论文标题
基于STEM的企业家计划对中学女学生的企业家意图的影响
The Impact of a STEM-based Entrepreneurship Program on the Entrepreneurial Intention of Secondary School Female Students
论文作者
论文摘要
尽管在过去的二十年中付出了巨大的努力和研究,但企业家领域仍然受到对企业家计划对大学前研究水平的企业家意图的影响的几乎没有证据的知识的限制。此外,在企业家部门,尤其是以STEM为中心的企业家精神,性别平等仍然是一个问题。在这种情况下,这项研究旨在探讨一日基于女性的企业家计划(对于简洁起见,我们称其为Ozgirlsentrepreneurship计划)对中学女学生的企业家意图。该研究收集了由193名中学女学生完成的两项调查的数据,年龄在14-16岁,他们参加了Ozgirlsentrepreneurship计划。该计划鼓励女孩使用Micro:BIT设备使用物联网(IoT)组件开发和实施与社会相关问题的创造性计算解决方案。研究结果表明,年轻女学生的创业态度发展的关键因素与软技能的发展有关,尤其是在创造性思维,冒险,解决问题和领导力发展领域。有意义的人类联系的重要性,包括积极的榜样和同伴对同伴学习的重要性也是促进企业家意图的重要因素。考虑到这些因素,我们的发现强调了Ozgirlsentrepreneurship计划大大提高了中学女学生的企业家意图。此外,这项研究还提供了可行的含义和建议,可以为中学级学生开发和提供企业家教育计划。
Despite dedicated effort and research in the last two decades, the entrepreneurship field is still limited by little evidence-based knowledge of the impacts of entrepreneurship programs on the entrepreneurial intention of students in pre-university levels of study. Further, gender equity continues to be an issue in the entrepreneurial sector, particularly in STEM-focused entrepreneurship. In this context, this study was designed to explore the effects of a one-day female-focused STEM-based entrepreneurship program (for brevity, we call it the OzGirlsEntrepreneurship program) on the entrepreneurial intention of secondary school female students. The study collected data from two surveys completed by 193 secondary school female students, aged 14-16 years, who participated in the OzGirlsEntrepreneurship program. This program encouraged girls to develop and implement creative computational solutions to socially relevant problems, with an Internet of Things (IoT) component using the micro:bit device. The findings reveal that a key factor in the development of entrepreneurial attitudes in young female students is associated with soft-skills development, particularly in the areas of creative thinking, risk-taking, problem-solving, and leadership development. The importance of meaningful human connections, including positive role modelling and peer to peer learning were also important factors in fostering entrepreneurial intent. With these factors in mind, our findings highlight that the OzGirlsEntrepreneurship program substantially increased the entrepreneurial intention of secondary school female students. In addition, this study offers actionable implications and recommendations to develop and deliver entrepreneurship education programs for secondary school level students.