Women's Entrepreneurship in STEM Disciplines

Women's Entrepreneurship in STEM Disciplines
Author: Michaela Mari
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 95
Release: 2021-09-25
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 3030837920

This book presents scholarly reflections on women's entrepreneurial propensity and on women's entrepreneurship in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) fields. Contributing to a country's innovativeness and competitiveness, women entrepreneurs also promote healthy social and economic growth and act as mentors and role models for younger women. However, the low involvement of women in STEM, which begins at education, affects the share of women entrepreneurs in these fields. The authors address these issues and highlight the output of research studies by bringing together both global and country-specific evidence. Researchers and policymakers interested in advancing women's entrepreneurship, especially in STEM, will particularly benefit from this book.

Cases on STEM Entrepreneurship

Cases on STEM Entrepreneurship
Author: Cyrine Ben-Hafaïedh
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing
Total Pages: 151
Release: 2024-01-18
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1802206280

Cases on STEM Entrepreneurship provides essential insight into a nuanced collection of STEM case studies and is highly accessible for both educators and students. Importantly, it will help readers to identify with actual role models and their entrepreneurial challenges, delving into the complexities of fields such as environmental science and revolutionary modes of transport.

Foreign-Born STEM Entrepreneurship

Foreign-Born STEM Entrepreneurship
Author: Wayne Stevens
Publisher: Nova Science Publishers
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2016
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9781536102703

The STEM fields -- science, technology, engineering and mathematics -- are the source of tangible innovations in products and processes that help to spur economic growth. Though many of these advances may occur in established organizations, radical innovation has long been associated with entrepreneurial ventures. Several previous studies have shown that high-growth, high-tech STEM-based businesses in the United States are disproportionately founded by foreign-born scientists and engineers. However, recent data also suggest that immigrants rate of participation in U.S. entrepreneurship is slowing. Policies that support nascent immigrant STEM entrepreneurs may also help to improve U.S. employment rates, economic productivity, and career satisfaction among new Americans and legal permanent residents. This book investigates several explanations for differences in STEM entrepreneurship between college-educated native-born and foreign-born workers. It also explores reasons for differences in entrepreneurial participation among foreign-born workers.

The Roles of Immigrants and Foreign Students in US Science, Innovation, and Entrepreneurship

The Roles of Immigrants and Foreign Students in US Science, Innovation, and Entrepreneurship
Author: Ina Ganguli
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 248
Release: 2020-02-19
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 022669576X

The number of immigrants in the US science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) workforce and among recipients of advanced STEM degrees at US universities has increased in recent decades. In light of the current public debate about immigration, there is a need for evidence on the economic impacts of immigrants on the STEM workforce and on innovation. Using new data and state-of-the-art empirical methods, this volume examines various aspects of the relationships between immigration, innovation, and entrepreneurship, including the effects of changes in the number of immigrants and their skill composition on the rate of innovation; the relationship between high-skilled immigration and entrepreneurship; and the differences between immigrant and native entrepreneurs. It presents new evidence on the postgraduation migration patterns of STEM doctoral recipients, in particular the likelihood these graduates will return to their home country. This volume also examines the role of the US higher education system and of US visa policy in attracting foreign students for graduate study and retaining them after graduation.

Stem Entrepreneurs

Stem Entrepreneurs
Author: LaVonne Slaton
Publisher:
Total Pages: 283
Release: 2018
Genre: Engineering
ISBN:

