Thursday 27 March 2014

TEACHING ENTREPRENEURSHIP: THE ROLE OF THE SCHOOL

From school, particularly from Vocational Training, we are convinced that the future of our youth and our society has to go through to understand how global economy and business world work. Youth has to must be able to create their own professional and personal projects but School has to help them.

The academic world understands the meaning of "entrepreneurship" in the broadest sense. This concept includes from start-ups to social entrepreneurship through entrepreneurship within a created company. Therefore, the question is:

What should be the role developed by vocational training school?

Training centres understand that not everyone has to become an entrepreneur to undertake business project but we believe that our duty is to help them consider creating their own business as an alternative to be employee and awakening entrepreneurial vocations among our VET students.

It is true that teaching values ​​related to entrepreneurship, school transmit a set of values ​​such as initiative, creativity, decision-making, negotiation and teamwork, values ​​that certainly will help them in their personal and professional development outside they  develop their own business or project.

These values ​​certainly develop caring citizens while critically with economic and social reality around them.

Thus, the duty of the VET centres is participate, create, stimulate ... projects related to entrepreneurship in order to teach to students these values and skills. Fortunately, Vocational Training, and school in general, are mobilizing to teach the values ​​of an entrepreneurial culture.

The Entangle Project’s consortium is convinced that stimulate entrepreneurship among young people create better citizens while they develop new economic opportunities.


Miguel Delgado Caballero

Sunday 23 March 2014

Tien belangrijke lessen voor startups (ten important lessons for start-up companies)

(item in Dutch)

Op Failcon delen startups en andere ervaringsdeskundigen met elkaar welke fouten zij hebben gemaakt. Het achterliggende idee is dat andere startende ondernemers en zijzelf daarvan kunnen leren en vervolgens succesvoller kunnen zijn.

NUzakelijk verzamelde de tien belangrijkste lessen die de eerste Nederlandse versie van de conferentie heeft opgeleverd:

  1. Falen vormt de basis van alle startups. Succes vraagt om risico en risico leidt tot mislukkingen. Als je succesvol wilt zijn, moet je falen omarmen. (Cass Phillipps, oprichter Failcon)
  2. Niet alleen een bedrijf moet klaar zijn om gelanceerd te worden, ook de maatschappij moet er klaar voor zijn. Timing is alles. (Floris van Alkemade, investeringsbedrijf Solid Ventures)
  3. Werk samen met mensen die allemaal verschillend zijn en elkaar aanvullen. Blijf altijd investeren in je team. (Hans Rekers, managementconsultant)
  4. Als je geld ophaalt via crowdfunding, doe dan vooral aan community management. Communiceer met je geldschieters en kom je beloftes na. (Gijsbert Koren, crowdfundingadviesbureau Douw & Koren)
  5. Wees niet te eerlijk en doe jezelf niet kleiner voor dan je bent. Soms helpt het om iets net even anders te communiceren. (Janneke Niessen, Improve Digital)
  6. Begin met het absolute minimum. Ga uit van niets, haal er dan nog iets af en schrap vervolgens her en der nog wat dingen. (Daan Weddepohl, Peerby)
  7. Zeg soms 'nee' tegen mogelijkheden. Je hoeft niet op alle markten actief te zijn en je hoeft niet alle klanten aan te nemen. Focus. (Janneke Niessen, Improve Digital)
  8. Plan A zal falen. En dat geldt trouwens ook voor plan B, C en D. (Daan Weddepohl, Peerby)
  9. Falen is een werkwoord. Je kunt er beter in worden. (Niels 't Hooft, hybride schrijver)
  10. Word minder bang voor falen, want zonder fouten vindt er geen innovatie plaats. (Professor Paul Iske, oprichter Instituut voor Briljante Mislukkingen)

Friday 21 March 2014

Creative ideas need a lot of relax

"What a great idea! It's so simple and obvious, how come I've never thought of this by myself?!" Does it sound familiar? You find yourself wasting hours to think of a decent title for your essay when others seem to have the most brilliant ideas for a successful businesses with no particular efforts. Or in a science example, Archimedes made his discovery simply having a bubble bath! The truth is that breakthrough ideas are not an effortless accidental thoughts. It takes your whole life, your whole knowledge and experience which at some point of time fall into the right places giving you the "Aha!" moment or the "Bing!" solution. Thus the question is how to make all those puzzle pieces fall into the right places more often?

