Gender differences in academic entrepreneurship: experience, attitudes and outcomes among NSF I-CORPS participants

IF 3.1 Q2 BUSINESS
Alanna Epstein, Nathalie Duval-Couetil, A. Huang-Saad
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

PurposeExpanding access to entrepreneurship training programs can be a method to increase female involvement in technology commercialization only if these programs adequately address the specific challenges facing female faculty and graduate students. In the context of the US National Science Foundation's Innovation Corps (NSF I-Corps) program, this study examines gender differences in prior experience and attitudes towards the training in order to propose improvements to the program design.Design/methodology/approachThis quantitative study uses Pearson's Chi-Square and ANOVA tests on survey data from the I-Corps national program (n = 2,195), which enrolls faculty members, graduate students, postdoctoral researchers and industry experts.FindingsIn comparison to male participants, female I-Corps participants reported less entrepreneurial experience prior to the program, poorer team relationships during the program and lower entrepreneurial intention and technology commercialization readiness at both the beginning and the end of the program. However, no gender differences were found in positive or negative perceptions of the instructional climate or perceptions of program usefulness.Originality/valueThis study is unique as it is based on a large-scale dataset drawn from sites across the United States. The results support potential changes to I-Corps and similar programs, including providing more explicit instructions for tasks with which female participants have less prior experience than males (e.g. in applying for patents), offering guidance for team interactions, and providing mentorship to assess whether low self-efficacy is leading women to underestimate the potential success of their projects.
学术创业的性别差异:NSF I-CORPS参与者的经验、态度和结果
目的只有在这些项目充分解决女性教师和研究生面临的具体挑战的情况下,扩大创业培训项目的机会才能成为增加女性参与技术商业化的一种方法。在美国国家科学基金会创新团队(NSF I-Corps)项目的背景下,本研究考察了先前培训经验和态度的性别差异,以提出项目设计的改进建议。设计/方法/方法这项定量研究对I-Corps国家项目(n=2195)的调查数据进行了皮尔逊卡方检验和方差分析检验,该项目招收了教职员工、研究生、博士后研究人员和行业专家。发现与男性参与者相比,I-Corps的女性参与者在项目前的创业经历较少,项目期间的团队关系较差,项目开始和结束时的创业意愿和技术商业化准备程度较低。然而,在对教学氛围的积极或消极看法或对课程有用性的看法方面,没有发现性别差异。独创性/价值这项研究是独一无二的,因为它基于从美国各地网站提取的大规模数据集。研究结果支持I-Corps和类似项目的潜在变化,包括为女性参与者先前经验少于男性的任务提供更明确的指导(例如申请专利),为团队互动提供指导,提供指导以评估低自我效能感是否会导致女性低估其项目的潜在成功。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.40
自引率
15.60%
发文量
15
期刊介绍: Launched in 2009, the International Journal of Gender and Entrepreneurship (IJGE) aims to facilitate the natural evolution of the field of gender and entrepreneurship by drawing together the very best research contributions from around the world. The journal seeks to: -Provide a dedicated publication outlet for high calibre, international research of interest to scholars, entrepreneurs and policy makers in the field of gender and entrepreneurship -Offer a unique perspective on the practice of gender and entrepreneurship by including sections dedicated to practitioner and policy content -Support a more consistent global approach to the presentation of research in the field -Platform the work of dynamic young researchers and those who are in a position to offer new perspectives on this particular research area -Enable those active in the area as researchers, educators, trainers, practitioners, support personnel and policy makers to keep up to date with the field on an international level. The coverage of the journal includes, but is not limited to: Entrepreneurship, Female/Women’s entrepreneurship , Business, Management, Strategy, Gender, Economics, Internationalization, Marketing.
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