Catalyst by Camber Creek
At the University of Maryland, the actor Kevin Bacon funded a “Shark Tank”-style competition for young social entrepreneurs. Instead of investing in skincare brands or gourmet cookies, judges heard pitches from students who wanted to right some wrongs in the world and help people. That competition grew into the University of Maryland's Do Good Institute, which supports classes and research and uses social entrepreneurship to help students learn, lead, and grow. Camber Creek spoke with Jenny Cox and Nathan Dietz from the Institute about what happens to a giant college campus when an entrepreneurial mindset is taught, encouraged, and rewarded. 1:20 The Do Good Institute is a hub for social impact providing funding, education, and resources to students. 2:10 The Institute’s research function and focus on measuring the impact of social entrepreneurship programs 3:30 Expanding programming, from early student engagement to post-graduate entrepreneurial support 6:30 A student-led effort to reduce campus food waste led to the creation of the first Do Good Challenge. 8:00 Collaborating with Kevin Bacon’s foundation 12:50 Social entrepreneurship follows the same disciplined, problem-solving mindset as traditional entrepreneurship. 19:00 Intermediate and advanced offerings, including incubators, accelerators, and seed funding programs. 21:15 Approximately 10–15% of University of Maryland College Park students engage directly with Do Good programming. 29:30 Students increasingly want both financial success and social impact. 41:45 The Do Good Institute wants to do its part to counteract a broader trend of declining interpersonal connection
28 episodios
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