Entrepreneurial Intention Among Children: Findings From School-Going Children Compared With Children at Workplace

This research compares the entrepreneurial intention among school-going children and children at work (child labor) who are optimistic about entrepreneurship. Furthermore, we analyze the relationship between personality factors and three perceptual variables of the theory of planned behavior (TPB) w...

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Main Author: Ilyas, Aamar
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Published: Animo Repository 2023
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/apssr/vol23/iss2/8
https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/context/apssr/article/1499/viewcontent/RA_207.pdf
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:apssr-14992024-06-24T09:42:03Z Entrepreneurial Intention Among Children: Findings From School-Going Children Compared With Children at Workplace Ilyas, Aamar This research compares the entrepreneurial intention among school-going children and children at work (child labor) who are optimistic about entrepreneurship. Furthermore, we analyze the relationship between personality factors and three perceptual variables of the theory of planned behavior (TPB) with entrepreneurial intentions. We used hand-collected data techniques from school-going children and children at the workplace to investigate the proposed relationships. The in-house survey was conducted in five towns of Lahore city. The convenience sampling technique was used to collect data from 450 school-going children, and the snowball sampling technique was used to collect data from 450 child laborers. The statistical findings show that both school-going children and children at the workplace hold optimistic attitudes toward starting a new venture. During the comparison of these two datasets, we found more significant differences than similarities. However, the intentions of child laborers were more entrepreneurial than school-age children. Moreover, both school-going children and children at the workplace scored above average in three personality traits (optimism, competitiveness, and risk-taking tendency); they predicted higher entrepreneurial intention (EI). Innovativeness also predicted intention for school-going children but not for children at the workplace sample. The findings of this study were based on only one developing nation. It is not generalized to other countries due to cultural variations. In future research, data would be collected from numerous regions, developed or developing nations, improving generalizability. Furthermore, only four constructs of personality traits were used, ignoring social and contextual factors. This study provides new insights for educational policymakers and practitioners. They should develop a comprehensive policy and incorporate entrepreneurship education in our secondary schools to boost entrepreneurial knowledge. Moreover, practitioners may change effective policy reforms to foster the interest of child laborers in entrepreneurship. This study contributes to the child labor and entrepreneurship literature by comparing the entrepreneurial intention among school-going children and children at the workplace. As far as the researchers’ experience, there is no empirical evidence in the literature on this unique phenomenon. 2023-06-30T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/apssr/vol23/iss2/8 info:doi/10.59588/2350-8329.1499 https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/context/apssr/article/1499/viewcontent/RA_207.pdf Asia-Pacific Social Science Review Animo Repository entrepreneurial intention school-going child theory of planned behavior personality traits child labor Pakistan
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic entrepreneurial intention
school-going child
theory of planned behavior
personality traits
child labor
Pakistan
spellingShingle entrepreneurial intention
school-going child
theory of planned behavior
personality traits
child labor
Pakistan
Ilyas, Aamar
Entrepreneurial Intention Among Children: Findings From School-Going Children Compared With Children at Workplace
description This research compares the entrepreneurial intention among school-going children and children at work (child labor) who are optimistic about entrepreneurship. Furthermore, we analyze the relationship between personality factors and three perceptual variables of the theory of planned behavior (TPB) with entrepreneurial intentions. We used hand-collected data techniques from school-going children and children at the workplace to investigate the proposed relationships. The in-house survey was conducted in five towns of Lahore city. The convenience sampling technique was used to collect data from 450 school-going children, and the snowball sampling technique was used to collect data from 450 child laborers. The statistical findings show that both school-going children and children at the workplace hold optimistic attitudes toward starting a new venture. During the comparison of these two datasets, we found more significant differences than similarities. However, the intentions of child laborers were more entrepreneurial than school-age children. Moreover, both school-going children and children at the workplace scored above average in three personality traits (optimism, competitiveness, and risk-taking tendency); they predicted higher entrepreneurial intention (EI). Innovativeness also predicted intention for school-going children but not for children at the workplace sample. The findings of this study were based on only one developing nation. It is not generalized to other countries due to cultural variations. In future research, data would be collected from numerous regions, developed or developing nations, improving generalizability. Furthermore, only four constructs of personality traits were used, ignoring social and contextual factors. This study provides new insights for educational policymakers and practitioners. They should develop a comprehensive policy and incorporate entrepreneurship education in our secondary schools to boost entrepreneurial knowledge. Moreover, practitioners may change effective policy reforms to foster the interest of child laborers in entrepreneurship. This study contributes to the child labor and entrepreneurship literature by comparing the entrepreneurial intention among school-going children and children at the workplace. As far as the researchers’ experience, there is no empirical evidence in the literature on this unique phenomenon.
format text
author Ilyas, Aamar
author_facet Ilyas, Aamar
author_sort Ilyas, Aamar
title Entrepreneurial Intention Among Children: Findings From School-Going Children Compared With Children at Workplace
title_short Entrepreneurial Intention Among Children: Findings From School-Going Children Compared With Children at Workplace
title_full Entrepreneurial Intention Among Children: Findings From School-Going Children Compared With Children at Workplace
title_fullStr Entrepreneurial Intention Among Children: Findings From School-Going Children Compared With Children at Workplace
title_full_unstemmed Entrepreneurial Intention Among Children: Findings From School-Going Children Compared With Children at Workplace
title_sort entrepreneurial intention among children: findings from school-going children compared with children at workplace
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2023
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/apssr/vol23/iss2/8
https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/context/apssr/article/1499/viewcontent/RA_207.pdf
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