Music Students’ Definitions, Evaluations, and Rationalizations of Entrepreneurship
Journal article, Peer reviewed
Accepted version
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Date
2019Metadata
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Original version
10.1080/10632921.2019.1646178Abstract
Entrepreneurship education in higher music education has grown rapidly, yet little is known about what music students think of entrepreneurship. Using a qualitative description approach guided by analytic rigor, we present results from a survey of 114 music students. Respondents most commonly define entrepreneurship as “self-employment” as introduced by McClelland, with a Schumpeterian theme of “innovation and disequilibrium” following behind. Fifty-two percent of respondents value entrepreneurial skills as important for their careers; forty-three percent do not know if entrepreneurial skills are important for their careers. Finally, we discuss how they rationalize these evaluations. Implications for educators and practitioners are discussed.