The Effect of Entrepreneurship Education on Entrepreneurial Intentions
Entrepreneurship education is inculcated in the curriculum as a course and designed as a program that provides students with the necessary knowledge, skills, and attitudes as they create their enterprise after graduation in many universities across the globe (Ekpoh & Edet, 2011; Ooi, Selvarajah, & Meyer, 2011). It is delivering teaching and/or training courses typically for students or small group of entrepreneurs on how to start up a business; how to generate business ideas, how to develop and implement a business plan, how to manage small businesses, and a variety of aspects of the small business development process (Pages & Kenneth, 2003). According to Davidsson (1991), entrepreneurship education has become a prominent field of study nowadays. This field has emerged from multiple disciplines such as management, economics, education, psychology, and technical studies. Entrepreneurship education is booming worldwide now since it is vital for the socio-economic development of a nation (Katz, 2003). It focuses on students’ entrepreneurial abilities so that they develop entrepreneurial intentions that formal methods of education do not do. Besides, Gorman, Hanlon, and King (1997) conducted ten years of an extensive review of literature on entrepreneurship education and reach on the conclusions that most of the entrepreneurship can be taught, or can at least be encouraged by entrepreneurship education.
Numerous scholars have discovered that exposure to entrepreneurial education significantly increases participants’ entrepreneurial intentions (Dendup & Acharja, 2017; Fayolle et al., 2006; Keat et al., 2011; Lee et al., 2006; Luthje and Franke, 2003; Packham et al., 2010; Pittaway and Cope, 2007; Souitaris et al., 2007, Zhao et al., 2005). Krueger, et al. (2000) believes that entrepreneurial intentions can be learned. For this, we can say that entrepreneurship education is one of the environmental support variables that can influence the entrepreneurial attitude and intention of students in universities. But entrepreneurship development is at its infant stage in Ethiopia though its importance recognized and attention given in Educational Roadmap Development (2018-2030) of the country. For example, even though the importance of entrepreneurship is recognized by universities, there are no actual entrepreneurship policies and strategies that promote entrepreneurship beyond teaching one course for the students. Even, there are many problems observed in Ethiopian higher education institutions on the development and promotion of entrepreneurship and graduating entrepreneurial-minded students’ as desired. There is no clear policy, manuals, guidelines that urge higher education institutions to promote entrepreneurship education, the way the course entrepreneurship delivered has also multifaceted problems such as the method of teaching, an assessment used, course content, credit hour, semester when the course is given. Lecturers teaching the course have little or no practical experience in running their businesses and most have not had formal training in teaching entrepreneurship. According to McMullan and Long (1985); Vesper and McMullan (1988), the content and teaching methods have to be differentiated between entrepreneurship and traditional business courses. But in Ethiopia traditional lecturing is the most basic tool and examination is the main assessment method used for entrepreneurship in tandem with other courses. Few researches conducted in Ethiopia still revealed that entrepreneurship education has significant effects on the entrepreneurial intentions of university students (Mesfin & Shumet, 2018; Dugassa, 2012). But these studies focused on only engineering and business students. Therefore, to fill this gap by participating students from all field of studies from both public and private, the researcher set the following hypothesis.
Hapothesis-1: Entrepreneurship education has significant effect on entrepreneurial intentions
The effect of entrepreneurship education on perceived behavioral control (PBC)
The first scholars who were applying the theory of planned behavior (TPB) with the specific context of entrepreneurship education were Krueger and Carsrud (2000). They found that entrepreneurship education has an impact on the antecedent of entrepreneurial intentions identified by TPB (i.e. attitude toward behavior, social norm, and perceived behavioral control). Moreover, Wilson et al. (2007), stated that students’ sense of entrepreneurial self-efficacy or PBC can be improved by entrepreneurship education since it engages students’ in various learning opportunities such as business idea generation, business plan writing, role modeling, and case study. Walter & Dohse (2012); Karimi et al. (2016); Oyugi (2015) also confirmed entrepreneurship education programs positively related to PBC and other antecedents of entrepreneurial intentions. However, Fayolle, et al. (2006) PBC was not highly influenced by entrepreneurship education. Besides, Souitaris, Zerbinati, and Al-Lahm (2007) found there was no significant relationship between entrepreneurship education programs and PBC. The results from empirical evidence show inconsistent findings on the effect of entrepreneurship education on PBC; as a result, the present study formulated the following hypothesis to test the effect of entrepreneurship education on PBC from the Ethiopian context.
