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Creative Partnerships for Entrepreneurship Education Consortium for Entrepreneurship Education Conference November 5, 2007 Genelle Taylor California State University, Fresno. Lyles Center for Innovation & Entrepreneurship. Campus-wide center established in 2003
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Creative Partnerships for Entrepreneurship Education Consortium for Entrepreneurship Education Conference November 5, 2007 Genelle Taylor California State University, Fresno
Lyles Center for Innovation & Entrepreneurship • Campus-wide center established in 2003 • Bridge between community and campus resources • Offer programs and services for entrepreneurs, students and innovators of all ages
K–12 Programs • Kids Invent! After School and Summer Programs • Central Valley Entrepreneur Leadership Program (CVELP) • National Foundation for Teaching Entrepreneurship (NFTE)
Kids Invent! Programs • 90-minute afterschool program, K-8 • Learn science, math, creativity & entrepreneurship through toy invention • Promotes life-long creativity and builds skills that will make them successful in the future • Curriculum meets many of the California State Science & Math Standards
CVELP • High School business plan competition • Market to 8 county area • Teams of students from each high school come to Fresno State campus 7 times year • Workshops by faculty & entrepreneurs • Business plan competition • Cash prizes • Limo back to their home school
NFTE • Founded in 1987 • Headquartered in NYC • Provides entrepreneurship education programs to young people from low-income communities • Entrepreneurship Education –curriculum covers: Math, English, Leadership, Technology
NFTE – Current Status in Central Valley 6 High Schools 10 CET’s 10 additional CET’s in January 2008
The Problem • Large population of at-risk students • Large number of schools being taken over by the state because of AYP results • Drop out rates as high as 30%
The Solution • Proven track record with reaching at-risk students • Proven track record with reaching those that struggle to meet the standards in traditional coursework • Focus in on real-world application • NFTE participants make the same academic skill connection, in a different setting; experiential learning. • Evaluation results: program effectiveness and impact
The Solution (cont’d) • Partner with schools, universities and community-based organizations • Train and support teachers and youth workers • Create innovative, experiential curricula • Provide supportive alumni services
Program Partners • Fresno County Office of Education • Individual Schools • School of Education – CSUF students • Community Corporations & Private Donors • Scholarships, food and prize donations • NFTE Corporate & Bay Area • Coleman Foundation Grants
The Next Level • Taking Entrepreneurship Education a step further • Creation of Entrepreneurial Pathway
Entrepreneurship Pathway Vision: The Pathway vision is to produce a higher yield of sustainable business start-ups in communities around the Central Valley. Mission: To bring consistency and unity to the delivery of entrepreneurial education at high school, community college and four year institutions • Collaboration between institutions and faculty members • ex: Articulation agreements • Training and support to faculty members teaching entrepreneurial courses • Opportunities for students to participate in national conferences and on campus student entrepreneurship organizations
Entrepreneurship Pathway • Knowledge • Business Plans • Opportunity • Operations • Finance • Marketing • Skills • Vision • Leadership • Team Building • Networking • Selling • Action • Idea Feasibility • Product Development • Investor Pitch • Launch • Growth Entrepreneur High School 2-year College 4-year College New Venture Creation and Growth INCUBATION
Pathway Partners • Coleman Foundation • Lyles Center • National Association for Community College Entrepreneurship (NACCE) • National Foundation for Teaching Entrepreneurship (NFTE)
Progress To Date • Held kick off meeting with Community Colleges • Buy-in from 10 campuses • Identified first 5 campuses • Coleman Scholars • Hired evaluator, NACCE representative & necessary staff for implementation
Future Outlook • Articulation of high school curricula • Common curricula at 2 year and 4 year colleges, leading to… • Common skill development resulting in … • Application of skills and knowledge • Emphasis on action – launching a business • Incubators to help a new business grow and succeed
Future Outlook (cont’d) • Take the model to other areas for replication • Lead to more successful entrepreneurial start ups nation-wide
Questions? Genelle Taylor 559.347.6832 genellet@csufresno.edu