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  2. Entrepreneurship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entrepreneurship

    Entrepreneurship resources and facilities (e.g. business incubators and seed accelerators) Entrepreneurship education and training programs offered by schools, colleges and universities; Financing (e.g. bank loans, venture capital financing, angel investing and government and private foundation grants) [19] [need quotation to verify]

  3. Course Hero - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Course_Hero

    Course Hero was founded by Andrew Grauer at Cornell University in 2006 for college students to share lectures, class notes, exams and assignments. [4] In November 2014, the company raised $15 million in Series A Funding, with investors that included GSV Capital and IDG Capital. Seed investors SV Angel and Maveron also participated. [5]

  4. Entrepreneurship education - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entrepreneurship_education

    Entrepreneurship For Kids: To catch them early is the vision. Based on certain research in India & Israel, Schools are now incorporating new courses for young students. Founder of Leader To Creator Entrepreneurship for kids Pradeep Mishra started this program in schools in India. The kids are taught about business and economics at a very young age.

  5. Chegg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chegg

    Purdue University prohibits students soliciting answers using Chegg's homework help: "While Chegg can be helpful to access textbooks and more practice problems, using this resource to find assignment answers is considered academic dishonesty because it is a form of copying and plagiarism.". [55]

  6. Entrepreneurship ecosystem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entrepreneurship_ecosystem

    This requires collaboration and multistakeholder partnerships. Entrepreneurship ecosystems commonly refer to academic programs within a university that focus on the development of student/graduate entrepreneurs and/or the commercialization of technology or intellectual property developed at the university level.

  7. Business Association of Stanford Entrepreneurial Students

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Business_Association_of...

    The Business Association of Stanford Entrepreneurial Students (BASES) is a student group at Stanford University focusing on business and entrepreneurial activities. One of the largest student-run entrepreneurship organizations in the world, BASES' mission is to promote entrepreneurship education at Stanford University and to empower student entrepreneurs by bringing together the worlds of ...

  8. Bloomington Academy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bloomington_Academy

    The Academy opened in fall 2008 with a class size of 96 students, [2] the school serves students in 9th-12th grades, and at the beginning, added a class each year, with up to 100 students per grade. In May 2009, the class of 2012 had 50-65 students, and 58 Students graduated in the class of 2012. The school has a 1:1 student to computer ratio. [3]

  9. Entrepreneurial economics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entrepreneurial_economics

    Baumol has argued that entrepreneurship can be either productive or unproductive. [15] Unproductive entrepreneurs may pursue economic rents or crime. Societies differ significantly in how they allocate entrepreneurial activities between the two forms of entrepreneurship, depending on the 'rules of the game' such as the laws in each society.