Samson Adewumi
University of Zululand, South Africa

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CURRICULUM DESIGN AND ENTREPRENEURIAL INTENTION: BRIDGING GRADUATES’ UNEMPLOYMENT GAP IN NIGERIA Samson Adewumi; Simangele Cele
Erudio Journal of Educational Innovation Vol 10, No 1 (2023): Erudio Journal of Educational Innovation
Publisher : Universitas Brawijaya

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Abstract

Remarking on the narrative of curriculum design, scarce research attention has been harnessed to understand the implication of curriculum design in the development of entrepreneurship intentions in Nigeria.  To address this gap, the study assesses how curriculum design can be used as a lever to propel robust entrepreneurship intentions among graduates in reaction to rising youth unemployment. A total of 19 respondents (graduates and educators) were interviewed to understand the role of curriculum design in the development of entrepreneurial intentions for employment and venture creation. Different themes and sub-themes were identified with the NVivo (12) qualitative software, and the Content Qualitative Analytical tool was thereafter used to make sense of these themes. Results revealed the concern of ambiguous and outdated course curricula incapacitated to explore and provoke appropriate entrepreneurial intentions. The right mix of entrepreneurial intentions, skills, traits, and competency is largely not infused in the existing higher education curriculum in Nigeria. Addressing graduates’ unemployment challenges is unconnected to having a robust and practical curriculum in tandem with global best practices. The study concludes with the need to revoke the existing Nigeria’s higher education curriculum through the infusion and application of entrepreneurial intentions skills and traits.