Entrepreneurship education has gained considerable importance within higher education institutions as universities increasingly aim to cultivate innovation, opportunity recognition, and venture creation skills among students. Over the past two decades, entrepreneurship courses and programs have expanded rapidly across academic disciplines. Despite this growth, scholars continue to debate the effectiveness of current pedagogical approaches used to teach entrepreneurial competencies. Many entrepreneurship courses still rely heavily on traditional lecture-based instruction, which may not adequately reflect the uncertain, experiential, and practice-oriented nature of entrepreneurial activity (Neck Nabi et al., 2017). Based on these findings, the paper proposes a conceptual framework that integrates experiential learning strategies, digital learning platforms, and collaboration with entrepreneurial ecosystems such as industry mentors, incubators, and startup networks. This integrated approach aims to strengthen students’ practical entrepreneurial capabilities while aligning entrepreneurship education with contemporary technological and economic developments. The study contributes to the expanding body of research on entrepreneurship education by offering a structured model that can support curriculum innovation, institutional policy development, and future empirical research within higher education.
Dr. Meenal Shah (Wed,) studied this question.