRae Banks, Worcester Polytechnic Institute
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Management. It is further built on the legacy teaching of the individual disciplinesbut represents a synergistic melding of the individual perspectives. This factor is an importantelement of the success of this project. The lectures are used to introduce various topics such asidentifying customer needs, opportunity recognition, role of start-ups and venture capital,innovation, and intellectual property. The discussions focus on several Harvard Business Schoolcases and text readings about technology ventures and technology entrepreneurs selected to berelevant to the course objectives. In the team project, which culminates in a report and apresentation, the students are challenged to look at a selected innovation opportunity and exploreits value
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- Improving Student Entrepreneurial Skills
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Daniel Raviv, Florida Atlantic University; David Barbe, University of Maryland
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NCIIA-sponsored project titled “Ideation toInnovation.” The goal is to design, develop and test an innovation-focused interactive programaimed at future national dissemination at different colleges and for multidisciplinary audiences. For engineers of the future, technical capability alone will no longer be a distinguishingfeature. Clearly, a broader-based educational experience must teach leadership, innovation, andentrepreneurship. There is a need to focus on thinking outside-the-box, taking risks, and beingcritical thinkers who are creative and imaginative. For the past several years, The National Collegiate Inventors and Innovators Alliance(NCIIA) has supported the development and implementation of workshops on “Invention
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Angela Shartrand, National Collegiate Inventors and Innovators Alliance; Phil Weilerstein, National Collegiate Inventors and Innovators Alliance; Mary Besterfield-Sacre, University of Pittsburgh; Katharine Golding, National Collegiate Inventors and Innovators Alliance
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evaluation methods. Her research in this area has been funded by the NSF, Department of Education, Sloan Foundation, Engineering Information Foundation, and the NCIIA. She has served as an associate editor for the Journal of Engineering Education and is currently associate editor for the Applications in Engineering Education Journal. Additionally, she co-authored the book Total Quality Management, 3rd Edition (Prentice Hall). Prior to joining the faculty, Dr. Sacre worked as an industrial engineer with ALCOA and with the U.S. Army Human Engineering Laboratory. She received her B.S. in Engineering Management from the University of Missouri-Rolla, her M.S. in Industrial Engineering from Purdue
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- Entrepreneurship and Design
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David Wells, North Dakota State University
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AC 2010-32: A MODEL FOR INTEGRATING ENTREPRENEURIALINNOVATION INTO AN ENGINEERING CAPSTONEDavid Wells, North Dakota State University David L. Wells has been Professor of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering at North Dakota State University since January 2000. He teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in process engineering and production engineering systems design and in product innovation and entrepreneurialism. His instruction is characterized by heavy reliance upon project-based, design-centric learning. Course projects are drawn from real industrial applications with real industrial constraints, often interactive with a corporate sponsor. Students are challenged to design