california’s statewide business education leadership project
Post on 09-Jan-2016
25 Views
Preview:
DESCRIPTION
TRANSCRIPT
Napa County Office of EducationSheryl Ryder, Coordinator
Business Education Industry Sectors
Finance & Business
Information Technology
Marketing, Sales & Services
A. E-Commerce
B. Entrepreneurship
C. International Trade
D. Professional Sales & Marketing
Marketing Sales & Service Industry Sector
Resources for Business EducatorsCurriculum Development using CTE Online• eCommerce• Banking & Financial Services• Business Website Design & Development• Computer Graphics for Business
Teacher Training• Google Tools• CTE Assessments• UC a-g & UCCI Institutes• CBEA & MBAReseearch Conferences
News, Events & Links to resources• Newsletter• CaBusinessEd.org• Twitter/CaBusinessEd
Entrepreneurship Resources
Resources for Young Entrepreneurs
• www.mindyourownbiz.org• http://napayep.org• www.sba.gov• www.entrepreneur.com/tsu• www.college-startup.com• http://titan.ja.org• www.businessownersideaca
fe.com• www.youngentrepreneur.c
om
Resources for Entrepreneur Instructors
• http://www.entre.ed.org• www.21stcentryskills.org• www.sba.gov• www.kaufman.org• http://www.yeaworks.org/• http://nvccte.org• The Real Game California
5
Entrepreneurship Resources Continued
Consortium for Entrepreneurship Educationwww.entre-ed.org
USA TODAY Education Entrepreneurship resources: www.usatoday.com/educate/entrepreneur.htm The National Council on Economic Educationhttp://www.galleryofentrepreneurs.com/ Global Entrepreneurship Weekwww.unleashingideas.org Small Business Entrepreneurswww.smallbusinessentrepreneurs.co.uk MicroMentorhttp://www.micromentor.org/
65 Indispensable Websites for Business OwnersEntrepreneurship Magazine
LEVEl
GRADE
CTE CoursesEnglishLanguage
ArtsMath
SocialStudies
Science
OtherRequiredCourses orRecommendedelectives
SECONDARY
7
BusinessCareerExploration Lang Arts Pre Alg W History
8 Keyboarding Lang Arts Algebra US History
9 Intro toBusiness English Geometry W History Biology
Foreign LangPhysical Ed
10
Accounting English Algebra 2 Health Foreign LangPhysical Ed
11BusinessManagemnt English
USHistory Fine Arts
12Work based
Learning Com Tech Govt/Economics
Programs of Study - Secondary
California Virtual Enterprise ~What is it? ~
• A simulated business set up & run by students.• Market research to determine products & services• Digital representations offered through Web sites,
catalogs & brochures.• Payroll, purchases & payments completed through
an online banking system.• Hundreds of virtual companies have each other as trading and business partners.
VIRTUAL ENTERPRISE AROUND THE WORLD
ArgentinaArgentina 24 24 Australia 131 Austria 886Australia 131 Austria 886Belgium 142 Brazil 104 BulgariaBelgium 142 Brazil 104 Bulgaria 68 68 Canada 42 Croatia 42 Czech RepCanada 42 Croatia 42 Czech Rep 254 254England 26 Finland 86 France 134England 26 Finland 86 France 134Germany 548 Hungary 258 Hong Kong 265Germany 548 Hungary 258 Hong Kong 265Italy 344 JapanItaly 344 Japan 30 30 Lithuania 47Lithuania 47Norway 46 Slovenia 120 Slovak Rep. 283Norway 46 Slovenia 120 Slovak Rep. 283South AfricaSouth Africa 10 10 Spain 215 Sweden 80Spain 215 Sweden 80Switzerland 48 Poland 58Switzerland 48 Poland 58 RomaniaRomania 11 11
Russia 7 Russia 7 U.S.A. 428U.S.A. 428
CALIFORNIA VE COMPANIES? 180 & growing!
