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Education for Enterprise

S.G.C. Stoker (Vice‐Master & Senior Tutor, Hatfield College, Durham)
C. Johnson (Research Associate, Durham University Business School)

Education + Training

ISSN: 0040-0912

Article publication date: 1 April 1986

109

Abstract

Agreement with Napoleon's suggestion that Britain was a nation of shopkeepers has not, in itself, brought about an increased consciousness in our educational system that a knowledge of the process of wealth‐creation is a pre‐requisite for the young school‐leaver. In recent years, however, it has at last become respectable to be associated with vocational education. Statements by the Department of Education & Science, the activities of the Manpower Services Commission, and curriculum innovations such as TVEI and CPVE have highlighted the potential of vocational vehicles in the work of secondary schools in particular. Tragically many curriculum changes have come about as a result of the plague of unemployment which has beset the nation; and educational thinkers and developers have been forced into a corner, there to ponder on the activities of either the young unemployed or the potentially unemployed. Sadly, the development of Education for Enterprise in Durham University Business School over the last two years was born of an unemployment disaster.

Citation

Stoker, S.G.C. and Johnson, C. (1986), "Education for Enterprise", Education + Training, Vol. 28 No. 4, pp. 127-128. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb017265

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1986, MCB UP Limited

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