Who is Qualified to Teach Entrepreneurship?

"Many faculty members see themselves as 'entrepreneurial outsiders' — unqualified, uninterested, or just downright confused by the whole concept."

In a nutshell

Many educators don’t feel qualified to teach entrepreneurship, seeing it as too vague, too corporate, or just “not for them.” But the real challenge isn’t who can teach it — it’s how we help more educators feel like they can.

In a Bigger Nutshell

Entrepreneurship education is booming. Business schools have been championing it for decades, but now, universities are embedding entrepreneurship into everything from engineering to the arts. There’s just one small problem: many educators outside of business disciplines don’t feel qualified to teach it.

A recent study by Neergård and Roald (2024) dives into this issue, exploring how university educators perceive entrepreneurship and their role in teaching it. The researchers conducted focus-group interviews with 44 educators across various disciplines at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), and their findings show that many faculty members see themselves as “entrepreneurial outsiders” — unqualified, uninterested, or just downright confused by the whole concept.

Basically, entrepreneurial outsiderness is when educators feel disconnected from entrepreneurship, either because the jargon makes no sense to them, it doesn’t seem relevant to their field, or they can’t shake the image of entrepreneurs as Silicon Valley tech bros. Many felt that entrepreneurship was either too vague or too corporate, and some outright admitted they’d rather someone else deal with it. One professor summed up the sentiment neatly: “I understand that there is a set of tools and things to do in an innovation process, but I don’t know anything about it. This makes it hard for me to incorporate it into my teaching.”

This raises a bit of an uncomfortable question: If so many educators don’t feel qualified to teach entrepreneurship, who actually is? The knee-jerk answer is perhaps business school faculty, but this paper challenges that assumption. The authors mean that if entrepreneurship is meant to be embedded across disciplines, it shouldn’t be confined to a business-school perspective.

Publication Date: 6 January 2025

Authors: Gunn-Berit Neergård, Gunhild Marie Roald

Institutions: Department of Industrial Economics and Technology Management, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Trondheim, Norway

Study Type: Qualitative study

Sample Size: 44 university educators across multiple disciplines, interviewed in eight focus groups

Research Focus: Investigating how university educators perceive entrepreneurship and their ability to teach it, particularly in the context of embedded entrepreneurship education.

Research Methodology: Thematic analysis of focus-group interviews, applying social identity theory to explore educators’ perceptions of entrepreneurship and their self-positioning as either “entrepreneurial outsiders” or “entrepreneurial insiders.”

Main Findings: Many educators feel like entrepreneurial outsiders, struggling to connect with entrepreneurship due to unclear terminology, lack of knowledge, and rigid stereotypes about who qualifies as an entrepreneur. Others embrace entrepreneurial insiderness by adapting entrepreneurship to their discipline, yet still face challenges due to institutional barriers and prevailing narratives. The study suggests that dismantling stereotypes and broadening the definition of entrepreneurship could make it more accessible to educators across disciplines.

Citation: Neergård, G.-B. and Roald, G.M. (2025), “Competent to teach? Educators’ perceptions of entrepreneurship”, International Journal of Entrepreneurial Behavior & Research, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. Link

The study also introduces entrepreneurial insiderness, where some educators do embrace entrepreneurship — often by adapting it to fit their discipline, but even some of these “insiders” felt like impostors because they didn’t match the dominant image of an entrepreneur.

And what does that image look like? According to the study’s participants, it’s still overwhelmingly male, tech-driven, and capital-focused. One professor admitted that when asked to picture an entrepreneur, the only figures that came to mind were Steve Jobs and Elon Musk. Another participant saw entrepreneurship as something meant only for engineers and startup founders, while others linked it solely to high-risk ventures or flashy tech innovations. This narrow perception fuels a cycle where only certain disciplines — and certain types of people — feel entitled to claim entrepreneurship as their own.

So, who is really qualified to teach entrepreneurship? According to this study, the better question might be: How can we help more educators feel like they are? The authors suggest that universities need to shake off these outdated stereotypes and rethink how they present entrepreneurship — making it something more people can see themselves in. Instead of treating it as a rigid, business-school export, educators could view it more broadly — as a way of creating value, solving problems, and questioning the status quo.

Until that happens, we’re left with a paradox: we want students across disciplines to develop an entrepreneurial mindset, but many of their professors don’t feel entitled to one themselves.

Related insights appear in
Rethinking Who Fits the Mould in Entrepreneurship Education,
The Actual Skills You Need for Sustainable Entrepreneurship,
and
Untangling the Threads of Entrepreneurship Education Research.

More Research Recaps:

Research Recap – engineering entrepreneurship education (illustration)

Turning Engineers into Entrepreneurs

A Spanish university course used challenge-based learning to boost engineering students' entrepreneurial skills, improving their problem-solving, creative thinking, and resource management.
Science-fiction prototyping workshop: students create speculative artefacts; science fiction in entrepreneurship education.

Teaching the Future
Before It Arrives

Blending science fiction with entrepreneurship education helps students imagine and prepare for radically different futures – not just extrapolate from the present. This study shows ...
Illustration of the entrepreneurial learning curve and psychological capital

What Students Need to Survive
the Entrepreneurial Learning Curve

Entrepreneurial learning works best when students have the inner resources to stay steady through uncertainty, hopeful through setbacks, and confident enough to try again.
Entrepreneurship education effectiveness – research illustration

When does Entrepreneurship Education Actually Work?

Making entrepreneurship education compulsory doesn’t guarantee it will stick. Too early, and students tune out. Too late, and they’ve moved on. Taught poorly, and it’s ...
Entrepreneurial method illustration, representing effectuation in entrepreneurship education

Introducing the Entrepreneurial Method

Teaching entrepreneurship is evolving from simply just tools and techniques to an entire method – one that teaches students to master uncertainty and create opportunities ...
Research recap – reality of becoming an entrepreneur (illustration)

The Bumpy Reality
of Becoming an Entrepreneur

Students’ entrepreneurial identity and intent don’t develop in neat upward curves. Even with the support of enterprise education, the process is messy, emotional, and riddled ...
Illustration of academic entrepreneurship hybrid identity — researchers balancing academia and innovation — SSES Research Recap.

Researchers by Day, Entrepreneurs by Night

Balancing academic rigour with entrepreneurial impact isn’t easy, but the right mix of university support and real-world connections can make it possible for researchers to ...
Research recap – secondary school to startups (illustration)

From Secondary School to Startups

Turns out entrepreneurship isn’t necessarily just a university thing. A Danish school reform shows that early exposure to entrepreneurship boosts startup rates and nudges students ...
Research recap – relevance in entrepreneurship education (illustration)

Relevance Isn’t a Bonus
– It’s the Point

Most entrepreneurship research is designed to impress reviewers, not to help entrepreneurs. This paper argues that studies should be built with real-world relevance in mind ...
Research recap – rebels build startups (illustration)

Why Rebels Build Startups
— and Rule-Followers Don’t

Some people break the rules to make things better — and those people are more likely to become entrepreneurs. But if they believe too strongly ...