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Generalist or specific studies for engineering entrepreneurs? Comparison of French engineering students' trajectories in two different curricula

Yifan Wang (School of Economics and Management, Southwest Jiaotong University, Chengdu, China)
Caroline Verzat (ADVANCIA, Paris, France)

Journal of Small Business and Enterprise Development

ISSN: 1462-6004

Article publication date: 17 May 2011

996

Abstract

Purpose

French engineering students are traditionally reluctant to envisage entrepreneurship. Can a new engineering school aimed at fostering entrepreneurship reverse this trend? The purpose of this paper is to compare the development of engineering students' entrepreneurial intentions and perceived career orientation of the prestigious engineering training schools (Ecole Centrale de Lille) and ITEEM, whose curriculum is dual (engineering+management), new and based on active pedagogies.

Design/methodology/approach

This study is based on qualitative analysis of 12 in‐depth interviews and quantitative longitudinal analysis of data obtained from a questionnaire administered each year to all students from both schools.

Findings

Results show that ITEEM fosters students' entrepreneurial and project management careers, whereas Centrale promotes the traditional technical model of an engineer. Family background of students is close in both schools. Level of entrepreneurial intention at enrolling is higher at ITEEM than Centrale but cannot fully explain why entrepreneurial career orientations decrease at Centrale while they increase at ITEEM. On the other hand, perception of school culture is weak at Centrale and strong at ITEEM and this difference is significantly with regard to the development of students' career orientation. Qualitative interviews indicate that both cultures highlight different elements.

Research limitations/implications

The cultural element can then be proposed as a new factor to take into account when studying the impact of entrepreneurship education. However, this result is based here on a simple measure of school culture perception and qualitative interviews. It should be confirmed by a more detailed quantitative analysis of cultural and organizational characteristics of educational institutions.

Practical implications

Engineering schools can foster entrepreneurial orientations if their educational culture is perceived as new and innovative by students. This can be achieved through a new curriculum based on a wider set of courses (management, entrepreneurship and engineering) and the systematic deployment of active pedagogies such as project work and internships. A new question arises: can such a perception of innovation be maintained over time?

Originality/value

In the theoretical literature, culture is considered to be an essential element that can have an impact on entrepreneurial career aspirations and intentions. But as yet, no empirically based study had been carried out to prove it.

Keywords

Citation

Wang, Y. and Verzat, C. (2011), "Generalist or specific studies for engineering entrepreneurs? Comparison of French engineering students' trajectories in two different curricula", Journal of Small Business and Enterprise Development, Vol. 18 No. 2, pp. 366-383. https://doi.org/10.1108/14626001111127124

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2011, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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