DocumentCode :
2744170
Title :
Entrepreneurship in electrical engineering education
Author :
Looney, M.S. ; Kleppe, J.A.
Author_Institution :
Interpoint Corp., Redmond, WA, USA
Volume :
2
fYear :
1996
fDate :
6-9 Nov 1996
Firstpage :
707
Abstract :
The program in entrepreneurship education offered by the Electrical Engineering Department at the University of Nevada, Reno (UNR) has as one of its courses a senior-level undergraduate course which takes a hands-on approach to teaching electrical engineering students the concepts of innovation and entrepreneurship. The basic goal is for students to experience the product development process as well as how to start a new company. The students are separated into groups and form companies known as E-teams. They generate a few product ideas, evaluate them and choose one to explore, develop the product idea into a functional prototype, and finally perform market/financial analysis to determine if the product could sustain an actual business. Once they have completed this process, the E-teams present all of their findings at a final presentation to faculty members and guests from the private industry sector. The idea is for the E-teams to experience an actual start-up process and attempt to take it to the point of soliciting financial support. While they negotiate the product development process, the E-teams are given a wide variety of lectures that provide them with valuable insight into being both effective engineers and entrepreneurs. The class fits into the engineering curriculum by offering students a capstone course, i.e. one that ties their entire college education together. This class has been extended to include MBA majors from the College of Business at UNR. This paper describes the format, content and results of teaching the class
Keywords :
educational courses; electrical engineering education; management education; product development; teaching; E-teams; Electrical Engineering Department, Nevada University, Reno, NV, USA; MBA majors; business; capstone course; company startup; electrical engineering education; engineering curriculum; entrepreneurship education; financial analysis; financial support solicitation; functional prototype; hands-on approach; innovation; lectures; market analysis; negotiation; product development process; product ideas evaluation; senior-level undergraduate course; student groups; teaching; Business; Companies; Educational institutions; Educational products; Educational programs; Electrical engineering; Electrical engineering education; Innovation management; Product development; Technological innovation;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Frontiers in Education Conference, 1996. FIE '96. 26th Annual Conference., Proceedings of
Conference_Location :
Salt Lake City, UT
ISSN :
0190-5848
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-3348-9
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/FIE.1996.573051
Filename :
573051
Link To Document :
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