The Guide shows how entrepreneurship education can be implemented in programs and offers suggestions on how to introduce self-employment as an option for all youth, including youth with disabilities.
NCWD/Youth works to ensure that transition age youth are provided full access to high-quality services in integrated settings to gain education, employment, and independent living.
Is an organization that organizes teams of youth to develop businesses to help their communities. It is one of the few websites to actually have online material of use to prospective youth entrepreneurs, including advice on getting started success stories. It looks like YouthVenture partnered with Ashoka.org which is one of the leading organizations supporting social entrepreneurship.
This is a website that got started focusing on youth investing in the stock market with a small section on youth entrepreneurship. The free material is good, but the amount of it has not grown much over the past few years. There is a members only section which requires a fee, but the free materials are plentiful and very good.
The USDC's Minority Business Development Agency has established entrepreneurship programs that reach minorities, including youth. These centers provide electronic and one-on-one business development services.
This web page packed with cases, success stories, projects, and activities is for teachers, instructors, youth leaders, program developers and others who help students find their own entrepreneurial opportunities.
As part of their global studies curriculum during the 2010-2011 school year, students in Kimberly Clarkson's 6th Grade class at Sidwell Friends Middle School in Washington, D.C. explored ideas related to entrepreneurship. Students participated in and reflected on online simulation activities, researched and discussed mission statements of established businesses, and learned about and experimented with developing basic business concepts, including options for funding and marketing.