19 April 2024

College, youth education in entrepreneurial and business skills on the rise

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Many colleges are beginning to make career development a core aspect of the college experience, and US Daily Journal intends to aid in this by promoting USDJ Youth Entrepreneurs Workshops.

In the coming months, US Daily Journal will roll out a plan for sponsoring a number of local USDJ Youth Entrepreneur conferences to help college students and young people develop entrepreneurial and business skills so critical in the 21st Century workforce.

The programs that colleges, meanwhile, are offering include everything from ramped-up career services to academic programs emphasizing real-world applications and efforts to engage faculty in practical mentoring.

At Wake Forest University, for example, students can hedge their bets, majoring in history and balancing out Napoleon or the Prussians with a minor in.

Innovation, Creativity and Entrepreneurship is a five-year-old program at Wake Forest University and it is the school's most popular minor. It requires students to learn the basics of starting a new business.

It and programs like it at other liberal-arts colleges are new, and a sign that colleges are wrestling what it takes to ready students for a tight and rapidly shifting job market.

Job preparation and training should be part of a liberal-arts education, but some traditional educators are uncomfortable with such real-world training.

Liberal-arts schools and the tenured professors who run them have are largely  insulated from such issues. They say the benefits of a broad liberal-arts education that covers everything from art and literature to philosophy and sociology are as valuable as more market-oriented courses. Of course, those very teachers and professors don’t have to compete in the private sector – academia is very removed from the real world.

But with tuition increases far outpacing inflation and graduates entering a bad job market with record debt, students and parents are demanding a clearer—and quicker—return on their investment.

Some schools are warming to the idea of working directly with employers in the classroom, something already common on the community-college campus. And smarter colleges are helping students get a head start on such planning. Students begin planning internships and research opportunities from their first year at the school.

Some point to a risk in developing courses based on business trends or software languages. And even proponents of applied-knowledge initiatives are wary of going too far.

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