November 2011 newsletter
Encouraging young entrepreneurs
These days, the subject of entrepreneurship is big news. The solution to almost everything, it seems, is to create new businesses — and young people's energy and ideas are increasingly sought after. But that's where the agreement ends. What's the best way to encourage young entrepreneurs? And how can colleges and universities help all students and alumni, not just business majors, think about entrepreneurship differently?
Several of Minnesota's private colleges are taking unique approaches to facilitating entrepreneurship on campus. The ultimate goal of the efforts, whether they take the form of a competition, a center devoted to small businesses or an academic major, is "to create more of an entrepreneurial culture," said David Deeds, the Schulze Chair of Entrepreneurship at the University of St. Thomas' Schulze School of Entrepreneurship.
Deeds sees the spate of new programs and centers promoting entrepreneurship as part of a larger trend. "In the 1990s, most of the major business schools had one entrepreneurship course in their MBA program. In the last decade, most graduate and undergraduate business programs have added a fuller spectrum of entrepreneurship courses," he said. From there, even non-traditional business schools have added coursework, programming and other efforts to encourage entrepreneurship.
What is driving this emphasis? Shane Bowyer, a professor of business administration at Bethany Lutheran College, sees efforts to foster young entrepreneurs as driven in part by tough economic conditions and fewer jobs. "Lots of students are going to school to get a job but don't realize that entrepreneurship is an option that's out there," he said.
And most institutions encouraging entrepreneurship realize that it's a subject that shouldn't be limited to just business students. Trevor Hall, the director of the Kabara Institute for Entrepreneurial Studies at Saint Mary's University of Minnesota, said that from the time it began in 2005, the focus of the Institute was to involve any interested student in entrepreneurial activities it sponsors. "The founder of the Institute, an alumnus, was a scientist. He didn't want this to be just for business majors. He believed that the spirit of innovation needs to be there for all students, including science majors and others."
A twist on the entrepreneurship major
One field that has been recognized as having many
entrepreneurs is art — and in many ways, the creative spirit artists possess is
an asset for entrepreneurs in general. At the Minneapolis College of Art and
Design (MCAD), a Bachelor of Science in Entrepreneurial Studies has been
offered for about 13 years, said Jerry Allan, chair of the B.Sc. program and a
professor. It provides "an entirely different way to look at and do business,"
he said, and can supplement a student's chosen artistic medium or stand alone.
"The program is perfect for students who say, 'I always wanted to go to a
creative school but I didn't want to be an artist,'" he said.
As a project-based program, students begin devising solutions to various issues faced by their clients' businesses or organizations early on. Emphasizing teamwork, collaboration with students across departments and a sustainable global outlook, students currently have clients on five continents.
One recent student project involved collecting 50,000 books to send to Gambia — and then working with MCAD furniture designers to design a bookshelf to be made from the crates the books are sent in. Other projects include designing green roofs, a student taking over an organic farm and students starting a portable ice cream vendor business that travels around the South Minneapolis lakes. "These are not theoretical classroom projects, but real-world projects with real-world clients; that's what really makes it unique," Allan said.
Centers for innovation on campus
The idea of having a center devoted to entrepreneurship on campus has been embraced by several Minnesota private colleges. However, while their goals of exposing students to entrepreneurship are similar, the models used by Saint Mary's University of Minnesota and Bethany Lutheran College are quite unique.
Bethany's partnership with the Regional Center for
Entrepreneurial Facilitation (RCEF), a local entrepreneurship center, is new to
campus. RCEF is a nonprofit organization that is both state- and county-funded — and since it had been assisting existing small business owners and
entrepreneurs in the start-up phase for years, having students work on projects
there seemed the perfect way to facilitate hands-on learning, Bowyer said.
This week, students from several business classes will help RCEF host its open house; students have also begun helping with the center's rebranding by planning a focus group. Graphic design students will also be assisting in the creation of a new RCEF logo. In the spring, the center will have its first intern.
"There will be lots of new opportunities for students from different majors," Bowyer said. "Entrepreneurship is one of those things where a student could be in theatre or graphic design, too. It's not just business majors that need to think creatively and communicate well."
Bowyer noted that several Bethany students have already become entrepreneurs as undergraduates; one student has a freelance film business and designed a commercial for the Mankato Convention and Visitors' Bureau; another books gigs as a DJ. Both students use Bethany's equipment for their work, keeping costs low.
