Enterprise education in schools and the role of competency frameworks

Draycott, Matthew and Rae, David (2011) Enterprise education in schools and the role of competency frameworks. International Journal of Entrepreneurial Behaviour & Research, 17 (2). pp. 127-145. ISSN 1355-2554

Full content URL: http://www.emeraldinsight.com/10.1108/135525511111...

Documents
Ent_Ed_paper_(Draft19)_MD_DR.Dec10.doc
Ent_Ed_paper_(Draft19)_MD_DR.Dec10.pdf
[img]
[Download]
[img] Microsoft Word
Ent_Ed_paper_(Draft19)_MD_DR.Dec10.doc - Whole Document
Restricted to Repository staff only

288kB
[img]
Preview
PDF (Word to PDF conversion (via antiword) conversion from application/msword to application/pdf)
Ent_Ed_paper_(Draft19)_MD_DR.Dec10.pdf - Whole Document

103kB
Item Type:Article
Item Status:Live Archive

Abstract

Purpose
The period 2002 - 2010 has seen significant growth in enterprise education in schools in England, accompanied by the growth of guidelines and frameworks to provide educational and assessment structures. This article explores these questions:
1. What does ‘enterprise’ mean in the context of 14-19 education?
2. What is the purpose and contribution of competence frameworks and related structures for the learning and assessment of enterprise education? How effective are they?
3. How might enterprise education frameworks evolve in response to changes in the post- recessionary economic, employment and educational landscape?

Methodology
The paper conducts a critical review of competency frameworks introduced in England to assist with enterprise education primarily for the 14-19 age group. These are compared on the basis of their educational purpose and rationale (‘why?’), their content (‘what skills and knowledge they include’), and the approaches to teaching, learning and assessment they recommend (‘how?’).
Findings
The analysis discusses the following questions to reflect on the progress and direction of enterprise education
 How broadly or narrowly should enterprise be defined? How useful is the term?
 Are the skills and related knowledge and attributes too broad or too soft?
 Is there too much emphasis on assessable outcomes, rather than how enterprising learning takes place?

Practical Implications
The paper contributes to the development of enterprise education for researchers, policymakers and practitioners in schools at an important point in the economic, educational and political cycle.
Value
Enterprise education in schools requires critique and reflection of what has been achieved, together with consideration of its future purpose, value, orientation and nature. There is a concern that the ‘delivery’ of enterprise education takes place in ways which are not ‘enterprising’ forms of learning, and that assessment drives the curriculum. Changes to definitions, frameworks and pedagogy are needed to clarify its future educational role.

Keywords:Enterprise, education, entrepreneurship, schools, curriculum, learning
Subjects:N Business and Administrative studies > N290 Management studies not elsewhere classified
Divisions:Lincoln International Business School
ID Code:4108
Deposited On:28 Feb 2011 17:16

Repository Staff Only: item control page