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DeSantis, Nick – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Harsh economic realities mean trouble for college leaders. But where administrators perceive an impending crisis, investors increasingly see opportunity. In recent years, venture capitalists have poured millions into education-technology start-ups, trying to cash in on a market they see as ripe for a digital makeover. And lately, those wagers have…
Descriptors: Technological Advancement, Higher Education, Investment, Financial Support
Mangan, Katherine – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2013
Mike Potts was halfway through a five-year prison sentence outside Houston when he heard about a program that would help him start a business when even buddies with clean records were struggling to find work. The Prison Entrepreneurship Program, run by a nonprofit group of the same name, works with Baylor University's Hankamer School of Business…
Descriptors: Employment, Distance Education, Internet, Marketing
Blumenstyk, Goldie – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Universities and their inventors earned more than $1.8-billion from commercializing their academic research in the 2011 fiscal year, collecting royalties from new breeds of wheat, from a new drug for the treatment of HIV, and from longstanding arrangements over enduring products like Gatorade. Northwestern University earned the most of any…
Descriptors: Certification, Intellectual Property, Commercialization, Research and Development
DeSantis, Nick – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
College campuses are hothouses of data, including course schedules, degree requirements, and grades. But much of the information remains spread out across software systems or locked on university servers. Start-up companies want to pry the information loose from campus servers in order to offer personalized services that could transform the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Campuses, Grades (Scholastic), Scores
Bartlett, Thomas – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
In 1974, John G. Sperling left a tenured position at San Jose State University with $26,000 in savings to start an academic program for working adults. In the beginning, he ran the operation out of his house. The program soon outgrew the house, Sperling relocated to Arizona, and the program adopted the name of that state's capital. Now the…
Descriptors: Proprietary Schools, Profiles, Entrepreneurship, Educational Development
Wasley, Paula – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Entrepreneurial ingenuity and risk taking may seem like traits that can't be taught, but colleges are increasingly attempting to do just that--and they are doing so in nontraditional contexts. Long a staple of business and M.B.A. programs, and of some engineering programs, courses in kick-starting new companies are now taking hold in research…
Descriptors: Campuses, Research Universities, Undergraduate Study, Entrepreneurship
Mangan, Katherine – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
This paper reports on an entrepreneurial camp at Texas A&M's Mays Business School for disabled veterans. The program began at Syracuse University's Whitman School of Management last year and expanded this summer to Texas A&M, the University of California at Los Angeles, and Florida State University, all of which completed camps for 16 to 20…
Descriptors: State Universities, Military Personnel, Veterans, Entrepreneurship
Wilson, Robin – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
This article reports that Gary Rhoades, who has spent his entire 22-year career at the University of Arizona studying issues that affect the professoriate, has been named general secretary of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP). Mr. Rhoades directs Arizona's Center for the Study of Higher Education. Leaders of the AAUP hope…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Labor Force, Professional Associations, College Faculty
Blumenstyk, Goldie – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
The deluge of money that private-equity investors have been pouring into buyouts of companies in all sectors of the economy is having a growing impact on higher education. Until recently, outside investors were primarily interested in the for-profit college industry, acquiring family-owned colleges and chains of colleges. Now several of those…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Trend Analysis, Entrepreneurship, Private Sector
Fischer, Karin – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
In economically struggling communities, small private colleges are helping generate development projects in large part as a matter of survival. Unlike research universities and land-grant institutions, which have long viewed regional economic development as central to their missions, most liberal-arts colleges are relative newcomers to this work,…
Descriptors: Private Colleges, Entrepreneurship, Liberal Arts, Community Development
Mangan, Katherine S. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2003
Describes the new Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering's innovative approach to engineering education, including integrating art and entrepreneurship into the curriculum. (EV)
Descriptors: Educational Innovation, Engineering Education, Entrepreneurship, Higher Education
Van der Werf, Martin – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
The Davidson Academy of Nevada may have one of the most-intelligent student bodies in America, with each student required to be in the 99th percentile on IQ or achievement tests. But these kids need room to run and jump and have someone to talk to as much as any middle schooler. The 44 students now at the academy are at the precarious stage of…
Descriptors: Gifted, Early Adolescents, Achievement Tests, Intelligence Quotient
Mangan, Katherine – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
A growing number of students are pursuing M.B.A.s in order to develop the skills they'll need to help their families' businesses prosper. Business schools are responding with a flurry of new courses that focus on the unique challenges of homegrown businesses: the patriarch who insists that the approach he inherited from his father works better…
Descriptors: Self Employment, Total Quality Management, Business Skills, Skill Development
Wilson, Robin – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2000
Reports on the increasing numbers of college and university faculty, especially in computer science and related high-technology fields, who have struck it rich in the Internet gold rush. Notes that while these newly wealthy faculty members take more time off from teaching than do average faculty members, most continue in their academic jobs,…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Computer Science, Entrepreneurship, Higher Education
Blumenstyk, Goldie – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1998
Stanford University (California) and the Yamaha Corporation have agreed to pool over 400 patents and patent applications, most involving sound synthesis, and to license them as a package along with rights to the trademark, and share the royalties. The deal builds on a 23-year relationship between Stanford and Yamaha, one which is both fruitful and…
Descriptors: Audio Equipment, Entrepreneurship, Higher Education, Patents
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