Class number:
3050
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Title: Engineering Entrepreneurship |
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Department: Engineering |
Career: Undergraduate |
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Component: Seminar |
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Session: Regular |
Instructor's Permission Required: No |
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Grading Basis: Regular |
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Units: 1.00 |
Enrollment limited to 25 |
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Current enrollment: 25 |
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Available seats: 0 |
Start date: Tuesday, January 21, 2025 |
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End date: Friday, May 9, 2025 |
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Mode of Instruction: In Person |
Schedule: R: 1:30PM-4:10PM, MECC - 246 |
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Instructor(s): Guha, Richard |
Prerequisite(s): Prerequisite: A satisfactory score on the Mathematics Placement Examination or a C- or better in Quantitative Literacy 101 or QLIT 103 |
Distribution Requirement: Meets Numerical & Symbolic Reasoning Requirement |
Course Description:
This course introduces how significant innovations are created and launched and how they generate new entities, jobs, and value for stakeholders, often changing the world. The focus is on how engineers drive innovation through engineering design and customer discovery. This course will help students understand the broader context in which innovation, invention, and engineered solutions exist -- and how ideas are tested, prototyped, and refined for market. Students will also be exposed to a historical discourse on innovation and how today's approaches were honed by practitioners willing to change how the world views the entrepreneurial journey. Not creditable as an elective to the Engineering major. |