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= Overview- A Campus on the Move<br/> =
+
= '''Overview- A Campus on the Move''' =
  
<span style="font-size:small;">UMass Lowell Innovation and Entrepreneurship Landscape Canvas is full of opportunities. The University of Massachusetts Lowell is growing at high rates, and we are moving along these lines in order to achieve even better results than ever.&nbsp;<span style="color: rgb(68, 68, 68); font-family: Arial, sans-serif; line-height: 20.15999984741211px;">UMass Lowell has been evolving in every aspect; upgraded classrooms, libraries and labs; new and renovated student living and activity spaces; and enhanced parking facilities are a few on the list of what has been updated and changed over the past decade of campus improvement.</span></span>
+
The University of Massachusetts Lowell is a top-tier research university with a full plate of offerings for innovation and entrepreneurship. The faculty and administration are eager to connect with the movement of promoting an innovative culture at the university level. Being a national research university, UMass Lowell has been evolving quite a bit in the past few years: new buildings have sprouted everywhere, classrooms are being upgraded to support a culture of learning, and centers for innovation are being built to involve as many students as possible in I&E. As well, programs and offerings have been refined over the years to adapt to our changing society.
  
<span style="font-size:small;"><span style="color: rgb(68, 68, 68); font-family: Arial, sans-serif; line-height: 20.15999984741211px;">UMass Lowell's Entrepreneurial culture is budding and many changes are already in the works. The faculty and administration at the University of Massachusetts Lowell are supportive of the movement and want to embrace the economic developments that are possible for students, the school, and the city of Lowell. Programs and organizations have been put into place to give us a great head start, but there is still more to come from our University.</span></span>
+
UMass Lowell's entrepreneurial culture has been active since around 2011, with the DifferenceMaker Program kicking off in 2012. Since then, a wealth of programs have been started to connect students with more opportunities for entrepreneurship. The university has taken many steps to work with the City of Lowell and local companies for the greater benefit and economic development of the area. There are many programs in place that have given us a great head start, but there is more to come yet.
  
<span style="font-size:small;"><span style="color: rgb(68, 68, 68); font-family: Arial, sans-serif; line-height: 20.15999984741211px;">Our strategic plan will incorporate the promotion and growth of what already has began to grow a reputation on campus (DifferenceMaker, Hawk Hatch, and other opportunities), the development of new space, and the organization and funding for a design challenge to give students innovative and entrepreneurial experience as well as help our university's surrounding community.</span></span>
+
Our strategic plan centers around the idea of Jump-Starting Awareness, where students acknowledge that the programs exist but aren’t necessarily aware of the other offerings in place to help the entrepreneurial process go as smoothly as possible. Our priorities are to introduce fun and engaging events to get students inspired toward an entrepreneurial venture. We want to show that the work can be extremely rewarding, even in failure. We aim to do this through a variety of channels.
  
= Strategy #1: Promote and Support Current Entrepreneurial Programs&nbsp;<br/> =
+
= '''Fall 2015 Innovation Fellows''' =
  
Following are already on campus but needs further promoting to improve our entrepreneurial mindset culture
+
==== Rachel Silk – Marketing and Entrepreneurship ‘16 ====
  
== DifferenceMaker Program ==
+
Rachel is an active member of the entrepreneurial environment at UMass Lowell. A participant in the DifferenceMaker Program, her team started a non-profit, Love of the Game, dedicated to connecting people with disabilities to their community through sports. As an Innovation Fellow, she hopes to unify the university by generating increased awareness for the offerings for I&E.
  
'''About DifferenceMaker™:'''&nbsp;
+
==== Stephen Kender – Plastics Engineering ‘18 ====
  
The DifferenceMaker™ Program sponsors specific events and activities that support students in solving big problems through innovation and entrepreneurship. The Program is highly experiential by offering students a series of workshops that they can engage in to better understand innovation, entrepreneurship and launching a start-up of their interest.
+
Stephen is also active in the innovative culture in the community around him. He and his team started a sports equipment company, KEnDERS Athletic Body Armor, around a novel and revolutionary technology. With the training from the Innovation Fellows program, he hopes to develop new and existing entrepreneurial skills so he can bring back a plethora of opportunities for his school and his community.
  
Students of all majors and disciplines are welcome to join this Program and make a difference at UMass Lowell, in the community or in the world through innovative and entrepreneurial action. These DifferenceMaker™ projects include interdisciplinary student teams from all majors and skill sets.&nbsp;
+
&nbsp;
  
&nbsp;'''Goals of DifferenceMaker™:'''&nbsp;
+
== '''JUMP-STARTING AWARENESS''' ==
  
·&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Introduce all UMass students to creative problem solving, innovation and entrepreneurship
+
''Our plans involve getting students engaged in the process of I&E, and will work with and alongside the current programs on campus. While our projects will stand on their own, we will work very hard to display the full offerings on campus to the participants.''
  
