The youth unemployment crisis in South Africa has continued to escalate from 60% between age of 15-34-year-olds, despite all efforts put in place by the government.In this regard, entrepreneurship education has become a priority for the government at all levels.The objective of this study is to investigate entrepreneurial education in South Africa, identify its peculiarities, and formulate recommendations.The literature on ecosystem development and entrepreneurial education theory was combined in the literature review.The study revealed that there are four transformative elements: the shift in paradigm, shift from theoretical learning to experiential learning models (Stellenbosch University's IGNITE programme and Centennial Schools' NextGen Founders); collaborative ecosystem emergence (KwaZulu-Natal universities' networked approach generating employment and jobs for students, integration of digital and the industrial revolution skills growth and national policy coordination through the draft National Entrepreneurship Strategy.It was also found that the adoption of theory-based learning leads to producing half-baked graduates who have inadequate innovation skills, the gap between institutions and the historical advantages and disadvantages, cultural barriers which look at entrepreneurship as the last choice or career to pursue in school, and outcome misalignment with market demands, compounded by data coordination failures.This paper presents a novel analytical framework for understanding the trend-tension dynamic in entrepreneurial education within developing-economy contexts.Also, policymakers, educational leaders, and entrepreneurship educators should enhance the effectiveness of entrepreneurial education by reducing financial constraint environments.
Peter et al. (Thu,) studied this question.