蓬勃发展的社会影响:在农村生态系统中发展阿巴拉契亚植物公司的资源合作伙伴关系

Stephanie Elizabeth E. Raible
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引用次数: 0

摘要

研究方法本案例基于一手和二手数据收集。2022 年 7 月,ABCo 创始人乔斯林-谢帕德(Jocelyn Sheppard)与作者进行了 75 分钟的录音访谈,并通过电子邮件提供了后续信息。访谈数据得到了来自公开渠道的二手数据的补充,以填补创始人、公司历史和所在地的部分内容,并对收集到的访谈数据进行三角测量(Creswell and Poth,2018)。该案例于 2022 年秋季、2023 年春季和 2023 年秋季学期在一所院校进行试点,59 名本科生参加了面授社会创业课程,165 名本科生和 33 名研究生参加了在线异步社会创业课程。所有学生都以小组为单位完成了案例,作为提交相应作业的要求,他们提供了去标识化的反馈。根据匿名反馈,ABCo 公司的主角、产品线、期望的社会影响和经历的挑战对学生来说都很有趣、平易近人和贴近生活,而且该案例引起了来自不同专业(如商学、环境问题、人类服务和刑事司法)的学生的兴趣。来自农村地区或家人在农村地区的学生认为案例特别有趣;在异步在线课堂上,少数对农村环境不熟悉的学生建议为学生提供更多有关农村环境的背景知识,可以通过与其他有农村环境经验的学生进行课堂讨论,或提供额外的媒体或文本支持。进一步的调整还包括删除一篇阅读文章和一个相应的问题,并修改即时通讯工具 "教学方法 "部分的内容,以支持他们在反馈意见中建议的补充内容(即在参与该问题的相关写作之前,花时间定义和浏览所提供的模型,并在课堂上强调农村创业和农村创业的不同之处)。案例概述/梗概阿巴拉契亚植物公司(Appalachian Botanical Company,简称 ABCo)的创始人约瑟琳-谢帕德(Jocelyn Sheppard)建立公司的初衷不仅是通过种植薰衣草和生产薰衣草产品来振兴被开垦的煤矿用地,同时也是为了对美国西弗吉尼亚州阿什福德镇(Ashford)及其波恩县(Boone County)的农村地区产生社会影响。虽然她知道雇用需要第二次机会的工人会面临挑战,但她对新员工的社会需求之深感到震惊,这也是许多员工出现破坏性行为和离职的原因。为了解决目前的问题,谢帕德需要对她周围的资源进行反思,即其他实体和组织,这些实体和组织可能会支持她的努力,以改善 ABCo 履行其社会使命的方式,从而帮助改善当地社区及其经济。本案例借鉴了农村创业和社区发展方面的文献和模式,让学生为 Sheppard 提供建议,告诉她下一步应该怎么做,以改善 ABCo 及其员工的社会成果。案例向学生介绍了一家在农村环境中艰难立足的社会企业。该案例既适合入门课程,也适合高级课程,尤其是在讨论场所营造/基于场所的创业或生态系统建设时。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Blooming social impact: Growing Appalachian Botanical Company’s resource partnerships in a rural ecosystem
Research methodology This case is based on primary and secondary data collection. ABCo’s Founder, Jocelyn Sheppard, sat down with the author for a 75-min recorded interview in July 2022, and she provided follow-up information via email. Interview data was supplemented with secondary data from publicly available sources to fill in portions on the founder, the company’s history and its location; and triangulate the collected interview data (Creswell and Poth, 2018). There are no conflicts of interest that the author needs to disclose related to the founder or company. The case was piloted at one institution in the Fall 2022, Spring 2023 and Fall 2023 semesters, with 59 undergraduates in an in-person social entrepreneurship course and 165 undergraduates and 33 graduate students in an online asynchronous social entrepreneurship course. All students worked through the case in groups, and as a requirement of their corresponding assignment submission, they provided feedback that was de-identified. In total, 60 groups reported their feedback, which was considered during the subsequent drafts of the case and instructors’ manual IM. According to the anonymized feedback, the protagonist, product line, desired social impact and experienced challenges of ABCo were all said to be interesting, approachable and relatable for students, and the case piqued the interest of students coming from different majors (e.g. business, environmental issues, human services and criminal justice). Students from rural areas, or those who have family in rural areas, felt the case was particularly interesting; a handful of the students in the asynchronous online class who were unfamiliar with such settings suggested providing students with some additional contextualization of rural environments, either through class discussion with other students who had experience in those environments or additional media or text-based supports. Further adjustments also included removing a reading and a corresponding question and revising elements within the Teaching Approaches section of the IM to support the additions they suggested within the feedback (i.e. spending time to define and walk through the provided model and highlight the differences of rural entrepreneurship and entrepreneurship in the rural as a class before engaging in the related write-ups for that question). Case overview/synopsis Jocelyn Sheppard, Founder of Appalachian Botanical Company (“ABCo”), had built her company not just on a vision of revitalizing reclaimed coal mine land through planting and producing products with lavender, but also to have a social impact on the rural town of Ashford and its greater region of Boone County in West Virginia, USA. While she understood that hiring workers in need of a second chance would present its challenges, she was shocked by the depth of social need her new employees presented, which contributed to many employees’ disruptive behaviors and turnover. To approach the problem at hand, Sheppard needed to reflect on the resources around her, namely, other entities and organizations who might be able to support her efforts to improve how ABCo delivers on its social mission and, thus, helps to improve the local community and its economy. The case draws upon literature and models within rural entrepreneurship and community development to have students advise Sheppard on what she should do next to improve the social outcomes for ABCo and its employees. Complexity academic level This case is geared for both upper-level undergraduate and graduate courses in entrepreneurship, including in social, environmental and rural entrepreneurship courses and course modules. The case introduces students to a social enterprise struggling to get its footing in a rural context. The case would be suitable for both introductory and advanced courses, especially when placemaking/place-based entrepreneurship or ecosystem building are discussed.
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