·&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Accelerate purpose in each students education
+
=== River Hawk Tank ===
  
·&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Connect current students to alumni experience
+
*Meant to involve students in a fun and engaging activity, as a pre-cursor to the DifferenceMaker Program
 +
*Will be akin to a mini-accelerator, with small deliverable-based learning and quick crash course sessions
 +
*Will be targeting new students, to show them the complete offerings of the DifferenceMaker Program
 +
*When the program ends, we will funnel participants directly into the DifferenceMaker competitions
 +
*Program Layout
 +
**&nbsp;Session 1: Pitch Ideas/Problems
 +
***​Form teams/solutions
 +
***Do not have to present they could just write it down and we could read it out loud.
 +
**Session 2: Reach out to teams, guide them with their solutions
 +
***Make sure things are viable/the team is passionate enough if it is not viable
 +
**Session 3: Basic Business Model (Deliverable), Practice Pitch?
 +
**Session 4: Mock Shark Tank (Practice for College Competitions)
  
·&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Encourage a social responsibility ethos
+
==== ​Timeline<br/> ====
  
= Strategy #2: "The Mill" & Design Challenge<br/> =
+
''Spring 2016'': Begin organizing and promoting the program, gearing up current students on the fence about entrepreneurship
  
Following are some ideas of plans that we want to begin to roll out this summer & beyond
+
''Spring/Summer 2016'': Talk with faculty and organizations on campus about being speakers in our Tank program
  
== Tactic #1: Tiger Business Alliance through Clemson InnoVenture Network ==
+
''Summer 2016'': Visit orientations, giving pitches for the River Hawk Tank and getting incoming students interested
  
*Description: Alumni presence to a university is crucial for many reasons, with funding being that which commons to mind most often. However, keeping a successful alumni network close to the students for mentorship opportunities is one that should first come to mind. The Tiger Business Alliance will keep successful graduate entrepreneurs connected to the university. This program will allow for mentorship within the community from those who have the answers, understand where the young entrepreneurs are starting out, and will be there for them along their own journey towards I&E. It is crucial to execute this program with the right mindset. It is not a goal to raise x dollars for Clemson University. It is to foster a relationship between successful graduate entrepreneurs and aspiring entrepreneurs- all who have been and will forever be TIGERS.
+
''Fall 2016'': Jump-start the program in the first week or two of school, and funnel students into the DifferenceMaker Program
*Team Leaders: John Warner (CEO of InnoVenture), David Orr, PhD, and Matthew Gaevert, PhD (co-founders of Kiyatec)
 
*Milestones:
 
**Reach out to current alumni- Fall 2013 through Spring 2014
 
**Explore the local, regional, and national entrepreneurial space for Clemson alumni- Fall 2013 through Spring 2014
 
**Formulate a list of interested alumni- Fall 2013 through Spring 2014
 
**Create a forum and central space for these alumni- Summer 2014
 
**Host webinar sessions on goals of the program- Summer 2014
 
**Re-evaluate interested alumni- Fall 2014
 
**Afford benefits and rewards to committed alumni- Fall 2014
 
**Generate awareness of program to current students- Spring 2015
 
**Marketing resources- Spring 2015
 
**Connect students with alumni- Fall 2015
 
  
== Tactic #2: BioInnovation ==
+
''After Program'': Meeting with DifferenceMakers, faculty, etc. to see where to improve
  
*Description: Already in place at Tulane University is a mentorship program for entrepreneurial minded scientists looking to take their research interests beyond the labspace or machine shop. This program is designed to capture the attention of undergraduates who possess that drive for I&E but are unsure how to attack it. To lead and mentor these students, PhD entrepreneurs (both aspiring and achieved) work with undergraduates to foster new innovators and entrepreneurs.
+
=== Prototyping Hackathons ===
*Team Leader: TBD
 
*Milestones:
 
