2012/2013 KAN-SOC_VFSE Social Effectuation
English Title | |
Social Effectuation |
Course information |
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Language | English |
Exam ECTS | 7.5 ECTS |
Type | Elective |
Level | Full Degree Master |
Duration | One Semester |
Course period |
Changes in course schedule may occur
Wednesday 13.30-16.05, week 36-41, 43-46 |
Time Table | Please see course schedule at e-Campus |
Study board |
Study Board for MSc of Social Science
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Course coordinator | |
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Administrative contact: Karina Ravn Nielsen, LPF/MPP, electives.lpf@cbs.dk, direct phone 3815 3782 |
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Main Category of the Course | |
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Last updated on 27-04-2012 |
Learning objectives | |||||||||||||||||
The course aims at: • Equip students with the analytical and planning tools necessary to launch a high impact social enterprise. • Provide students with the opportunity to apply the tools to develop their own social entrepreneurial initiative. • Help students better assess their own potential and interest in becoming a social entrepreneur. |
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Examination | |||||||||||||||||
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Course content | |||||||||||||||||
Effectuation processes take a set of means as given and focus on selecting between possible effects that can be created with that set of means. Compare it to causation processes, that take a particular effect as given and focus on selecting between means to create that effect. These are, as it were, two distinct decision-making processes. The first starts with the means you (the potential entrepreneur) have and looks at what can be done with them; the second starts with a given goal and attempts to reach it regardless of the means you are actually able to gather (Sarasvathy, 2001). This course takes its starting point in the difference between causation and effectuation processes. Whereas causation processes have traditionally dominated management and business education, effectuation processes have only recently gained momentum. This course will look at effectuation principles and apply them to the creation of students’ own social entrepreneurial ventures. This course is venture based: it will be based on a passion oriented social venture that students cocreate. First because the most effective way to understand social entrepreneurship is to practice it. Second, because the course aims to promote a creative and proactive stance toward the society you live in, not merely an adaptive or critical one. Thus, this course takes an experiential approach and students are expected to interact with civil society and the social entrepreneurial community, participate in class discussion, and be active participants in the teaching/learning process. Topics will include understanding the problem you want to address, assessing the opportunity, acknowledging the implicit theory of change, organizational form, funding your initiative, building your board, using social media for social ventures, pitching your initiative, measuring social impact, and the tradeoffs between social and financial returns on investment. This course appeals to students with a strong desire to become social entrepreneurs, or work in a social startup, early stage or social entrepreneurial minded company that may be pursued now or later in their careers. It is also for those students who are considering obtaining jobs in consulting, social venture capital, or social foundations where they are dealing with new or relatively new social ventures. |
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Teaching methods | |||||||||||||||||
The course will combine a variety of methods, ranging from traditional lectures, case studies, study visits, guest speakers, reading groups, group presentations and the mini-project. Students are expected to come prepared to engage with guest speakers, faculty, and class members, and to participate in class discussion. Before each class, class members should have read the assigned readings, thought about their application to the case/topic of the day and their particular social ventures, and prepared to discuss the assigned study questions. On days when speakers have provided background materials, students should have reviewed that material and thought about questions or issues you would like them to address. |
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Expected literature | |||||||||||||||||
Preliminary course literature
Read, S., Sarasvathy, S., Dew, N. , Wiltbank, R. & Ohlsson, A. 2010. Effectual Entrepreneurship. Abingdon/New York: Routledge. Saras D. Sarasvathy. 2001. “Causation and effectuation: Toward a theoretical shift from economic inevitability to entrepreneurial contingency.” Academy of Management Review, 26(2): 243-263. Teaching cases tbc |