Scientists use advanced behavioural methods and cognitive neuroscience tools trying to find the answer. They have discovered that just before the "Aha!" moment strikes, the gamma waves flash in the brain's right hemisphere. The gamma flash demonstrates the creation of new neural pathways - the new idea. But just before that, alpha band activity occurs in the right visual cortex - area responsible for controlling our sight. Alpha waves are emitted during wakeful and relaxed mental states, usually with closed eyes limiting possible distractions. The right hemisphere of our brain is responsible for creative thinking. It is naturally suppressed by the logical left one, operating from the wake up til late night when making plans, solving issues, and being rational. And only when we stop thinking, relax, perhaps take a bath - that's when the brain sets into alpha mode and we have a chance to think outside the box without actually thinking (in a conscious and focused way).

Annette Swierzbinski (OthersAreUs.org) suggests that drawing is a great technique to awaken our right part of the brain. According to her, engagement in visual arts generates the kind of well being we experience through exercise. In her article "Paint Your Way Past Brain Freeze" she shares 3 ways to boost creativity using some paints and a brush:

* Start a day with a simple painting. Take it as a form of meditation, use vibrant colours and get kick started into a new day.
* Collaborate with others. Increase your capacity to trust, give up your ego, and accept ideas of others by giving them to finish your painting.
* Try unusual things. Paint on wood, use fingers, glue things onto the painting. Focus on the process over the product.

Entangle partner Fitin.lt invites you to join "Art Therapy" sessions conducted by our certified trainer Rūta. Playing with colours and forms you will feed your right part of the brain, tune to alpha mode and perhaps find the breakthrough answers you were looking for.

Reference: BrainWorld, issue 4, vol 3

Monday 17 March 2014

Entrepreneurship classroom activities




 The significance of teaching entrepreneurship skills is nowadays highlighted by different entities. Innovative ideas, creativity, independent work approach, finding relevant information, self-management, cooperation, team work as well as presentation and communication skills are present in almost every field. This brings challenges to the education system and classroom practices. In several countries the national curriculum recognizes the importance of the entrepreneurship skills and in some cases it has been mainstreamed to the whole curriculum. The number of separate entrepreneurship courses is also increasing.

As entrepreneurship skills can be integrated to all school subjects, there are many possibilities to practice those skills. The multidisciplinary approach to entrepreneurship gives flexibility, but it is also possible to integrate exercises, which strengthen entrepreneurship skills, to the traditional subject lessons. The participative methods and learning by doing are necessary when motivating students to entrepreneurship and lowering the barriers to try something different. In addition, it is important to create atmosphere where mistake is seen as a good opportunity to learn and not to be feared. The creative and successful ideas can be also strange and funny, but there is also risks and surprises which can´t be predicted before seeing the idea in the practice. Good example is Movember: How would you initially predict that growing mustache can lead to successful, international movement which has raised funds to improve the wellbeing of the men with prostate cancer?