At Saint Mary's, the Kabara Institute also provides hands-on opportunities for students and alumni to learn about entrepreneurship, said Hall. The Institute organizes business plan competitions, workshops for non-majors to learn about entrepreneurship and elevator pitch competitions. In addition, it brings speakers like Dave Anderson (founder of Famous Dave's restaurant chain) and Jake Leinenkugel (president of Leinenkugel Brewing Company) to campus.
But the aim of the Institute is also to help current students and alumni get small businesses off the ground. One alumnus who recently sought out the Institute's assistance is Tucker Robeson '09, who owns a business that helps trucking companies better manage employees and avoid high turnover rates. Hall said he helped Robeson with his business plan and assisted him in making calls to potential clients — and the efforts paid off. Robeson's company landed a large trucking company as a client and is now making a profit.
Hall, who owns a wholesale coffee roasting business, said the kinds of tasks he helped Robeson with are just what the Institute was designed to do. "If they see the opportunity, we can give them the skills and assistance to make it happen."
A low-risk way to innovate
For three years, students at St. Thomas have had the chance
to participate in an innovative contest that helps minimize the risk involved
with starting a small business. The Fowler Business Concept Challenge was
designed by an alumnus who wanted to support entrepreneurship at his alma
mater. The Challenge, which Deeds facilitates, took place last month and
offered $39,000 in scholarships. In all, 85 students or teams submitted their
ideas; four teams in the graduate and undergraduate divisions took home
scholarships ranging from $1,000 to $10,000 per person. "This is different than
a business plan contest because that requires students to submit a 40-page
plan; this only requires five pages," Deeds said.
Already, four projects submitted in previous years of the Challenge are moving forward with their businesses — and one, a website for job seekers, just signed its first client. This year, winning projects included a variable-camber wheelchair and a website for swapping tickets, among others.
"Every year, not only have we had more submissions, but the quality of the projects gets substantially better," Deeds said. "We had the executive director of the Minnesota Angel Network [a program that links entrepreneurial companies with investors] attend this year and he said that the projects he saw were as good or better than those he encounters in his work."
Deeds sees the competition as part of a larger commitment to entrepreneurship at St. Thomas, he said. In addition to the Schulze School, both the undergraduate business major and MBA programs offer business classes focusing on the challenges of starting and growing a business, as well as marketing classes that concentrate on negotiating around established distribution channels.
"When you put it all together with the other classes students take, you're building not only effective managers but entrepreneurs for a modern, technology-based economy," Deeds said.
By Erin Adler, Communications Associate
High school grad profile changing
If you're wondering how the pool of high school graduates will be changing in the next decade, a new report provides some answers. The National Center for Education Statistics projects that the number of public high school graduates will drop 1% nationally between 2007-08 and 2020-21.
The number of graduates in Minnesota is also projected to decrease 1% during this period — to 59,900 students in 2021. In the shorter term, however, the state will reach its low point in 2013-14, when the number will be 9% lower than in 2007-08.
Neighboring states will experience more dramatic declines by 2020-21. The number of high school graduates will be down 5% in Iowa, down 22% in Michigan, down 13% in North Dakota and down 8% in Wisconsin. South Dakota is the exception, with an 11% increase expected by 2020-21. Across the rest of the country, the trend varies with number of graduates generally increasing in Western and Southern states and decreasing in the Northeast, Midwest and Florida.

The bigger change ahead will be in the composition of potential future college students. When the number of Minnesota high school graduates begins to rise again in 2014, it will be a more racially and economically diverse group. The percent of graduates receiving subsidized lunch (an indicator of lower income families) will increase from about 32% in 2011 to 40% in 2020. Students of color are projected to grow from 18% of graduates in 2011-12 to 30% in 2020-21. National data show similar trends.
These demographic changes will have implications for Minnesota's labor force — since currently, students of color attend and graduate from college at lower rates than do white students. For example, four years after starting college in Minnesota, 43% of white students will graduate from college compared to 34% of students of color. Participation and completion gaps between white students and students of color may be attributed to high school education and preparation, family income, being a first-generation student or knowledge of availability of financial aid. Recent research by The Education Trust notes that wide gaps in graduation rates can be closed when institutions set goals and dedicate resources.
A steady supply of college-educated workers will be vital to the economic health of our state. Unless we act together to improve college-going and persistence among lower income students and students of color, Minnesota will have an inadequately educated workforce in the coming years.
A strategic investment in students
College of Saint Benedict senior Jeenah Archambault has participated in psychology research projects, plays intramural volleyball and has a work-study job at the dining hall. One reason she's been able to take full advantage of opportunities at Saint Ben's is her scholarships, including the Tennant Foundation Diversity Scholarship.
