Claim Missing Document
Check
Articles

Found 2 Documents
Search

Unveiling the Synergy Between the Digital Startup Ecosystem and Entrepreneurship Education: The Role of Digital Personality in Enhancing Students’ Entrepreneurial Intentions Junianto, Pilifus; Sutrisno, Sutrisno; Syamsuri, Syamsuri; Pramono, Susatyo Adhi; Solihati, Garin Pratiwi; Wanof, M. Indre
Jurnal Kependidikan : Jurnal Hasil Penelitian dan Kajian Kepustakaan di Bidang Pendidikan, Pengajaran, dan Pembelajaran Vol. 11 No. 4 (2025): December
Publisher : LPPM Universitas Pendidikan Mandalika

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.33394/jk.v11i4.17116

Abstract

This study examines how the digital startup ecosystem and entrepreneurship education influence university students’ entrepreneurial intentions in Bandung City, with digital personality acting as a mediating variable. A quantitative approach using SEM-PLS was employed, with data collected through an online Likert-scale questionnaire that served as the primary research instrument for measuring perceptions of the digital startup ecosystem, entrepreneurship education, digital personality traits, and entrepreneurial intention. A total of 100 students were selected through purposive sampling, an approach considered sufficient for SEM-PLS analysis, particularly for exploratory models and moderate model complexity. The results show that both the digital startup ecosystem and entrepreneurship education positively influence entrepreneurial intention. However, the digital startup ecosystem exerts its effect only indirectly through digital personality traits such as technological adaptability, digital creativity, and confidence in digital environments. In contrast, entrepreneurship education demonstrates both direct and indirect effects on entrepreneurial intention. The study contributes theoretically by integrating the Theory of Planned Behavior and the Theory of Digital Personality, emphasizing that digital personality acts as a psychological mechanism transforming educational and ecosystem stimuli into entrepreneurial motivation in digital contexts. These findings highlight the importance of incorporating digital personality development into entrepreneurship learning and offer contextual strategies to strengthen youth participation in digital-based entrepreneurship within creative urban ecosystems like Bandung.
Unveiling the Role of Risk-Taking Ability in Mediating the Influence of Entrepreneurship Education, Digital Financial Literacy, and Financial Self-Efficacy on Students’ Courage to Start a Business Sutrisno; Solihati, Garin Pratiwi; Syamsuri; Pramono, Susatyo Adhi; Jayanto, Imam; Shafiq, Muhammad Aqib
Jurnal Kependidikan : Jurnal Hasil Penelitian dan Kajian Kepustakaan di Bidang Pendidikan, Pengajaran, dan Pembelajaran Vol. 12 No. 1 (2026): March
Publisher : LPPM Universitas Pendidikan Mandalika

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.33394/jk.v12i1.19701

Abstract

This study aims to analyze the effects of Entrepreneurship Education, Digital Financial Literacy, and Financial Self-Efficacy on Students’ Courage to Start a Business, with Risk-Taking Ability as a mediating variable. A quantitative approach with a survey design was employed, with 100 university students in Banyumas Regency selected via purposive sampling. Data were collected through a structured online questionnaire and analyzed using SEM-PLS with a bootstrapping procedure. The results indicate that Entrepreneurship Education, Digital Financial Literacy, and Financial Self-Efficacy have positive and significant effects on Risk-Taking Ability. Furthermore, Risk-Taking Ability has a positive and significant effect on Students’ Courage to Start a Business. In addition, Risk-Taking Ability is proven to positively and significantly mediate the effects of the three independent variables on students’ entrepreneurial courage. These findings suggest that students’ entrepreneurial courage is largely determined by their ability to assess risks and opportunities and to make decisions under uncertainty. This study contributes theoretically by uniquely integrating financial aspects and psychological aspects within a single framework grounded in the Theory of Planned Behavior, Social Cognitive Theory, and Behavioral Finance Theory. By linking students’ digital financial capability with their risk-taking ability, the model explains how financial knowledge strengthens psychological readiness in entrepreneurial decision-making. The findings also provide practical implications for higher education institutions and policymakers in designing entrepreneurship programs that simultaneously develop digital financial competence and risk-taking capacity.