To sum up, entrepreneurship skills can be taught in various practices, but continuous effort to encourage students to think independently in every lesson leads to positive attitude which makes the difference. It is advised to perform group work with incidental groups in order to ensure work with unfamiliar and new approaches. Here few examples of participative methods to activate entrepreneurship skills:
1.       Branding our school: The objective is to create a brand to the school and suitable small product (cup, t-shirt, key chain etc.), which can be given to visitors or sold to stakeholders. The starting point is to describe the personality of the school (physically, social atmosphere, people etc.) Separate groups create visual image, slogan, product etc. based on their own ideas.  After presenting all brands, the best one is elected democratically and the product is realized. The exercise can be extended to create marketing plan for the school.
2.       Brainstorming: Use activity to create incidental groups. Orientate students to brainstorming: it is important to create as many ideas as possible without thinking too much. Present the question or theme. For example if you could choose anything in the world what kind of enterprise you would create? In the group everybody participates and tells their ideas. All ideas are written to sticky notes. Then the group chooses the best idea. All groups make presentation of their idea (3 min/group). Discussion and evaluation: Which of the ideas are worth to realize?
3.       The recycling workshop: Collect used material, for example paper, cardboard, plastic, bottles, tins etc. Give the pupils the theme (festivity decoration, sculpture, miniature etc.) which should be created mainly from used materials. Variation: Give every group an imaginative word and task to create that machine or thing with the recycled material. Afterwards groups make presentation which includes explanation how the creation works and why others should buy it. The creation with most votes can get a prize.
4.       Marketing: The starting point is to analyze few existing adverts. What kind of strategies has been used? What kind of image, vision or message the advert wants to transfer? What kind of emotions it raises? How the advert tries to impact you? What kind of people are in the advert? What is the focus in the advert? After discussion give all groups some product and task to create advert about it, for example short video or poster.
5.       Solution based team work: Choose one current problem from the local, national or global level and challenge groups to create solutions to the problem. For example how to increase the healthy lifestyle, responsible consumption, decrease the use of drugs, juvenile delinquency, school absence, littering, depression. Groups have to create campaign, project or presentation. Remember!: It is necessary to touch emotional and social side of the human life to achieve successful impact. The rational reasons have less relevance.
6.       Redesign everyday object: How would you improve the usability of cutlery, coat rack, mobile phone? How would you improve your school corridor, playground or classroom?
7.       Game: Ask groups to create a game, which can be also digital if students have programming skills. Other group has to test the prototypes and give feedback in order to develop the game further. Make so many testing rounds as necessary.
8.       Fund raising event: The students have to create fund raising event or activity for the student union or for study visit. It can be for example musical, artistic or sport competition, theatre show, party with small entrance fee. The simple idea is also prepare something easy (i.e. biscuits) and sell it from door to door. Funny and social media campaigns are also fruitful.
9.       Desert island: First ask everybody individually to list 10 things they would take on a desert island to survive there. Divide students into pairs. They should discuss of their lists and negotiate common 8 things to take on a desert island. Unite students to small groups, which have to reduce the list to 6 things. Then unite bigger groups, which choose 4 things. Then groups present their lists and justify their choices to all class.
10.   Company visits, living library of local entrepreneurs or normal presentation: Prepare with the students questions for the entrepreneurs. It can be also combined to find shared project with the company or the organization.
11.   Short activities in the middle of any lesson for energizing the group:
- Paper tower: Which group builds the highest tower using only 10 pages of paper?
- Drawing, explaining, acting: Write different words on papers and separately 3 action papers with words ‘drawing’, ‘explaining’ and ‘acting’. The classroom is divided into groups. All students are at least once in the front.  They take one paper and one of the 3 action papers without seeing other side. According to the papers, the task is to draw, act or explain the word to all. The first group guessing right gets one point. Points are marked to see the competition. The activity works well in foreign language lessons too.
- Blind team work: Preparation: 15-20m ropes and scarves for all. The students are divided into groups and they have their eyes blindfolded with scarves. The groups have to make different patterns, for example square, isosceles triangle, and star.  
- Legs and arms: The groups (same number of students in each group) have to perform together tasks of increasing difficulty. For example first there can be in total 5 legs and 1 arm on the ground -> 4 legs and 2 arms -> 3 legs -> 2 legs and 1 arm -> 1 leg. 

Thursday 13 March 2014

Inclusive Entrepreneurship in Europe

The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and the European Commission (EC) launched in December 2013 the book "The missing entrepreneurs, policies for inclusive entrepreneurship in Europe".