Hypothesis-2: Entrepreneurship education has significant effect on perceived behavioral control
The Effect of Perceived Behavioral Control (PBC) on Entrepreneurial Intentions (EIs)
Ajzen (1991) introduced PBC as another antecedent factor that can influence intentions. He defined as a “person’s perception of the ease or difficulty of performing the behavior of interest”.
It is related to the self-efficacy concept which focuses on a person’s perception towards a behavior simplicity and/or complexity. Perceived behavioral control referred to control people's beliefs towards various factors associated with the issues that could ease them or not (Yean et al., 2015). According to Krueger et al. (2000) in the field of entrepreneurship, entrepreneurial self-efficacy has proved to be a remarkable predictor of entrepreneurial intentions. Perceived behavioral control has an impact on intentions and actions since it deals with an individual’s perception of the ease or difficulty of performing certain behavior and its actual role varies depending on situational factors (Sara Bux, 2016). Sesen (2012) conducted research in Turkish found that PBC has a positive and significant impact on entrepreneurial intentions. Karimi et al. (2016) indicated that PBC is the strongest predictor of EI. Yap, Othman, & Wee (2013) stated that PBC is the most controversial construct due to inconsistency in the empirical findings on the impact of PBC on EIs. For example, Engle et al. (2010) conducted scientific research in twelve countries to test the predicting ability of antecedents of entrepreneurial intentions on entrepreneurial intentions and found that perceived behavioral control (PBC) was significant predictor of entrepreneurial intention only in seven countries. Thus, the following hypothesis is developed to test the influence of PBC on EIs of university students from Ethiopian context.
Hypothesis-3: Perceived behavioral control has significant effect on entrepreneurial intentions
The mediating effect of perceived behavioral control
The mediating effect is created when a new third variable/construct intervenes between two related variables. It highlights the distinction between direct and indirect effects. The direct effects are the relationship between two constructs with a single arrow (Hair, et al., 2019). As discussed above in the present study, there are three direct relationships. Those are the direct effect of entrepreneurship education on entrepreneurial intentions (EED-EIs) and PBC (EED-PBC), and the effect of PBC on entrepreneurial intentions (PBC-EIs). The indirect effects are those relationships that involve a sequence of relationships with at least one intervening construct (ibid). Thus, in the present study, the researchers have tried to find the mediating role of PBC on the relationship between entrepreneurship education and entrepreneurial intentions (EED-PBC-EIs) but there was scant empirical evidence on the mediating role of PBC on the relationships of entrepreneurship education and entrepreneurial intentions. For example, Oyugi (2015) conducted research in Uganda on the mediating effect of self-efficacy on the relationship between entrepreneurship education and entrepreneurial intentions of university students and found that self-efficacy was partially mediating the relationship between entrepreneurship education and entrepreneurial intentions. The second empirical evidence that the researchers found was the study conducted in Malaysia on public university students found that perceived behavioral control proved as significant mediators in individual entrepreneurial orientation and entrepreneurial intentions relationships (Awang et al. 2016). Though the research used maximum effort to review relevant empirical literature, unfortunately, did not find more empirical evidence on the mediating role of PBC. Therefore, this study is assumed to fill the gap in the extant literature on the mediating role of PBC on the relationship between entrepreneurship education and entrepreneurial intentions of university students in general and particularly from the Ethiopian context. Thus, the following hypothesis was designed in the current study:
Hypothesis-4: Perceived behavioral control has a significant mediating effect on the relationship between entrepreneurship education and entrepreneurial intentions
Conceptual Framework
In the following figure (Figure 1) entrepreneurship education is an exogenous variable that influences entrepreneurial intentions and perceived behavioral control. Thus, as clearly depicted the present study investigates the effect of entrepreneurship education on directly on entrepreneurial intentions and indirectly via perceived behavioral control based on data gathered from undergraduate university students in Ethiopia.
The above pictorial presentation of the conceptual framework (Figure-1) depicted the effect of entrepreneurship education on entrepreneurial intentions (H1), the effect of entrepreneurship education on perceived behavioral control (H2), and the effect of perceived behavioral control on entrepreneurial intentions (H3). Perceived behavioral control is also used as an intervening variable on the relationship between entrepreneurship education and entrepreneurial intentions (H4). In this relationship, we may say that adequate entrepreneurship education enhances students’ perceived behavioral control (self-efficacy), and this in turn increases the entrepreneurial intentions of students. Perceived behavioral control for undergraduate students’ is a function of entrepreneurship education (taking the course entrepreneurship in case of the present study), and help to explain the entrepreneurial intentions of students’.