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Special Section: Historically Black Colleges and Universities

Business in Social Work Education: A Historically Black University’s Social Work Entrepreneurship Project

Pages 79-94
Accepted 01 Aug 2015
Published online: 19 Jan 2016
 
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The destabilization of the current economy has sparked increased interest in entrepreneurship, especially for underrepresented minority social work students. The entrepreneurial thinking of these social work students entering social work programs at historically Black colleges and universities needs to be fostered in a learning environment. This article describes a historically Black university’s creative social entrepreneurship venture in response to the Social Work Congress’s 2010 imperative “Business of Social Work—Infuse models of sustainable business and management practice in social work education and practice.” The social entrepreneurship project uses the interprofessional collaborative educational model and attempts to provide meaningful and relevant education to social work students interested in social entrepreneurship through the collaborative efforts of the university’s School of Social Work and the School of Business and Management.

Additional information

Author information

Paul Archibald

Paul Archibald is an Assistant Professor in the School of Social Work at Morgan State University and

Omar Muhammad

Omar Muhammad is the Director of the Entrepreneurial Development & Assistance Center (EDAC) in the Earl G. Graves School of Business and Management at Morgan State University.

Anthony Estreet

Anthony Estreet is an Assistant Professor in the School of Social Work at Morgan State University.
 

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