REAL Entrepreneurship

Outcomes:

The REAL Entrepreneurship course is designed to help participants develop skills, expand their knowledge, and create tangible products, including new enterprises. A summary of these three areas follows:

Skills:

REAL Entrepreneurship gives participants opportunities to develop skills which increase their likelihood of success as entrepreneurs and which better equip them for life and the world of work, regardless of their ultimate career choices. These skills include:

Life Skills – abilities related to living an effective and successful life, including:

  • critical and creative thinking
  • working with others
  • problem-solving
  • communication
  • operating effectively within organizations
  • using numbers, data, and technology

Opportunity Identification – the ability to recognize favorable circumstances

Opportunity Evaluation – the ability to measure and analyze opportunities for their feasibility and practicality, including:

  • self assessment
  • community, industry, market, and financial analysis

Opportunity Realization – the skills required to seize opportunities, including:

  • opening an enterprise
  • managing time and resources
  • getting and keeping employees and customers
  • managing assets
  • operating legally and ethically

Knowledge:

REAL Entrepreneurship seeks to increase participants’ knowledge in the following key areas:

Self – personal attributes, attitudes, needs, goals, and capacities, especially as they relate to career choice

Planning – effective planning strategies and process for business and other undertakings

Entrepreneurship – the personal and professional realities of owning and operating a small business

Business – marketing, operations, and financial management

Legal Requirements – permits, licensing, taxes, and other necessities of operating a small business legally and ethically

Products

REAL Entrepreneurship students create a number of products, including:

Journal – a documentation and evaluation tool which chronicles the process of analyzing self and community, planning an enterprise, and writing a business plan

Oral Presentation – several opportunities for oral presentations in class which culminate in the presentation of the business plan to an audience beyond the class itself

Business Plan – a comprehensive and substantive document which address an identified business or community need, is based on research of the local community, and is written for a significant enterprise, economic in nature, including for-profit and non-profit ventures and projects

Viable Ventures – businesses, community services, or projects which students implement themselves or offer (in the form of completed business plans) to other entrepreneurs, agencies, or organizations for implementation

Resources

The REAL Entrepreneurship curriculum consists of a printed guide of core activities and a USB Flash Drive with supplemental activities and resources designed for those setting up hands-on REAL Entrepreneurship programs in their schools or community organizations. The curriculum includes group and individual activities, business planning journals, an integrated technology component, and a course and program planning section. Note: The curriculum is licensed only to teachers/educators who attend a REAL Entrepreneurship Institute.

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Testimonials

High school participants point out—
When you have to write a business plan and it has to be clear and without errors, you start taking your English and math classes more seriously. My grades came up because I started to realize that I need the skills my other classes teach me. Everybody in the class sees the connection.

What people learned in my class was maturity and responsibility. In a group business, if they goofed off, they didn’t just let themselves down, they let down the whole group. So we learned to work in teams so that everyone could profit.

Post-secondary participants point out—
The class was great. It made me do things that I think I wouldn’t have done otherwise, such as projecting a cash flow statement and analyzing costs.

The class is especially important for businesses that are in the infant stage. It will scare you out of it or give you the information and push to make you succeed.