There is a dearth of literature on STEM-educated self-employed or entrepreneurs, so this dissertation is a contribution to education, and Entrepreneurship theory and practice. The dissertation includes four studies to identify common career blueprints that individuals pursued to gain career success and job satisfaction to flourish. This mixed-methods qualitative, quantitative and quantitative-qualitative research examines what experiences effectively prepare STEM-educated majority and underrepresented minority students (URM) for the workforce when 74% of STEM-educated individuals are not employed in STEM fields (U.S. Census Bureau, 2014). Half of all majority white STEM degree holders go into a STEM job, but the likelihood is lower than 30% among underrepresented minority (URM) workers (ESA, 2011). These statistics point to the importance of educating URM STEM students with skills beyond a STEM degree to achieve career success and job satisfaction. This is concerning when government funding is focused on increasing U.S. STEM-educated in STEM fields. Study 1 is a qualitative study consisting of interviews with 38 individuals including 22 underrepresented minorities (URM) and 8 counselors whose insights were used to explore their definition and experiences of career success, education, transition into the workforce, diversity, workforce experience, and what fostered or hindered their career success. The study examines how individual experiences influence career success. The research revealed five characteristics common to career success: intrinsic satisfaction, the illusion that individuals can achieve career success based on their education alone, vocational experience, supportive guidance, and the presence of a personal champion. The research also suggests a need to educate individuals about the reality of the challenges of achieving successful careers and improvement in the career counseling process. Quantitative Study 2 focuses on job satisfaction of URM with a Bachelor's degree in STEM fields to determine if taking courses education, job-related training, research development and design work activity and self-employed entrepreneurship have a positive impact on job satisfaction. The data for this quantitative study is from the 2013 National Survey of College Graduates (NSCG) administrated by the National Science Foundation (NSF) using a random sample of 500 individuals in STEM fields. The key findings are that for STEM-educated individuals, taking college courses is negatively correlated with job satisfaction for both minorities and non-minorities, but self-employment and training improves this relationship. The relationship between work activity of research, development and design and work-related training have a positive impact on job satisfaction. These findings confirm that there is an illusion that STEM education will result in job satisfaction and success of URM which was found in the qualitative research.Studies 3A and 3B include a quantitative and qualitative mixed methods study which triangulates around the concepts of support, training, and entrepreneurship. The qualitative study 3B consists of interviews with 32 STEM-educated individuals which included 12 STEM educators, 19 underrepresented minorities (URM) and 18 STEM-educated self-employed. The results indicate that the main reasons individuals were dissatisfied with their education was that it did not prepare them for the opportunity of starting their own business and the reality of the real-world work environment was often missing from the education environment. This study explored what was essential to achieve well-being and found that Positive Emotions (P), Engagement (E), Positive Relationships (R), Meaning (M), and Achievement/Accomplishment (A) was what people wanted but the experience they had lacked these elements (Seligman, 2012). The quantitative study 3A used the same 2013 NSCG survey data from Study 2, but with two larger and separate samples of STEM-educated individuals which included 500 whites non-minority and 360 minority individuals in STEM fields who are self-employed and non-self-employed. The second quantitative study 3A confirmed the findings from Study 2 and further emphasized the importance of STEM self-employed individuals and entrepreneurs. At the institutional level, the findings indicate that educational institutions are not doing enough, and a significant issue is the lack of knowledge regarding the real-world work experience and occupations, which perpetuates the illusion that education leads to career success which affects STEM-educated and non-STEM-educated alike. However, educational institutions and employers can effectively respond with internship programs, on-the-job training and counseling. At the individual level, individuals can see their careers as a journey with issues and problems to be solved along the way, starting in school and continuing well into their careers. Educational institutions and individuals can take the initiative and find mentors and be open to conversations about the realities of the work environment. The over-arching finding that education institutions are not doing enough are unified under four key issues and the effective actions that educational institutions and individuals can take: (1) The knowledge of internships, work experience and the reality of work environment is needed; (2) Support from individuals and groups indicate that educators, employers, and individuals can institute finding mentors, creating networks and take advantage of counseling to increase success. STEM education and knowledge of STEM entrepreneurial occupations plus real-world work experience are also needed; (3) There is a synergy for career success between STEM personality characteristics and entrepreneurs. The combination of STEM plus entrepreneurship knowledge of STEM occupations and real-world work experience in education is potent for career success. There are some important overlaps between characteristics developed in STEM education and characteristics useful to entrepreneurial initiatives and success. This is a critical finding of this dissertation since there is a dearth of studies connecting the two areas; and (4) The main findings are about URMs and the challenges they face. STEM education is a path to higher earnings, but institutional discrimination, the need to prove oneself, the lack of conversation about the challenges faced, and inflexibility in STEM work environments impede success. The implications for URM individuals is based on interviews about overcoming challenges and their entrepreneurial pursuits. The findings in this dissertation suggest that the institutional actions would benefit URMs' career success at least as much as non-minority members, if not more.The distinct differences between minorities and non-minorities are that URM and women interviewed express the craving and need for knowledge, support, and encouragement to be confident in a world where people of color and women are discriminated against, experience prejudice and inequality. They discussed the challenges of needing to work smarter, fastest and harder than everyone else, and still experience challenges which made entrepreneurship a vital avenue for success. Non-minorities were not concern about needing support, encouragement or confidence. Non-minorities greatest concerns were gaining knowledge to create opportunities and advancement. There was no discussion of challenges of discrimination or prejudice that prevented them from advancement, career success, and job satisfaction for non-minorities although they were asked the same question. The distinctions between minorities and non-minorities must be addressed to overcome inequalities, and this can start with having dialogs about the reality of the challenges and support needed by both to increase knowledge. Both groups yearn for knowledge which supports the research finding that the knowledge from training can increase job satisfaction for minorities and non-minorities. There are important intersections between characteristics developed in STEM education and entrepreneurial initiatives and success. This STEM knowledge base can create more opportunities and aid in achieving global goals to save and change lives. Study 3B develops a Blueprint for STEM Entrepreneurs by drawing together the findings of: Education, Knowledge, Personality Characteristics, Support, Opportunity, Challenges, Entrepreneurship and PERMA which is an acronym for the five essential elements of well-being: Positive Emotions (P), Engagement (E), Positive Relationships (R), Meaning (M), and Achievement/Accomplishment (A) (Seligman, 2012). Many have discovered a combination of skills of human capital that gives them a path to follow and a job or business to create. Overall, the four studies in this dissertation contribute to theory, practice and improving educational institutions, government STEM-funded programs, and businesses. This dissertation provides insights to assist with workforce management knowledge and skills to increase the number of diverse workers and identifying the positive and negative factors that impact job satisfaction for minorities and non-minorities. Considering the volatile political support of STEM programs and economic changes, the U.S. requires not just more STEM graduates, but also STEM URM graduates educated with skills and experiences to expand their employment opportunities to become entrepreneurs as well as employees to achieve job satisfaction and career success. To expand opportunities, this requires an improved educational institution that offers skills far beyond a narrow STEM education curriculum. STEM entrepreneurship is vital to our society and the U.S. economy, so it is imperative to identify what influences STEM-educated individuals to achieve success. This thesis is intended to enhance theory-building research