Ben Yawakie, a sophomore at Augsburg College, is working toward his dream of being a doctor. He does biology research with his professors and plans to shadow an emergency room doctor in the upcoming semester. Without the help of scholarships, he wouldn't be able to do either. "If I hadn't received the Galileo Scholarship, I wouldn't have been able to engage with my professors nearly as much, because I would have been working — a lot," he said.
Archambault and Yawakie were two of eight scholarship
recipients who recently had the chance to express their gratitude in
person. Along with college presidents and other members of the Council's board,
they gathered with donors on Oct. 26 to thank them for their support.
MaryAnn Baenninger, president of the College of Saint Benedict and chair of the Council's board, was one of the speakers who thanked the donors: "Your gifts are strategic investments in students who are going to shape the future of our state." Baenninger also recognized eight organizations that recently joined the ranks of our 50-year donors.
Archambault and Yawakie were two of four students featured in a video shown at the event. The students shared their stories about how scholarships have made it possible to attend — and thrive at their institutions. (View profiles of the four students.)
A highlight of the event was the keynote speech by Alex Cirillo, retired vice president at 3M and a former Council board member. He shared some unexpected trivia about our institutions and their presidents, along with observations about success and education. "The purpose of all education, and particularly of a private college education, is to help create 'load-bearing' members of society — who understand the meaning of life, the meaning of success and the meaning of happiness," he said.
Cirillo said that he believes students and faculty at our
institutions are experiencing access to both knowledge and wisdom. In closing,
he told donors: "I applaud you all for your involvement in educating our kids;
may they make the world a better place."
The Minnesota Private College Fund has a 60-year history of raising money from Minnesota foundations and businesses. Every dollar raised goes to our 17 member colleges and universities and their students for scholarships and general operating support. Donors value the opportunity to efficiently support all 17 schools with a single gift. Learn more about giving to the Fund.
Fact you can use
19% of new-entering students at Minnesota's Private Colleges were students of color in fall 2011 — up from 10% in 2001.
Campus news
- A new, expanded fleet of "green" silver bicycles on the St. Olaf College campus is making it easy for students to access an efficient, sustainable and healthy mode of transportation.
- Saint Mary's University presents the Nov. 16 and 17 forums: "From the Famine Frontline: The Complex Issue of Food Security." View the latest reporting from the UnderTold Stories team returning from East Africa and participate in a discussion about how to feed a world whose population will soon reach nine billion.
- The College of St. Scholastica is now on-site at Inver Hills Community College in Inver Grove Heights.The Social Work undergraduate degree is offered, with accelerated business courses a possibility in the future, as well as online degree completion programs in nursing, health information management, business and computer science.
- Hamline University's adult basic education program (ATLAS) has received significant grant support to continue training teachers to mentor adult learners. The program, which provides resources and professional development to adult basic education teachers throughout the state, recently received $547,000 from a combination of state and federal sources.
Briefs
- Many of our member colleges hold holiday concerts, services and other fine arts events that are open to the public. They often sell out quickly; see our list for details and ticket information.
- Community leaders — including a few private college presidents — show support for our state's bid in the Race to the Top Early Learning Challenge in this MinnCAN video. You can join them in signing a community letter of support.
- Minnesota College Application Week is Nov. 14-17. High school pilot sites will be dedicating time during the school day to have seniors complete a college application. Trained school staff and volunteers — including several from our member colleges — will be on hand to assist students.
- Members of Congress are making major decisions about funding for federal student aid — which more than 142,000 Minnesota college students rely on. Speak up about the importance of this aid to Minnesota college students and our economy by signing an online statement.
- Vallay Varro, executive director of the education reform advocacy group, MinnCAN, is featured on the LearnmoreMN blog this month. Read her latest post, "Minnesota wants race to the top" and consider joining the conversation by adding your comment. Sarah Dixon of the Minnesota Alliance With Youth will be blogging in December.
- Find it hard to keep up with higher education
news? Here are a few recent articles worth reading:
- What Spurs Students to Stay in College and Learn? Good Teaching Practices and Diversity (Chronicle of Higher Education, 11/07/2011)
- More Selective For-Profits (Inside Higher Education, 11/11/2011)
- Why Pogemiller might be an effective Office of Higher Education chief (MPR On Campus Blog, 11/04/2011)
- Connecting the Dots (Huffington Post, 10/18/2011)
- Worried? I'm Terrified (Inside Higher Education, 10/31/2011)