**Reach out to current graduate students- Fall 2013 through Spring 2014
 
**Formulate a list of interested graduate students- Fall 2013 through Spring 2014
 
**Create a forum and central space for these graduate students- Summer 2014
 
**Host webinar sessions on goals of the program- Summer 2014
 
**Re-evaluate interested graduate students- Fall 2014
 
**Afford benefits and rewards to committed graduate students- Fall 2014
 
**Generate awareness of program to current students- Spring 2015
 
**Marketing resources- Spring 2015
 
**Connect students with graduate students- Fall 2015
 
  
== Tactic #3: Transformation of the Clemson University Office of Technology Transfer ==
+
*Current hackathons at the university are just idea mixers, due to the lack of spaces available for a prototyping one
 +
*New makerspaces and centers for innovation open up amazing possibilities
 +
*Hackathon allows students to get creative with others in the end goal of creating a prototype to solve a problem
 +
*Hackathons will be hosted in the Spring semester (possibly integrating a Fall semester one in the future) and will be a lead-in to other DifferenceMaker Programs. Typically will be 48 hours.
 +
*Will have one or more themes (somewhat specific) to guide teams in their ideation
  
*Description: The purpose of a technology transfer office is to facilitate innovation from laboratory to commercialization. This is fostered by various techniques, a benchmark of which is still to be established. One tactic to raise the bar for technoogy transfer offices across the country is to establish a mentorship relationship between current I&E students and their university technology transfer office. This could be facilitated through work-shops, seminars, How-To sessions. All of these outlets generate learning experiences and shine a positive light on the technology transfer office, an entity who, if they facilitate technology development throughout all stages, will clearly be seen as facilitating innovation from laboratoty to commercialization.
+
==== ​Timeline<br/> ====
*Team Leader: Sarah Helms (current BioE Master's candidate), Elizabeth Perpall, Chief Technology Transfer Officer, Clemson University Research Foundation (CURF)
+
<div>''Fall 2016'': Once dates and spaces are finalized, reach out to local industry suppliers for donations and connections</div>
*Milestones:
+
''Winter 2016'': Continue collecting donations, work with DifferenceMaker program to develop specific themes and rules. Advertise and promote the hackathon (announce theme and rules before winter break)
**Set goals with students (What would they like to see from their OTT?)- Fall 2013 through Spring 2014
 
**Set goals with OTT (What would they like to see from their students?)- Fall 2013 through Spring 2014
 
***Setting these goals with both parties sets expectations and responsibilities with each party
 
**Negotiate goals- Spring 2014
 
**Set Measurable Standards- Summer 2014
 
**Facilitate Student-OTT Interactions- Fall 2014
 
**Select and Prepare OTT speakers- Fall 2014
 
**OTT Seminars (re-curring event)- Fall 2014
 
**Prepare Work-Shop Attendance List- Winter 2014
 
**OTT Work-Shops (re-curring event)- Spring 2015
 
**Generate Awareness of How-To Sessions- Spring 2015
 
**Accept Applications- Spring 2015
 
**Verify Applications- Spring 2015
 
**Select Teams- Spring 2015
 
**OTT How-To Sessions (recurring event)- Spring 2015
 
  
= Impact<br/> =
+
''Spring 2016'': First weekend of February, just before the Idea Challenge Application Deadlines
  
{{#widget:Google Spreadsheet|key=0AgHBY23xvE2CdGJHandKM3FveURGZkotUWlLNlZKbXc|width=800|height=650}}
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''Spring 2016'': Host hackathon and collect feedback on how well it was operated. Contact donors and see if they are alright with being recurring sponsors at annual events
  
{{#widget:Google Form|key=1m8dmj_mkPQEPpaX9Rd0fMeXLKpSTsDtJcQVk3MtxtrM|width=1400|height=1400}}
+
=== TEDx ===
  
 +
*This event will be centered around inspiring students toward innovation with tips from local entrepreneurs
 +
*Will engage the broader innovative community
  
 +
==== ​Timeline ====
  
= Related Links =
+
''Fall 2016'': Organize a date and location with the university (or with the city)
  
[[University of Massachusetts Lowell]]
+
''Winter 2016'': Begin advertising and reaching out to prospective speakers
 +
 
 +
''Spring 2016'': Advertise more heavily and finalize list of speakers. Host event, and figure out where to improve
 +
 
 +
== '''CONNECTING FACULTY AND STUDENTS''' ==
 +
 
 +
One other project we will be working on involves connecting students to faculty to help them learn more about a specific skill. We currently have a Mentor Program, but for students needing a basic education in a certain area it is much too formal.
 +
 
 +
Like the website LinkedIn, we seek to have faculty list their skills on the school website. These skills will have tags that can be searched for when students need help with one. When a student has a positive learning experience, they can endorse professors for a particular skill. There will be no way to “downvote” any professors, so there are no safeguards needed to prevent corrupting that system. All that is needed for this program is to talk with the website developers (who are currently working on a new site, so the timing could work out well) and see how it can be integrated.
 +
 
