Beyond teaching : the extended role of informal entrepreneurship education and training in challenging contexts
Akullo, Grace and Fernandez, Elisa Maria Aracil and Mwaura, Samuel and McMillan, Carolyn (2024) Beyond teaching : the extended role of informal entrepreneurship education and training in challenging contexts. International Journal of Entrepreneurial Behaviour and Research. ISSN 1355-2554 (In Press)
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Abstract
Purpose: We seek to understand how informal entrepreneurship education and training (EET) processes support marginalised women in challenging institutional contexts into gainful participation in entrepreneurial activities, facilitating empowerment and emancipation. Design/Methodology/Approach: The study employs an inductive qualitative approach drawing on in-depth individual interviews, a focus group, and observation of how female informal EET educators facilitate hands-on EET to marginalised female entrepreneurs in Uganda. Findings: We specify a range of novel complementary practices that informal EET educators undertake during the main instructional EET stage and present the wraparound purposive work, both pre-and-post the instructional stage, they enact to support female empowerment processes for their disadvantaged learners. We then propose a grounded model capturing practices enacted by EET practitioners that illuminates ways in which informal EET can contribute to processes of empowerment and emancipation. Contributions: Our contributions are twofold. First, we conceptualise EET educators as institutional entrepreneurs undertaking institutional work beyond core teaching. Second, we specify a range of novel complementary practices they undertake before, during, and after the conventional instructional part. This illuminates how EET can contribute to processes of empowerment and emancipation. Originality/Value: Drawing on data from a unique institutional context, we illuminate novel practices enacted by informal EET educators thereby extending both the pedagogy and the realm of entrepreneurship education with implications for grander empowerment and emancipatory outcomes beyond the development of entrepreneurial competencies.
ORCID iDs
Akullo, Grace, Fernandez, Elisa Maria Aracil, Mwaura, Samuel and McMillan, Carolyn ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4362-5222;-
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Item type: Article ID code: 90585 Dates: DateEvent5 September 2024Published5 September 2024AcceptedSubjects: Education > Theory and practice of education
Social Sciences > Commerce > BusinessDepartment: Strathclyde Business School
Strathclyde Business School > Hunter Centre for Entrepreneurship, Strategy and InnovationDepositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 17 Sep 2024 15:03 Last modified: 17 Sep 2024 15:03 Related URLs: URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/90585