Entrepreneurship education and its impact on the entrepreneurship career intentions of vocational education students

The rich body of literature examining the entrepreneurship education-entrepreneurship intention relations tends to neglect the influence of contingent and other mediating factors on the relationship. This elusion creates an erroneous assumption that entrepreneurship intentions are insulated from ext...

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Main Authors: Takawira Munyaradzi Ndofirepi, Patient Rambe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: LLC "CPC "Business Perspectives" 2017-05-01
Series:Problems and Perspectives in Management
Subjects:
Online Access:https://businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/8697/PPM_2017_01cont_Ndofirepi.pdf
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spelling doaj-b5bdbc61e4264ed28553523405b623ff2020-11-25T01:48:44ZengLLC "CPC "Business Perspectives"Problems and Perspectives in Management1727-70511810-54672017-05-0115119119910.21511/ppm.15(1-1).2017.068697Entrepreneurship education and its impact on the entrepreneurship career intentions of vocational education studentsTakawira Munyaradzi Ndofirepi0Patient Rambe1Kwekwe PolytechnicDr., Department of Business Support Studies, Faculty of Management Sciences, Central University of TechnologyThe rich body of literature examining the entrepreneurship education-entrepreneurship intention relations tends to neglect the influence of contingent and other mediating factors on the relationship. This elusion creates an erroneous assumption that entrepreneurship intentions are insulated from external influences and the entrepreneurship education-intentions relationship is an automatic, directly linear interaction. Contesting this premise, this research explores the influence of exposure to entrepreneurship education (EE), mediated by precursors (such as attitude, subjective norms and perceived behavioral control) to entrepreneurial intentions on the actual entrepreneurship intentions (EI) of vocational education students at a particular institution in Zimbabwe. Drawing on a cross-sectional research design and 154 randomly selected students, the study examines the extent to which they intended to engage in entrepreneurship careers in the near future. A non-parametric technique, the Spearman correlation test, and regression analysis were employed to test the relationships between EE on the direct determinants of EI, between the immediate determinants of EI and actual EI and to test a number of predictive effects. The results demonstrate that EE had a positive correlation with the direct determinants of EI. In addition, EE predicted all the immediate determinants of EI, except for subjective norms. Lastly, there was no evidence to support a direct predictive effect of EE on EI, controlling for other psychological factors. To a large extent, the results validated the Theory of Planned Behavior as a guiding tool for estimating any premeditated entrepreneurial behavior. Thus, the Theory remains an invaluable theoretical lens for academics, educators and policymakers’ evaluation of effective ways of enhancing the grooming of potential entrepreneurs.https://businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/8697/PPM_2017_01cont_Ndofirepi.pdfentrepreneurship educationentrepreneurship intentiontheory of planned behaviorvocational education
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Takawira Munyaradzi Ndofirepi
Patient Rambe
spellingShingle Takawira Munyaradzi Ndofirepi
Patient Rambe
Entrepreneurship education and its impact on the entrepreneurship career intentions of vocational education students
Problems and Perspectives in Management
entrepreneurship education
entrepreneurship intention
theory of planned behavior
vocational education
author_facet Takawira Munyaradzi Ndofirepi
Patient Rambe
author_sort Takawira Munyaradzi Ndofirepi
title Entrepreneurship education and its impact on the entrepreneurship career intentions of vocational education students
title_short Entrepreneurship education and its impact on the entrepreneurship career intentions of vocational education students
title_full Entrepreneurship education and its impact on the entrepreneurship career intentions of vocational education students
title_fullStr Entrepreneurship education and its impact on the entrepreneurship career intentions of vocational education students
title_full_unstemmed Entrepreneurship education and its impact on the entrepreneurship career intentions of vocational education students
title_sort entrepreneurship education and its impact on the entrepreneurship career intentions of vocational education students
publisher LLC "CPC "Business Perspectives"
series Problems and Perspectives in Management
issn 1727-7051
1810-5467
publishDate 2017-05-01
description The rich body of literature examining the entrepreneurship education-entrepreneurship intention relations tends to neglect the influence of contingent and other mediating factors on the relationship. This elusion creates an erroneous assumption that entrepreneurship intentions are insulated from external influences and the entrepreneurship education-intentions relationship is an automatic, directly linear interaction. Contesting this premise, this research explores the influence of exposure to entrepreneurship education (EE), mediated by precursors (such as attitude, subjective norms and perceived behavioral control) to entrepreneurial intentions on the actual entrepreneurship intentions (EI) of vocational education students at a particular institution in Zimbabwe. Drawing on a cross-sectional research design and 154 randomly selected students, the study examines the extent to which they intended to engage in entrepreneurship careers in the near future. A non-parametric technique, the Spearman correlation test, and regression analysis were employed to test the relationships between EE on the direct determinants of EI, between the immediate determinants of EI and actual EI and to test a number of predictive effects. The results demonstrate that EE had a positive correlation with the direct determinants of EI. In addition, EE predicted all the immediate determinants of EI, except for subjective norms. Lastly, there was no evidence to support a direct predictive effect of EE on EI, controlling for other psychological factors. To a large extent, the results validated the Theory of Planned Behavior as a guiding tool for estimating any premeditated entrepreneurial behavior. Thus, the Theory remains an invaluable theoretical lens for academics, educators and policymakers’ evaluation of effective ways of enhancing the grooming of potential entrepreneurs.
topic entrepreneurship education
entrepreneurship intention
theory of planned behavior
vocational education
url https://businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/8697/PPM_2017_01cont_Ndofirepi.pdf
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