Teaching ESL and STEM Content through CALL

Teaching ESL and STEM Content through CALL
Author: Abdelilah Salim Sehlaoui
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 293
Release: 2018-10-15
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1498555640

English Learners (ELs) are left behind in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM). The growing need for effective critical pedagogical competence (CPC), critical technological competence (CTC), and critical cross-cultural communicative competence (C5) in teachers who serve ELs has become more evident because of the increasing numbers of ELs and the global socio-economic, and technological developments. C5, which encompasses CTC and CPC, is defined in the book as the teacher’s ability to communicate effectively across cultures with diverse individuals. An educator who possesses C5 is able to critically understand the power relations and importance of the socio-economic and political contexts in any human encounter and the ability to make connections with real life to teach STEM content successfully. The book provides teachers of ELs with a research-based framework using classroom-tested Computer-assisted Language Learning and Teaching (CALL) programs to empower themselves, through a practical reflective self-professional development component, as they help their students succeed academically in STEM. A critical pedagogical and a genre-based communicative approach is used to achieve this goal by teaching vocabulary, grammar, reading, writing, listening, and speaking. These key English language skills are given special attention in the book while supporting ELs’ native literacies and STEM education. Throughout the book, the critical pedagogical approach focuses on the socio-economic context of education and makes connections between life in the classroom and real life. Research on successful STEM schools indicates that cultivating partnerships with industry, higher education, nonprofits, museums, and research centers is crucial for engaging students in STEM learning through internships, mentorships, interdisciplinary project-based learning, and early college experiences. To cultivate these partnerships and engage ELs in STEM requires educators to possess a C5. From an interdisciplinary approach, the book's argument is supported by insights gained from research in various fields of inquiry. The book offers practical detailed lesson plans, hands-on reflective inquiry activities, classroom vignettes, rubrics and research-based criteria to evaluate practice, strategies, and CALL programs and resources, that are either very inexpensive or free of charge. The main goal of the book is to develop students’ English proficiency and help ELs maintain their native literacy to succeed academically in STEM content areas.

Sustainability and the Future of Work and Entrepreneurship for the Underserved

Sustainability and the Future of Work and Entrepreneurship for the Underserved
Author: Rolle, JoAnn Denise
Publisher: IGI Global
Total Pages: 452
Release: 2022-06-24
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1668443244

Disparity in the workplace has been exacerbated in recent years as society faces a number of challenges in promoting inclusion and equality across fields. To ensure appropriate steps are taken to move in the direction of a diverse and equitable future for the workforce, further study and consideration on the key challenges, opportunities, and strategies for advancing business policy to provide for the underserved is required. Sustainability and the Future of Work and Entrepreneurship for the Underserved highlights marginalized labor and entrepreneurial market segments and reviews strategies used to prepare for technological change globally. The book also provides a series of recommendations to assist in growing and sustaining a more inclusive global society. Covering a range of topics such as disparities, class challenges, and entrepreneurs, this reference work is crucial for policymakers, business owners, managers, researchers, academicians, scholars, instructors, and students.

From Science to Startup

From Science to Startup
Author: Anil Sethi
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 249
Release: 2016-04-13
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 3319304240

This book charts the experiences, pitfalls and knowledge behind leading scientific ideas to successful startups. Written by one of Switzerland's top serial entrepreneurs, this book is a must-read for scientists and academicians who want to see their idea turn into a product and change the market. It is also pertinent for finance and business professionals who aspire to become technology entrepreneurs. Starting with personal qualities of an entrepreneur, Anil Sethi discusses successful ideas, technology evaluation, team formation, patents and investor expectations. To guide the entrepreneur, this book also analyzes deal closing, equity conversion and ideal exit strategies to follow. Ultimately Anil Sethi reveals the 'inside track' which helps understand what drives entrepreneurs and what they wouldn't admit.

High-growth Women’s Entrepreneurship

High-growth Women’s Entrepreneurship
Author: Amanda Bullough
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing
Total Pages: 224
Release: 2019-12-27
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1788118715

Women’s entrepreneurship is vital for economic and social development, yet female entrepreneurs worldwide are consistently found to have weaker sales and employment growth, fewer jobs, and lower profitability. This book was written to address this reality, and focuses on the high-growth potential of women entrepreneurs.

Contextual Heterogeneity in Entrepreneurship Research

Contextual Heterogeneity in Entrepreneurship Research
Author: Laveren, Eddy
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing
Total Pages: 192
Release: 2021-09-07
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1802200207

This insightful book explores the importance and influence of contextual heterogeneity in the field of entrepreneurship research, illuminating the circumstances, conditions or environments that may enable or constrain entrepreneurship.