TY - JOUR
T1 - Challenge Based Learning for Social Entrepreneurship Education
AU - Depryck, Koen
AU - Wambacq, Ilse
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025, University of National and World Economy. All rights reserved.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Challenge Based Learning (CBL) provides a promising educational framework for teaching social entrepreneurship, addressing the persistent gap between theoretical knowledge and practical implementation. Through a comprehensive analysis of existing literature and theoretical frameworks, this paper demonstrates how CBL’s seven key elements-authentic challenges, stakeholder involvement, interdisciplinary approaches, student agency, work and life skills development, entrepreneurial mindset cultivation, and impact focus-directly align with and support core social entrepreneurship competencies. The integration of Kolb’s experiential learning theory, Santos’ social entrepreneurship framework, and Rogers’ innovation diffusion theory provide a basis for understanding how CBL can enhance social entrepreneurship education. Evidence suggests that CBL particularly excels in developing three critical areas: (1) students’ ability to identify and validate social entrepreneurship opportunities through real-world engagement, (2) their capacity to build and manage multi-stakeholder collaborations, and (3) their competency in measuring and communicating social impact. While implementation of CBL is sometimes demanding, particularly related to resource allocation and stakeholder coordination, our analysis provides specific strategies for addressing these barriers through phased implementation and structured support systems. This paper advances both theoretical understanding and practical application of social entrepreneurship education by providing a comprehensive framework for curriculum design and implementation.
AB - Challenge Based Learning (CBL) provides a promising educational framework for teaching social entrepreneurship, addressing the persistent gap between theoretical knowledge and practical implementation. Through a comprehensive analysis of existing literature and theoretical frameworks, this paper demonstrates how CBL’s seven key elements-authentic challenges, stakeholder involvement, interdisciplinary approaches, student agency, work and life skills development, entrepreneurial mindset cultivation, and impact focus-directly align with and support core social entrepreneurship competencies. The integration of Kolb’s experiential learning theory, Santos’ social entrepreneurship framework, and Rogers’ innovation diffusion theory provide a basis for understanding how CBL can enhance social entrepreneurship education. Evidence suggests that CBL particularly excels in developing three critical areas: (1) students’ ability to identify and validate social entrepreneurship opportunities through real-world engagement, (2) their capacity to build and manage multi-stakeholder collaborations, and (3) their competency in measuring and communicating social impact. While implementation of CBL is sometimes demanding, particularly related to resource allocation and stakeholder coordination, our analysis provides specific strategies for addressing these barriers through phased implementation and structured support systems. This paper advances both theoretical understanding and practical application of social entrepreneurship education by providing a comprehensive framework for curriculum design and implementation.
KW - Challenge Based Learning
KW - Diffusion of Innovation Theory
KW - Experiential learning theory
KW - Positive Social Entrepreneurship Theory
KW - Social Entrepreneurship Education
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105018032215
U2 - 10.37075/EA.2025.3.08
DO - 10.37075/EA.2025.3.08
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105018032215
SN - 1312-7462
VL - 31
SP - 773
EP - 796
JO - Economic Alternatives
JF - Economic Alternatives
IS - 3
ER -