Students’ entrepreneurial regulation and intention to become an entrepreneur: A comparison between public and private universities

Motivation and ability to orient ones’ knowledge, thought and behavior to accomplish entrepreneurial goals and tasks has recently termed as entrepreneurial regulation. Entrepreneurial regulation strongly affects the whole process of new venture creation and specifically entrepreneurial opportunity e...

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Main Authors: Z. A.L. Pihie, A. Bagheri
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2013-12-01
Series:South African Journal of Business Management
Online Access:https://sajbm.org/index.php/sajbm/article/view/166
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spelling doaj-b02182acd8464e789570063b8b4beb862021-02-02T02:08:13ZengAOSISSouth African Journal of Business Management2078-55852078-59762013-12-01444253210.4102/sajbm.v44i4.166155Students’ entrepreneurial regulation and intention to become an entrepreneur: A comparison between public and private universitiesZ. A.L. Pihie0A. Bagheri1Department of Science and Technical Education, Faculty of Educational Studies, Universiti Putra MalaysiaDepartment of Entrepreneurship Development, Faculty of Entrepreneurship, Tehran UniversityMotivation and ability to orient ones’ knowledge, thought and behavior to accomplish entrepreneurial goals and tasks has recently termed as entrepreneurial regulation. Entrepreneurial regulation strongly affects the whole process of new venture creation and specifically entrepreneurial opportunity exploration that is the first step in the entrepreneurship process. However, few researchers examined the construct particularly among potential entrepreneurs such as university students. This study aims to measure self-regulation (promotion focus), entrepreneurial self-efficacy and intention to become an entrepreneur among university students. 722 students from both public and private universities were randomly selected as the participants based on the assumption that entrepreneurship education and training programs and university environment highly influence the development of entrepreneurial regulation, self-efficacy and intention in students. Analysis of the data revealed a significant relationship between students’ promotion focus, entrepreneurial self-efficacy and entrepreneurial intentions. Furthermore, students from public universities had significantly higher entrepreneurial regulation and intentions than their counterparts from private universities. We discuss the implications of the findings for entrepreneurship research, theory development and education.https://sajbm.org/index.php/sajbm/article/view/166
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Z. A.L. Pihie
A. Bagheri
spellingShingle Z. A.L. Pihie
A. Bagheri
Students’ entrepreneurial regulation and intention to become an entrepreneur: A comparison between public and private universities
South African Journal of Business Management
author_facet Z. A.L. Pihie
A. Bagheri
author_sort Z. A.L. Pihie
title Students’ entrepreneurial regulation and intention to become an entrepreneur: A comparison between public and private universities
title_short Students’ entrepreneurial regulation and intention to become an entrepreneur: A comparison between public and private universities
title_full Students’ entrepreneurial regulation and intention to become an entrepreneur: A comparison between public and private universities
title_fullStr Students’ entrepreneurial regulation and intention to become an entrepreneur: A comparison between public and private universities
title_full_unstemmed Students’ entrepreneurial regulation and intention to become an entrepreneur: A comparison between public and private universities
title_sort students’ entrepreneurial regulation and intention to become an entrepreneur: a comparison between public and private universities
publisher AOSIS
series South African Journal of Business Management
issn 2078-5585
2078-5976
publishDate 2013-12-01
description Motivation and ability to orient ones’ knowledge, thought and behavior to accomplish entrepreneurial goals and tasks has recently termed as entrepreneurial regulation. Entrepreneurial regulation strongly affects the whole process of new venture creation and specifically entrepreneurial opportunity exploration that is the first step in the entrepreneurship process. However, few researchers examined the construct particularly among potential entrepreneurs such as university students. This study aims to measure self-regulation (promotion focus), entrepreneurial self-efficacy and intention to become an entrepreneur among university students. 722 students from both public and private universities were randomly selected as the participants based on the assumption that entrepreneurship education and training programs and university environment highly influence the development of entrepreneurial regulation, self-efficacy and intention in students. Analysis of the data revealed a significant relationship between students’ promotion focus, entrepreneurial self-efficacy and entrepreneurial intentions. Furthermore, students from public universities had significantly higher entrepreneurial regulation and intentions than their counterparts from private universities. We discuss the implications of the findings for entrepreneurship research, theory development and education.
url https://sajbm.org/index.php/sajbm/article/view/166
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