 +
&nbsp;
 +
 
 +
= '''2013 Innovation Fellows''' =
 +
 
 +
== '''Enhance & Synergize the University I&E Ecosystem''' ==
 +
 
 +
=== '''Inspire Club''' ===
 +
 
 +
Inspire Club seeks to introduce students to innovation and entrepreneurship as well as connect them to campus and community resources such as ‘DifferenceMakers”, “M2D2”, “E For All”, etc. Weekly meetings will be held to expose students to an assortment of enriching experiences from innovative business model development tools and rapid prototyping exercises to guest panels and networking events. Students will be encouraged to develop ideas and solutions on an individual basis as well as to form teams in which they will combine, re-create, refine, and expand on them. We believe that this approach will engender high levels of student leadership and foster teamwork. Inspire will become an integral part of the student I&E pathway leading students from simple ideas to sustainable venture ready models. The skills learned will reflect the lean and iterative nature of the evolving economy and not only be valuable for start-ups but also in a traditional corporate environment where forward thinking, collaboration, and creativity are rapidly being adopted.
 +
 
 +
==== &nbsp;'''Goals of Inspire''' ====
 +
 
 +
*&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Introduce creative problem-solving, innovation and entrepreneurship
 +
*&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Identify purpose in each student's education
 +
*&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Connect students to I&E resources
 +
*&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Encourage student leadership
 +
*&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Push for development of a Maker Space&nbsp;
 +
*&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Help develop new experiential activities&nbsp;
 +
*&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Motivate & Capture new audiences
 +
 
 +
&nbsp;
 +
 
 +
= '''Related Links''' =
 +
 
 +
[http://universityinnovation.org/University%20of%20Massachusetts%20Lowell University of Massachusetts Lowell]
  
 
University Innovation Fellows:
 
University Innovation Fellows:
  
[[Ana Gouveia]]
+
[http://universityinnovation.org/wiki/Stephen_Kender Stephen Kender]
 
 
[[James Abdallah]]
 
  
[[Kevin Desjardins]]
+
&nbsp;
  
[[Jacob Hulme]]
+
[[Category:Student Priorities]]
 +
[[Category:Student Priorities]]
 +
[[Category:Student Priorities]]
 +
[[Category:University_of_Massachusetts_Lowell]]
 +
[[Category:Student_Priorities]]

Latest revision as of 01:06, 5 June 2020

Contents

Overview- A Campus on the Move

The University of Massachusetts Lowell is a top-tier research university with a full plate of offerings for innovation and entrepreneurship. The faculty and administration are eager to connect with the movement of promoting an innovative culture at the university level. Being a national research university, UMass Lowell has been evolving quite a bit in the past few years: new buildings have sprouted everywhere, classrooms are being upgraded to support a culture of learning, and centers for innovation are being built to involve as many students as possible in I&E. As well, programs and offerings have been refined over the years to adapt to our changing society.

UMass Lowell's entrepreneurial culture has been active since around 2011, with the DifferenceMaker Program kicking off in 2012. Since then, a wealth of programs have been started to connect students with more opportunities for entrepreneurship. The university has taken many steps to work with the City of Lowell and local companies for the greater benefit and economic development of the area. There are many programs in place that have given us a great head start, but there is more to come yet.

Our strategic plan centers around the idea of Jump-Starting Awareness, where students acknowledge that the programs exist but aren’t necessarily aware of the other offerings in place to help the entrepreneurial process go as smoothly as possible. Our priorities are to introduce fun and engaging events to get students inspired toward an entrepreneurial venture. We want to show that the work can be extremely rewarding, even in failure. We aim to do this through a variety of channels.

Fall 2015 Innovation Fellows

Rachel Silk – Marketing and Entrepreneurship ‘16

Rachel is an active member of the entrepreneurial environment at UMass Lowell. A participant in the DifferenceMaker Program, her team started a non-profit, Love of the Game, dedicated to connecting people with disabilities to their community through sports. As an Innovation Fellow, she hopes to unify the university by generating increased awareness for the offerings for I&E.

Stephen Kender – Plastics Engineering ‘18

Stephen is also active in the innovative culture in the community around him. He and his team started a sports equipment company, KEnDERS Athletic Body Armor, around a novel and revolutionary technology. With the training from the Innovation Fellows program, he hopes to develop new and existing entrepreneurial skills so he can bring back a plethora of opportunities for his school and his community.

 

JUMP-STARTING AWARENESS

Our plans involve getting students engaged in the process of I&E, and will work with and alongside the current programs on campus. While our projects will stand on their own, we will work very hard to display the full offerings on campus to the participants.

