TY - JOUR
T1 - Baking In Purpose: How Activist Pedagogies Can Transform Entrepreneurship Education for Collective Impact
AU - Kickul, Jill
AU - Brownell, Katrina
AU - Mestwerdt, Sönke
AU - Winkler, Christoph
PY - 2025/7/31
Y1 - 2025/7/31
N2 - Entrepreneurship education stands at a crossroads. Societal challenges, such as climate collapse, deepening inequality, and systemic instability, require creative collaboration and interdisciplinary solutions. Yet, the dominant model of entrepreneurship education is grounded in venture creation-focused models that privilege economic growth as its primary determinant of success. As this approach may be insufficient to equip students for the complex realities of entrepreneurship, this editorial calls for a reexamination of the purpose of entrepreneurship education. Drawing on activist pedagogies that challenge conventional paradigms, we propose baking in social and sustainability considerations as fundamental components, rather than optional add-ons to entrepreneurship education. Activist pedagogies may offer a path to shift from extraction to regeneration, from individual gain to collective impact. Instead of teaching students how to win in a structurally imbalanced system, entrepreneurship educators must teach them how to transform it. Through a synthesis of emerging frameworks, practical strategies, and entrepreneurship education scholarship, we outline what it means to prepare agentic, critically conscious entrepreneurs and leaders for a world in crisis. Business as usual is not only outdated but dangerous, and entrepreneurship education must become a site of purpose-driven and transformative action.
AB - Entrepreneurship education stands at a crossroads. Societal challenges, such as climate collapse, deepening inequality, and systemic instability, require creative collaboration and interdisciplinary solutions. Yet, the dominant model of entrepreneurship education is grounded in venture creation-focused models that privilege economic growth as its primary determinant of success. As this approach may be insufficient to equip students for the complex realities of entrepreneurship, this editorial calls for a reexamination of the purpose of entrepreneurship education. Drawing on activist pedagogies that challenge conventional paradigms, we propose baking in social and sustainability considerations as fundamental components, rather than optional add-ons to entrepreneurship education. Activist pedagogies may offer a path to shift from extraction to regeneration, from individual gain to collective impact. Instead of teaching students how to win in a structurally imbalanced system, entrepreneurship educators must teach them how to transform it. Through a synthesis of emerging frameworks, practical strategies, and entrepreneurship education scholarship, we outline what it means to prepare agentic, critically conscious entrepreneurs and leaders for a world in crisis. Business as usual is not only outdated but dangerous, and entrepreneurship education must become a site of purpose-driven and transformative action.
KW - entrepreneurship education
KW - social/sustainability integration
KW - activist pedagogies
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/25151274251360568
U2 - 10.1177/25151274251360568
DO - 10.1177/25151274251360568
M3 - Article
SN - 2515-1274
JO - Entrepreneurship Education and Pedagogy
JF - Entrepreneurship Education and Pedagogy
ER -