This fall, Temple University was the only area university ranked among top entrepreneurship programs for undergraduates in the United States by three separate ranking entities: Fortune Small Business magazine, Entrepreneur magazine with the Princeton Review, and U.S. News & World Report. Temple's graduate entrepreneurship programs also ranked highly.
Temple University was ranked eighth for undergraduate programs and 12th for graduate programs by Entrepreneur magazine and the Princeton Review following a survey of more than 900 schools across the United States.
Since Entrepreneur magazine started its ranking surveys five years ago, Temple University, through its Fox School of Business, has remained the only school from the Philadelphia region to be included each year.
In the September issue of Fortune Small Business magazine, Temple was named a Top 25 school for undergraduate programs in entrepreneurship. Only one other school in the state, the University of Pennsylvania, was included.
Temple was also included in U.S. News & World Report's "America's Best Colleges 2008 for entrepreneurship/entrepreneurial studies," an undergraduate ranking.
Temple's entrepreneurship program is housed at the university's Fox School of Business. "It's rewarding to see our entrepreneurship programs recognized nationally in the company of prestigious schools," said M. Moshe Porat, dean of the Fox School.
"Entrepreneurial thinking is a cornerstone of Temple, and our programs continue to expand and strengthen each year in both the academic and the applied sectors. Our mission is for students to think and act like entrepreneurs no matter where their career paths take them," he added.
Temple's entrepreneurship program includes interdisciplinary educational opportunities, internships with new and growing ventures, intensive mentoring and coaching, annual idea generation and business plan competitions, workshops and seminars, community outreach and annual conferences in social, global, women's and industry-specific entrepreneurship.
Explained Chris Pavlides, executive director of the university's Innovation and Entrepreneurship Institute, "We take a personal, hands-on approach to entrepreneurship. At Temple, students are empowered to start their own businesses, then encouraged, incubated and supported as they progress through revenue generation, sustainability and fast-track growth."
Currently, Temple offers an entrepreneurship major in its Fox School of Business as well as an entrepreneurship minor. At the undergraduate level, certificate programs in non-business disciplines have been successfully piloted at the College of Engineering, College of Science and Technology and College of Health Professions. The certificate is being formalized and will soon be rolled out to all schools.
This year, at the graduate level, several new courses were introduced: Entrepreneurship in the Life Sciences, Management of Innovation in Technology and Social Entrepreneurship. These courses were created in preparation for an MBA concentration in entrepreneurship that is nearing its launch.