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NC State Entrepreneurship Clinic Recognized for Innovation in Co-Curricular Education

Assistant Professor of Entrepreneurship Nachiket Bhawe with students at the NC State Entrepreneurship Clinic at HQ Raleigh
Assistant Professor of Entrepreneurship Nachiket Bhawe with students at the NC State Entrepreneurship Clinic at HQ Raleigh

Note: This news story updated with additional information from USASBE, 1/29/2018

The NC State Entrepreneurship Clinic received the 2018 Excellence in Co-Curricular Innovation Award from the United States Association for Small Business and Entrepreneurship (USASBE).

The award recognizes the Entrepreneurship Clinic’s innovative approach: serving as a classroom for experiential learning, a physical space where students can execute on their ideas, a locus of interaction between the university and area startups, and a practical research lab for data collection.

Photo of Gabriel Gonzalez, Clinic program manager and Lewis Sheats, Clinic executive director, center; Heidi Neck, USASBE president, left; Mark Schenkel, USASBE president elect.
Gabriel Gonzalez, Clinic program manager and Lewis Sheats, Clinic executive director, center; Heidi Neck, USASBE president, left; Mark Schenkel, USASBE president elect.

“It is always a great honor to be recognized by your peers,” said Lewis Sheats, assistant vice provost for entrepreneurship at NC State, executive director of the NC State Entrepreneurship Clinic, and Poole College professor of practice. He accepted the award at the association’s annual conference, held January 10-14, 2018, at the California State University – Northridge.

This is the second time NC State has been recognized by the association. In 2017, the NC State Entrepreneurship Clinic received the USASBE Outstanding Emerging Entrepreneurship Program Award.

“We are very proud of the progress we have made in creating an environment that promotes curricular diversity in the classroom,” Sheats said.

“There were many high-quality submissions this year,” said 2018 USASBE Awards Chair Megan Matthews of University of Wisconsin-Whitewater. The recipients of the 2018 USASBE Awards stood out with their innovative curriculum, thoughtful research and inclusive programming. It was an intense and rewarding process.”

More than 30 judges from 14 institutions across five countries – many of whom represented universities that previously won USASBE program awards – had a challenging time deciding on award recipients. “We feel it is important that the organization recognizes the colleges and individuals who create, innovate and lead the way in building excellence through entrepreneurship education,” said Dr. Jeff Vanevenhoven, senior vice-president of programming at USASBE and the Irvin L. Young Professor of Entrepreneurship at University of Wisconsin-Whitewater.

Dr. Heidi Neck, the Jeffry A. Timmons Professor of Entrepreneurial Studies at Babson University and president of USASBE said, “The events of the weekend marked the first awards program under USASBE’s updated mission of being an inclusive community advancing entrepreneurship education through bold teaching, scholarship, and practice. Through participation in our awards program winners and runners-up share their ingenuity, passion, and efforts. The future of entrepreneurship shines brighter today because of their involvement.”

The 2018 USASBE Conference welcomed representatives from 254 universities and 24 countries with a record of 407 submissions covering entrepreneurship education topics in research, teaching, and programming. “Over 525 diverse attendees came together to share their successes and challenges in a new conference architecture that encouraged deep engagement and thoughtful conversations in both structured and unstructured environments,” said Julienne Shields, the conference chair and director of the Center for Entrepreneurship at Millikin University.

NC State Entreprenuership Clinic: An Applied Teaching Model that Also Fuels Research

The clinic was established in January 2015 as part of the entrepreneurship curriculum based in NC State’s Poole College of Management, to change the way students learn by taking them out of the classroom and embedding them in the entrepreneurial community.

Modeled after the university teaching hospital model, the Entrepreneurship Clinic integrates research, teaching and real-world experience by providing a place where faculty, students, entrepreneurs and service providers go to teach, learn and build the next generation of entrepreneurs.

“NC State is rich with students eager to learn and ready to put what they learn into action,” Sheats said, adding that “the clinic now engages students from across the university in experiential learning and embeds them in the entrepreneurial ecosystem. By bringing together students from various disciplines, the Entrepreneurship Clinic has aided in bridging the gap between STEM and business disciplines at NC State.”

The clinic provides courses and practice for both undergraduate and graduate students across multiple disciplines, including business, engineering, design, textiles, agriculture, and computer science, etc. Students form diverse teams, based on the best mix of strengths, and serve as clinicians to partner companies – early stage startups, scaling businesses and established companies – that apply to the Entrepreneurship Clinic with specific business issues and needs. Student teams meet with company applicants, evaluate their weaknesses, and develop and execute a strategic action plan to help them solve their business need.

“Partnering with entrepreneurs who are in the execution phase of their business exposes students to real-world application of the entrepreneurial concepts they’ve been taught, moving the entrepreneurship curriculum beyond the traditional classroom,” Sheats said.

The Entrepreneurship Clinic also serves as a research lab, collecting data on each participating startup, including competencies, traits, characteristics, motivation, cognitions, strategies, attributes, industry and environment. The data are fed into a database and the ventures’ outcomes are tracked, resulting in data that ultimately can be used to assess and diagnose potential failure points and empower startups with evidence-based, practical solutions to help them grow and thrive.

The NC State Entrepreneurship Clinic Difference

The success of the NC State Entrepreneurship Clinic stems from its unique ability to bring together students, faculty, and the entrepreneurial community. Following are key factors that set it apart from other academic programs.

  • The clinic is open to students working for course credit and those who participate on a volunteer basis.
  • Students represent 20-plus majors and concentrations across NC State.
  • The clinic is a cornerstone of Raleigh’s largest co-working space, HQ Raleigh which currently houses more than 300 new ventures, providing students access to a large startup network.
  • Company projects may continue beyond the traditional academic semester. Data collected during each interaction with a partner company provides institutional knowledge that is passed along to successive student teams over multiple semesters. This data collection also aids in longitudinal research of these new ventures.
  • The clinic has a mentor program for interested students. Mentors and mentees self-select based on mutual interests and compatibility and meet at extracurricular events in a social setting.
  • The Entrepreneurship Clinic also drives multiple critical outcomes.
  • Students hone their critical thinking skills and gain valuable experience before launching their own concepts or entering the workforce.
  • Students are hired by high-growth startups for full-time or internship roles, join entrepreneurial divisions of large enterprises or launch their own companies.
  • Companies working with the clinic receive viable solutions to their business issues and a pool of students to hire as they grow their enterprises. This facilitates more NC State graduates joining high-growth companies after graduation and enables more startups spinning out of the university, creating a lasting impact on the local economy.

The Stats

Since its launch in 2015, the NC State Entrepreneurship Clinic has shown tremendous growth and impact:

  • 467 students from nine countries
  • 246 completed company projects
  • 17 student startups launched
  • $5.6M raised in outside funding for student startups
  • 35,000+ hours of student time recorded in the clinic
  • 110-person mentorship program
  • $1M gift acquired to fund student start-ups

The NC State Entrepreneurship Clinic is among the outreach programs of the Entrepreneurship Collaborative, based in Poole College.

About USASBE: USASBE is an inclusive community advancing entrepreneurship education through bold teaching, scholarship, and practice. With members ranging from universities, colleges, for-profit businesses, nonprofit organizations and the public sector, a shared common commitment to fostering entrepreneurial attitudes and behaviors is held. USASBE supports the development of entrepreneurship educators who in turn will create the next generation of entrepreneurs. For more information please contact Patrick Snyder, Executive Director for USASBE psnyder@usasbe.org or call 262-472-1449.