The effectiveness of entrepreneurship education in Malaysia

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Permanent URL for this page: http://hdl.voced.edu.au/10707/109549.


Author: Cheng, Ming Yu; Chan, Wai Sei; Mahmood, Amir

Abstract:

Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to trace the development of entrepreneurship education in Malaysia and to evaluate its effectiveness and limitations. Design/methodology/approach - Primary data are collected to reveal students' perceptions of the effectiveness of the entrepreneurship teaching and their knowledge about entrepreneurship. Findings - The results show that entrepreneurship education in Malaysia is not matching students' skill expectations with skill acquisition. The findings also indicate that the level of understanding on 'what is entrepreneurship' is still low among the respondents selected in this paper. Research limitations/implications - The paper only concerns students' perceptions towards the effectiveness of entrepreneurship education in their respective institutions. Results from this paper are limited in terms of their ability to demonstrate 'actual' outcomes of entrepreneurship education. Practical implications - The paper provides an important exploratory analysis of the state of entrepreneurship education in Malaysia to enable further research to be taken in the area of entrepreneurship education. The findings provide valuable insight on effective teaching methodologies in the area of entrepreneurship education. Originality/value - The paper expands the framework of Morris et al., Drucker, and Gorman et al. to provide a basis to improve the effectiveness of entrepreneurship education in Malaysia.

Published abstract reprinted by permission of the copyright owner.

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Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to trace the development of entrepreneurship education in Malaysia and to evaluate its effectiveness and limitations. Design/methodology/approach - Primary data are collected to reveal students' perceptions of the effectiveness of the entrepreneurship teaching and their knowledge about entrepreneurship. Findings - The results show that entrepreneurship education in Malaysia is not matching students' skill expectations with skill acquisition. The findings also indicate that the level of understanding on 'what is entrepreneurship' ...  [+] Show more

Subjects: Management; Research; Higher education; Teaching and learning; Evaluation

Keywords: Self development; Training evaluation

Geographic subjects: Asia; Malaysia

Published: Bradford, England: Emerald, 2009

Access item:
Publisher or alternative source

Journal title: Education + training

Journal volume : 51

Journal number: 7

Journal date: 2009

Pages: pp.555-566

ISSN: 0040-0912

Statement of responsibility: Ming Yu Cheng, Wai Sei Chan and Amir Mahmood

Resource type: Article

Call Number:
TD/TNC 97.727



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