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The Ethics of Entrepreneurship Education
About this book
Entrepreneurship is now everywhere on college campuses: from classes and contests to accelerators and incubators spread across diverse departments and programs. These activities cultivate tomorrow's Facebooks and Googles but can also put profit in conflict with pedagogy. Should faculty keep information about student start-ups confidential? Should universities, or educators personally, invest in student start-ups? Should educators adjudicate disputes between student founders? In The Ethics of Entrepreneurship Education, Kyle Jensen addresses these questions and many others.
This book fills a significant hole in the literature and helps readers think through the everyday ethical problems that arise in campus entrepreneurship. Jensen draws on economics literature, normative ethics, the wisdom of antiquity, and stories from his own wide-ranging experience to guide the discussion, while mixing in a good deal of wit and levity. It is an invaluable resource for all those involved in campus entrepreneurship, from university educators and administrators to students, mentors, investors, donors, and alumni.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1. An Ethical Dilemma
- 2. University Investment and Involvement in Student Start-ups
- 3. Faculty Investment and Involvement in Student Start-ups
- 4. Educators as Intermediaries
- 5. Problematic Student Start-ups
- 6. Start-ups in the Classroom
- 7. Should We Even Be Teaching Entrepreneurship?
- Epilogue
- Bibliography
- Index