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Crossing Boundaries and Redefining Roles: Humanists as Academic Entrepreneurs

Crossing Boundaries and Redefining Roles: Humanists as Academic Entrepreneurs We present an adaptive approach to academic entrepreneurship that we show to be successful for faculty working in humanities departments at public regional Master’s universities. At such institutions, faculty need to forge new roles as entrepreneurs that center on pedagogical concerns and student learning so that their work can be recognized as legitimate by colleagues and contribute to their central roles as teachers and scholars. Additionally, because these institutions offer less robust, established support for such endeavors, faculty need to cross numerous boundaries and locate resources and assistance from a variety of campus offices and institutional initiatives. Our article outlines two pilot entrepreneurial projects that we incorporated into professional and technical writing internships and courses that can serve as exemplars for faculty who seek to pursue entrepreneurial activities within similar institutional contexts. Keywords: academic entrepreneurship; boundaryless careers; regional Master’s university; humanities; higher education JEL codes: I23; L26 http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png American Journal of Entrepreneurship Addleton Academic Publishers

Crossing Boundaries and Redefining Roles: Humanists as Academic Entrepreneurs

American Journal of Entrepreneurship , Volume 9 (2): 22 – Jan 1, 2016

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Publisher
Addleton Academic Publishers
Copyright
© 2009 Addleton Academic Publishers
ISSN
2164-9685
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

We present an adaptive approach to academic entrepreneurship that we show to be successful for faculty working in humanities departments at public regional Master’s universities. At such institutions, faculty need to forge new roles as entrepreneurs that center on pedagogical concerns and student learning so that their work can be recognized as legitimate by colleagues and contribute to their central roles as teachers and scholars. Additionally, because these institutions offer less robust, established support for such endeavors, faculty need to cross numerous boundaries and locate resources and assistance from a variety of campus offices and institutional initiatives. Our article outlines two pilot entrepreneurial projects that we incorporated into professional and technical writing internships and courses that can serve as exemplars for faculty who seek to pursue entrepreneurial activities within similar institutional contexts. Keywords: academic entrepreneurship; boundaryless careers; regional Master’s university; humanities; higher education JEL codes: I23; L26

Journal

American Journal of EntrepreneurshipAddleton Academic Publishers

Published: Jan 1, 2016

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