The joint publication collects and synthesizes information and data on entrepreneurship activities in Europe, focusing on people that are at the greatest risk of social exclusion, including young people, older people, women, ethnic minorities and migrants, people with disabilities and the unemployed. 

The book describes how entrepreneurship could be made inclusive by specific policies lists interesting data and inspiring practice from the EU countries

Particularly enriching is the chapter on policies for entrepreneurship skills (pag.111-129), which examines variations in entrepreneurship skills levels and challenges across disadvantaged and under-represented groups in entrepreneurship and illustrate policy actions that help entrepreneurship skills through formal education, stand-alone training and counselling, coaching and mentoring. Some of them backed up with concrete examples (from Spain, Finland, Ireland, etc.).

Find more information in the dedicated section of the OECD website or order the paper version via the OECD bookshop.




From the OECD website:

What is inclusive entrepreneurship?
It is entrepreneurship that contributes to social inclusion to give all people an equal opportunity to start up and operate businesses. Target groups are those who are disadvantage and under-represented in entrepreneurship and self-employment, including youth, women, seniors, ethnic minorities and immigrants, disabled people and many other groups.

Why is inclusive entrepreneurship important?
Today nearly 26 million people in the European Union are unemployed and actively seeking work. One of the responses to moving people back into work is through business creation and self-employment, which is a key outcome sought from inclusive entrepreneurship policies, and with it greater labour market participation by the target population groups. 

Monday 3 March 2014

BizCanvas App online

(item text in Dutch)

Een heel bekend model om een organisatie in kaart te brengen is het business model canvas. Dit model biedt een heel gestructureerd overzicht hoe een bedrijf in elkaar zit en waar het geld mee wordt verdiend. Zo’n model bestaat simpel gezegd uit een hele boel vakjes die moeten worden ingevuld. Deze app doet dat via gele plakbriefjes die je als het ware in een vakje plakt. Het is mogelijk om de modellen te delen via Social Media of e-mail.


Deze app is gratis in de App Store.

Article source/Bron artikel: http://www.tabletsmagazine.nl/2014/02/drie-apps-die-niet-mogen-ontbreken-op-je-ipad-32/

TEACHING ENTREPRENEURSHIP: THE PEDAGOGY OF DISCOVER

In our previous article of the February 11, we asked ourselves about the teacher’s role regarding how to teach entrepreneurship.

In that commentary, we stressed to the readers the pedagogical skills’ importance. We asserted that teachers needed to know how encourage the process of learning in order to make competent workers, entrepreneurs, citizens, etc.

In this article we introduce three tools for developing the teacher’ pedagogical skills. All of them are included in the called PEDAGOGY OF DISCOVER:

·         Webquest methodology:
A webquest is an educational initiative of guided research, which mainly used Internet resources. It considers the development of basic skills, teamwork and provides individual accountability, prioritizing the construction of knowledge by transforming information into creating a product and contains a direct evaluation of the process and results.
The Webquest is a learning model based on the use of Internet and ICTs resources. The VET students do research and team working while they develop ICT skills and get knowledge. Webquest encourages them to investigate and improve their critical thinking and problem solving.
It was created by Bernie Dodge in 1.995

·         PBL methodology:
The problems based on the Learning is a didactic methodology which students build their knowledge basing on real-life problems. This methodology seeks to achieve:
o   Promoting student responsibility for their own learning
o   Working in classroom situations similar to real world
o   Developing certain skills that involve a commitment to lifelong learning.
o   Ordering and structuring information

·         Project work:
Project work is achieving knowledge and skills by analysing, interpreting, synthesizing information and doing a summary from a subject or centre of interest chosen by the student.


We think that the most interesting methodology for teaching entrepreneurship is a blended of these three methodologies highlighting the project work.


Form ENTANGLE Consortium we have developed a training program that takes into account this approach. We put the training program in the intersection of the three types of skills. We call this cross ENTANGLE UP.


Miguel Delgado
CETEI-Fundació Joan XXIII.