entrepreneurship_center
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====== Entrepreneurship Center ====== | ====== Entrepreneurship Center ====== | ||
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The Center is located in the [[nutt_mathematics_engineering_and_computer_science_center|Nutt Math, Engineering, | The Center is located in the [[nutt_mathematics_engineering_and_computer_science_center|Nutt Math, Engineering, | ||
- | Funding for the inauguration of the Center was donated by Lou Shipley ’85, a Trinity [[trustees|trustee]] who has served in executive roles at various technology companies, a senior lecturer at Harvard Business School and the MIT Sloan School of Management, as well as a member of the President’s Commission for Trinity’s Future. Shipley voiced his commitment to the project, stating that “All of the highly successful entrepreneurs I’ve worked with, mentored, or led have liberal arts educations...They have curiosity, think broadly, and are passionate, resilient, and adaptable, which are all hallmarks of a Trinity education.” The Center was born out of the Trinity Plus Curriculum, introduced by President [[berger-sweeney_joanne|Joanne Berger-Sweeney]] in 2021, which has the goal of pairing experience in the workforce with a liberal arts education by introducing three “plus credits” focused on preparing students for “life after Trinity.” | + | Funding for the inauguration of the Center was donated by Lou Shipley ’85, a Trinity [[trustees|trustee]] who has served in executive roles at various technology companies, |
One of the Center’s first projects was funded by a founding member of the Center’s advisory board, Kathryn George Tyree ’86. She endowed the Tyree Innovation Fellowship, a two-year competitive program aimed at guiding students towards business opportunities during and after their undergraduate years. One of the marquee programs of the Tyree Fellowship is the Summit Innovation Challenge, in which the fellowship’s participants design their own inventions which are presented to a live audience and judges, who choose a winning creation. The winner of the January 2024 competition was Alexander Cacciato ’25, whose startup Flippit “uses mobile technologies to allow air travelers to send prohibited items to themselves quickly and securely rather than surrender them at security checkpoints.” The runner-up was Nathan Sykes 25’, whose start up The People Company sources offshore workers for domestic sales teams to supplement a company’s administrative workforce. | One of the Center’s first projects was funded by a founding member of the Center’s advisory board, Kathryn George Tyree ’86. She endowed the Tyree Innovation Fellowship, a two-year competitive program aimed at guiding students towards business opportunities during and after their undergraduate years. One of the marquee programs of the Tyree Fellowship is the Summit Innovation Challenge, in which the fellowship’s participants design their own inventions which are presented to a live audience and judges, who choose a winning creation. The winner of the January 2024 competition was Alexander Cacciato ’25, whose startup Flippit “uses mobile technologies to allow air travelers to send prohibited items to themselves quickly and securely rather than surrender them at security checkpoints.” The runner-up was Nathan Sykes 25’, whose start up The People Company sources offshore workers for domestic sales teams to supplement a company’s administrative workforce. |
entrepreneurship_center.1725023656.txt.gz · Last modified: 2024/08/30 13:14 by bant06