Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10321/4724
Title: The effectiveness of entrepreneurship education in the selected high schools, TVET colleges and public universities in KwaZulu-Natal province
Authors: Ncube, Thandukwazi Richman 
Keywords: Entrepreneurship education;High schools;TVET colleges;Universities
Issue Date: 2022
Abstract: 
People around the world are increasingly seeing entrepreneurship is an avenue to
create wealth, stimulate economies, and fulfil self-employment hopes.
Entrepreneurship has also become a powerful tool for creating jobs and improving
economic conditions in the labour market and economy as a whole. Moreover, with
the advent of the Fourth Industrial Revolution, a variety of additional competencies
involving creativity, innovation, and agility are required for young entrepreneurs. Many
South African government educational institutions are currently considering
embedding entrepreneurship education within their curricula. Considering the shifting
entrepreneurial environment, teaching staff (educators, lecturers, and instructors)
must constantly be adjusting the educational practices, procedures, and curricula to
ensure the best outcomes for future entrepreneurs. Public institutions of learning
(PILs) need to entice students through programmes that are relevant. As the
entrepreneurial environment has changed, so have the expectations of educational
programmes. This study therefore seeks to evaluate the current effectiveness of
entrepreneurship education in PILs in KwaZulu-Natal – secondary education;
technical, vocational and training (TVET) colleges and universities.
South Africa as a developing country has a high rate of unemployment, while the
failure rate of start-up businesses is also high. These issues have triggered the South
African government’s efforts to help solve the unemployment crisis through the
promotion of entrepreneurship. Critical questions remain, however, such as whether
entrepreneurship education in PILs is effective enough to develop an entrepreneurship
mind-set in students, and how effectively these institutions can influence students to
value self-employment and create their own businesses rather than remain job
seekers. In addition, interest and investment in entrepreneurship education are
increasing in all PILs from secondary schools to graduate schools. This
entrepreneurship education has become important in tandem with the demand of
students seeking a business education that can provide the necessary competencies
to succeed in an increasingly diverse and complex management environment. The
current critical situation concerning entrepreneurship in the country motivated this
study The study applies a mixed method inductive approached to capture the effectiveness
of entrepreneurship education from the perspective of teaching staff and students in
PILs. Separate questionnaires for teaching staff and for students, each contained
quantitative and qualitative (interview-type) questions which respondents were asked
to complete independently (self-administered). These were followed by interviews
which the researcher conducted with each individual (both students and instructors)
face-to-face. The data collection process would thus result in both qualitative and
quantitative responses, and two qualified statisticians were employed to analyse the
data - one being responsible for the quantitative analysis, and one for the qualitative
analysis of the interview questions. The study involved identifying the factors in
teaching and learning entrepreneurship including attitudes, level of awareness,
barriers to inclusion and effectiveness. Non-probability purposive sampling techniques
were used. The total population of the study was 758 and the sample size was 256
which was determined through Krejcie and Morgan (1970) Table (Sample size Table).
The 256 participants who made up the units of analysis for this study; consist of 100
academics who teach entrepreneurial studies and 156 final year students in the
Departments of Management and Entrepreneurship Studies or Business Studies from
PILs in Kwa-Zulu Natal. A response rate of 85% was achieved. An inductive thematic
analysis was used to analyse the data obtained from interview questions. The study
was underpinned by different applicable entrepreneurship education theoretical
frameworks, including principally the Theory of Planned Behaviour by Ajzen (1991)
that guided the choice of instrument and the development and results of the study.
The findings reveal that PILs lack an inclusive model that meets the quality standards
required for successful teaching of entrepreneurship despite the dedication of many
instructors. Resource constraints were identified by both staff and students as serious
inhibiting factors including especially a lack of experienced and trained teachers of
entrepreneurship.
The insights gained from the intensive interviewing of both educators and students
ensured strong qualitative data findings from each university and representative TVET
colleges and high schools in the province. It was established that the current curricula
are not able to guarantee the acquisition of an entrepreneurial mind-set amongst
students of entrepreneurship despite the dedication of many educators and students.
The ‘theory of planned behaviour’ illuminated this investigation and this conclusion. Without more resources and more, and better trained, educators, fully appraised of
the requirements for developing an entrepreneurial mind-set, it cannot yet be claimed
that PILs are able to make the contribution to economic growth and job creation which
is the potential for this form of education. The theory was supported with a further
dimension suggested.
This information will be valuable for educators and policy makers within government
institutions at high school and higher education levels. While the findings of the study
are not generalizable beyond the Province of Kwa-Zulu Natal (KZN), the identical
syllabi for government high schools and TVET colleges and the similarity in context
between KZN other provinces of South Africa will make them of interest to educators
and to policy makers throughout the country.
Description: 
Thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy: Management Sciences, Business Administration at Durban University of Technology, Durban, South Africa, 2022.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10321/4724
DOI: https://doi.org/10.51415/10321/4724
Appears in Collections:Theses and dissertations (Management Sciences)

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