River Hawk Tank

  • Meant to involve students in a fun and engaging activity, as a pre-cursor to the DifferenceMaker Program
  • Will be akin to a mini-accelerator, with small deliverable-based learning and quick crash course sessions
  • Will be targeting new students, to show them the complete offerings of the DifferenceMaker Program
  • When the program ends, we will funnel participants directly into the DifferenceMaker competitions
  • Program Layout
    •  Session 1: Pitch Ideas/Problems
      • ​Form teams/solutions
      • Do not have to present they could just write it down and we could read it out loud.
    • Session 2: Reach out to teams, guide them with their solutions
      • Make sure things are viable/the team is passionate enough if it is not viable
    • Session 3: Basic Business Model (Deliverable), Practice Pitch?
    • Session 4: Mock Shark Tank (Practice for College Competitions)

​Timeline

Spring 2016: Begin organizing and promoting the program, gearing up current students on the fence about entrepreneurship

Spring/Summer 2016: Talk with faculty and organizations on campus about being speakers in our Tank program

Summer 2016: Visit orientations, giving pitches for the River Hawk Tank and getting incoming students interested

Fall 2016: Jump-start the program in the first week or two of school, and funnel students into the DifferenceMaker Program

After Program: Meeting with DifferenceMakers, faculty, etc. to see where to improve

Prototyping Hackathons

  • Current hackathons at the university are just idea mixers, due to the lack of spaces available for a prototyping one
  • New makerspaces and centers for innovation open up amazing possibilities
  • Hackathon allows students to get creative with others in the end goal of creating a prototype to solve a problem
  • Hackathons will be hosted in the Spring semester (possibly integrating a Fall semester one in the future) and will be a lead-in to other DifferenceMaker Programs. Typically will be 48 hours.
  • Will have one or more themes (somewhat specific) to guide teams in their ideation

​Timeline

Fall 2016: Once dates and spaces are finalized, reach out to local industry suppliers for donations and connections

Winter 2016: Continue collecting donations, work with DifferenceMaker program to develop specific themes and rules. Advertise and promote the hackathon (announce theme and rules before winter break)

Spring 2016: First weekend of February, just before the Idea Challenge Application Deadlines

Spring 2016: Host hackathon and collect feedback on how well it was operated. Contact donors and see if they are alright with being recurring sponsors at annual events

TEDx

  • This event will be centered around inspiring students toward innovation with tips from local entrepreneurs
  • Will engage the broader innovative community

​Timeline

Fall 2016: Organize a date and location with the university (or with the city)

Winter 2016: Begin advertising and reaching out to prospective speakers

Spring 2016: Advertise more heavily and finalize list of speakers. Host event, and figure out where to improve

CONNECTING FACULTY AND STUDENTS

One other project we will be working on involves connecting students to faculty to help them learn more about a specific skill. We currently have a Mentor Program, but for students needing a basic education in a certain area it is much too formal.

Like the website LinkedIn, we seek to have faculty list their skills on the school website. These skills will have tags that can be searched for when students need help with one. When a student has a positive learning experience, they can endorse professors for a particular skill. There will be no way to “downvote” any professors, so there are no safeguards needed to prevent corrupting that system. All that is needed for this program is to talk with the website developers (who are currently working on a new site, so the timing could work out well) and see how it can be integrated.

 

2013 Innovation Fellows

Enhance & Synergize the University I&E Ecosystem

Inspire Club

Inspire Club seeks to introduce students to innovation and entrepreneurship as well as connect them to campus and community resources such as ‘DifferenceMakers”, “M2D2”, “E For All”, etc. Weekly meetings will be held to expose students to an assortment of enriching experiences from innovative business model development tools and rapid prototyping exercises to guest panels and networking events. Students will be encouraged to develop ideas and solutions on an individual basis as well as to form teams in which they will combine, re-create, refine, and expand on them. We believe that this approach will engender high levels of student leadership and foster teamwork. Inspire will become an integral part of the student I&E pathway leading students from simple ideas to sustainable venture ready models. The skills learned will reflect the lean and iterative nature of the evolving economy and not only be valuable for start-ups but also in a traditional corporate environment where forward thinking, collaboration, and creativity are rapidly being adopted.

 Goals of Inspire

  •       Introduce creative problem-solving, innovation and entrepreneurship
  •       Identify purpose in each student's education
  •       Connect students to I&E resources
  •       Encourage student leadership
  •       Push for development of a Maker Space 
  •       Help develop new experiential activities 
  •       Motivate & Capture new audiences

 

Related Links

University of Massachusetts Lowell

University Innovation Fellows:

Stephen Kender