The textbook
www.virtualenterprise.org
Local & International Trade Fairs Electronic Conferences Business Partner Meetings Job Shadowing Workshops with Business Partners Business and Annual Report Presentations Company Grand Openings Open Houses
VE Projects
•Each year – STUDENTS decide on the virtual business they want to start
•STUDENTS own their Virtual Business
•They learn HOW TO start the company
•Students become EmployeesEmployees are interviewed and hiredManagement is selectedJob descriptions are definedTasks are divided
and Business Begins
It’s all pretend…….
• It simulates the real thing….
• But it provides a REAL experience that prepares students for LIFE
Everything is VIRTUAL
• Employees – Learn to Write a Business Plan – so they
can fund their business– Decide on product and pricing – Figure out inventory and potential sales– Create a catalog, advertisements,
newsletters, etc.– Work with business people from the
community– Create a website– And much, much more……..
First Business Plan Presentation
TRAVIS CREDIT UNION
SUCCESS!!
BUSINESS PLAN PRESENTATION #2
Grand Opening Event
Support from local business
Trade Fairs allow virtual businesses to sell face to face.
Networking & Business Skills from Trade Shows.
Student Learning Outcomes:• Goal setting and prior planning is emphasized. • Teamwork and cooperation is enhanced.• Marketing & Finance skills are practiced.• Entrepreneurial and Soft Skills are utilized in
real-world situations.
SAGE and Your High School: A Partnership
Opportunity
A Partnership Opportunity
Students for the Advancement of Global Entrepreneurship
SAGEStudents complete projects related to:• “business” entrepreneurship • “social” entrepreneurship• international business• civic engagement in a democracy, and• environmental awareness.Opportunities to compete globally
www.sageglobal.org
SAGE’s Mission
To advance entrepreneurship education and community service-learning around the world, emphasizing ethical business practices, social responsibility, civic engagement and environmental awareness.
What is SAGE?
SAGE is an international network that links secondary school student organizations, like Junior Achievement or Economics classes, and student government, to business consultants from local universities, community colleges and businesses.
Then, at the end of April or May…………
• Your team writes up a brief summary of your projects (with help from your university mentor)
• You create a dazzling PPT or multimedia presentation• Your SAGE team travels to the state competition to
present your projects to a panel of influential business and civic leaders
• The BEST team wins prize money and the right to represent your school in the SAGE USA National Competition!
Why Is This Project So Important?
• SAGE encourages a higher level of understanding of financial and economic concepts in high schools
• Also, a recent Gallup survey found that, even though 70% of high school students want to start their own business, more than half acknowledged that their understanding of business issues is poor.
• Many students want to “give back” to the community; SAGE gives them a chance to use their talents, creativity and imagination in choosing what programs to serve.
SAGE Judging Criteria
1. Completed at least one new “for profit” entrepreneurship venture (10 points)
2. Completed at least one continuing “for profit” entrepreneurship venture (10 points)
3. Completed at least one new “social” entrepreneurship venture (10 points)
4. Completed at least one continuing “social” entrepreneurship venture (10 points)
5. Included at least one type of “global” component in their venture(s) (10 points)
6. Understand the importance of civic engagement in a democratic society (10 points)
7. Understand the importance of being responsible stewards of the environment (10 points)
7. Utilizing resources, including at least one or two college “mentors” and a Business Advisory Board (10 points)
9. Utilizing mass media (10 points)10. Assessing the results of their projects (10
points)
Which Countries Currently Offer SAGE?
• Singapore • South Africa• South Korea• Tanzania• Ukraine • Uganda• United States
• Brazil • China• Ghana• Germany• Kenya• Nigeria• Philippines• Russia
For More InformationContact:
Virtual Enterprise: Nancy Phillips
nphillips@khsd.k12.ca.usSAGE:
Curt DeBergcdeberg@sageglobal.org
Job Shadow & Educational Eventsin partnership with Junior Achievement
• Guest Speakers• Job Shadowing• Business Ethics• Success Skills• Business Simulations
Career Technical Student Organizations (CTSO)
• DECAhttp://www.californiadeca.org/
• FBLAhttp://cafbla.schoolfusion.us/
top related