Donna Kelley and Irv Rhodes teach Junior Achievement at Crocker Farm School
So forget those stodgy A rated, peer reviewed, academic journals so many professors are enslaved to, my lovely wife just made the really b-i-g time for publishing: The Huffington Post. Yikes!
Excuse me while I slip into unbiased reporter mode:
Yesterday at the World Bank in Washington, DC, Babson College professor Donna J. Kelley helped to launch the "Global Woman's Report," which she was lead author. A comprehensive study of women entrepreneurs in 59 countries, the report verified an age-old truism: necessity is the mother of invention.
Yesterday at the World Bank in Washington, DC, Babson College professor Donna J. Kelley helped to launch the "Global Woman's Report," which she was lead author. A comprehensive study of women entrepreneurs in 59 countries, the report verified an age-old truism: necessity is the mother of invention.
Since starting a business is one way create a life line, it makes sense that in countries where women have less opportunity handed to them their motivation to succeed is higher.
And in countries like America, where desperation is less prevalent, woman correspondingly have less incentive to risk going it alone with a start-up business.
And in countries like America, where desperation is less prevalent, woman correspondingly have less incentive to risk going it alone with a start-up business.
Kelley just returned to her Amherst home on Saturday after a prestigious Fullbright Scholarship took her to Indonesia for three weeks to teach entrepreneurship while she simultaneously coordinated a Junior Achievement business course at Amherst Crocker Farm Elementary school, where her daughters are enrolled.
The Washington Post also reports
Business Week joins the pack
The Washington Post also reports
Business Week joins the pack