dc.description.abstract |
Despite concerted efforts to integrate entrepreneurship education into the education
system to address graduates’ unemployment challenges through business start-ups,
its effectiveness in facilitating technical graduates’ acquisition of entrepreneurial
competencies critical to venture into business start-ups remains questionable.
Grounded on Human Capital Theory (HCT), Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB),
and Institutional Theory (IT) as theoretical frameworks, this study empirically
examines the effectiveness of entrepreneurship education in facilitating technical
graduates’ acquisition of entrepreneurial competencies and their potential to venture
into business start-ups. Specifically, the thesis (i) examines factors influencing
entrepreneurial competencies acquisition among graduates, (ii) ascertains the
influence of entrepreneurial competencies on business start-up intentions as
mediated by TPB antecedents, (iii) measures how entrepreneurship education
moderates the effect of TPB antecedents on business start-up intentions, and (iv)
examines the influence of university support on graduates’ business start-up
intentions as mediated by institutional environment. Underpinned by the positivism
paradigm and quantitative research strategy, this thesis employs a cross-sectional
research design and collects data using a self-administered survey questionnaire from
391 technical graduates who graduated between 2012 and 2017 and who lived in Dar
es Salaam during data collection. The collected data are analyzed using descriptive
statistics, Partial Least Squares Structural Equation Modelling (PLS-SEM), and
Ordered Logistic Regression Model (OLRM). The findings show that
entrepreneurship education significantly facilitates entrepreneurial competencies
acquisition (p < 0.001). Specifically, technical graduates who studied at least two
entrepreneurship courses were more than 10 times more likely to acquire requisite
entrepreneurial competencies than those who did not study. Informal
entrepreneurship exposure through life-cycle experience in age (p < 0.001), previous
employment experience (p < 0.01), and parental role modelling through self
employment (p < 0.05) and education (p < 0.05) positively and significantly facilitate
the acquisition of entrepreneurial competencies among technical graduates.
Moreover, entrepreneurial competencies had a direct significant effect not only on
the attitudes towards business start-ups (p < 0.001) and perceived behavioural control
(p < 0.05) but also on technical graduates’ intentions to venture into business start
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ups (p < 0.001). However, attitudes towards business start-ups (p < 0.05) and
perceived behavioural control (p < 0.001) strongly mediated the effect of
entrepreneurial competencies on technical graduates’ intentions to venture into
business start-ups. Perceived behavioural control (52.1%) was the strongest predictor
of technical graduates’ business start-up intentions followed by attitudes towards
business start-ups (28.9%) and subjective norms (11.5%). Entrepreneurship
education significantly moderates the effect of attitudes towards business start-ups
(p < 0.001) and perceived behavioural control (p < 0.001) on graduates’ business
start-up intentions, but not subjective norms (p > 0.05). The findings further highlight
that only 30.2% of technical graduates’ business start-up intentions transitioned to
actual business start-ups and that limited capital, perceived high taxes, unfriendly
regulatory frameworks, and little awareness of business support services are the main
obstacles hindering their potential. Lastly, university support through concept
development support (p < 0.001) and institutional support (p < 0.001) had a direct
effect on graduates’ business start-up intentions. However, institutional support
partially mediates the effects of university support on business start-up intentions
through concept development support (p < 0.001), but fully mediates education
provision support (p < 0.001) and business development support (p < 0.05). Based
on the findings, the thesis concludes as follows: First, entrepreneurship education is
an effective intervention strategy in facilitating entrepreneurial competencies
acquisition and technical graduates’ intentions to pursue business start-ups. Second,
attitudes toward start-ups and perceived behavioural control strongly mediate the
effect of entrepreneurial competencies on technical graduates’ business start-up
intentions. Third, besides the direct effect of attitudes, subjective norms, and
perceived behavioural control on business start-up intentions, entrepreneurship
education strongly moderates their effect on graduates’ business start-up intentions.
Fourth, university and institutional support play critical roles in fostering graduates’
potential to venture into business start-ups. The thesis presents three implications.
First, the Ministry of Education, Science, and Technology should issue special
directives to all educational institutions to make at least two entrepreneurship courses
compulsory for all students from primary schools to universities. Second, technical
universities should spearhead the establishment of business incubation centers and
innovation spaces for graduates to innovate and test the feasibility of business ideas
before further investment. Third, Local Government Authorities should strive to
improve business start-up ecosystems to motivate university graduates and the
general public to pursue business start-ups to minimize unemployment challenges. |
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