Intellectual Entrepreneurship (IE) Citizen Scholars

Intellectual Entrepreneurship (IE) Citizen Scholars Official student organization of the Intellectual Entrepreneurship Consortium

IE Citizen Scholars aim to create a campus network where students can build and own their IE initiatives; to expand IE's college representation across campus; to make the IE consortium more efficient in recruiting students for the IE Pre-Graduate Internship.

06/29/2020

Among them are my parents' decision to leave Peru, becoming a mother at the young age of 19 and stumbling across the Intellectual Entrepreneurship (IE) program at The University of Texas at Austin. The program provides mentorships and internships that let students take charge of their education, dis...

Guess I missed this wonderful memory from 6 years ago today. I remain proud of all of these IE Pre-Grad Interns and Citi...
04/24/2020

Guess I missed this wonderful memory from 6 years ago today. I remain proud of all of these IE Pre-Grad Interns and Citizen Scholars: Jelisa Jay Robinson, Michael Ugeo, Ignacio Cruz, Cortney Sanders and Jordan Metoyer. They continue to achieve and make a difference. While biased, IE has some of the most diverse and amazing students.

During these uncertain and worrisome times, it is wonderful to have memories like this one from 7 years ago today.  I ap...
04/14/2020

During these uncertain and worrisome times, it is wonderful to have memories like this one from 7 years ago today. I appreciate Facebook reminding me of each day’s memories.
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I remain grateful to Keith McDowell, former vice chancellor for research and technology transfer for UT System, for his essay praising IE seven years ago today. Nearly 4,000 students have participated in IE’s Pre-Grad Internship. Notes McDowell: “My hat is off to Professor Cherwitz and the IE initiative at UT. One only has to read the many testimonials from IE graduates and people who work with and hire them to understand how truly marvelous and innovative this initiative is and how necessary it is for universities to engage in the mindset of entrepreneurial thinking. Presidents and chancellors from such prestigious institutions as Ohio State University, the University of California, Syracuse, and the University of North Carolina have endorsed the IE concept.”

04/11/2020
04/11/2020

"Overall, this internship has been of great value to me. I learned that I enjoy research and do want to pursue school beyond my undergraduate program. I am…

TBT: Seven years ago today, one of our Intellectual Entrepreneurship (IE) Pre-Grad Interns and Kuhn Scholars wrote a let...
04/09/2020

TBT: Seven years ago today, one of our Intellectual Entrepreneurship (IE) Pre-Grad Interns and Kuhn Scholars wrote a letter to the Kuhn family expressing the real significance of philanthropy. Like this student, we remain grateful to Michael and Alice Kuhn for their many years of generosity which enriched the lives students and contributed to their academic success. Combined with matching funds, from 2013-2018 over $400,000 was awarded to IE students who were the first in their families to attend college or came from economically-disadvantaged backgrounds.

PHILANTHROPY IS MORE THAN MONEY AND IT MATTERS! Fallon Seitz, one of our 2013 IE Kuhn Scholars, wrote this thank you note to the donors who made his award possible—very heartfelt with a clear and important message for all.

Dear Kuhn Family:

Philanthropic families like you illuminate the best our society has to offer. Besides garnering my admiration, your munificence has motivated me; with your grant my determination is fortified, and I believe I am capable of being one of the brightest representatives of our great university. The best part is that I am not the only recipient to feel this sentiment. Fellow Kuhn scholars I have spoken with are both humbled and honored to have been selected for the award. For many of us, the Kuhn scholar award serves as both a pat on the back and a gentle nudge. The pat on the back reminds us that we have put in the work necessary to earn such an honor. The gentle nudge reassures us that we are capable of continuing our life’s path no matter how ambitious the trail may be. The stipend money may unlock doors, but the confidence bred from being a Kuhn scholar helps enable recipients to open and walk through those doors.

It is a great feeling to be specifically acknowledged on a campus of over fifty-thousand students. On the night of the ceremony I received a name tag that says “Fallon Seitz—Kuhn Scholar.” I saved that small sticker and placed it on a spot in my room where I see it often. That name tag reminds me that as a Kuhn scholar—even amongst mobs of stellar students—I am distinguished. I admit that seeing that tag in the morning instills a sense of pride and propriety within me for the rest of the day. Frankly, it’s nice to have rigorous labor receive recognition—especially for those of us who have never received praise outside of our family and teachers.

I genuinely thank you. Thank you for the law text book I could never afford. Thank you for providing me the opportunity to attend communication classes to develop my bourgeoning oratory skills. And most of all, thank you for generating inspiration. The remaining stipend money will continue to relieve financial burdens, so I thank you also for future benefits. I hope that one day I will place myself in a position to give back, because the gift you give transcends money—it rewards, requires and represents greatness.

Sincerely,


Fallon Seitz
Kuhn Scholar

03/29/2020

In the face of possible changes, the University of Texas community has taken a strong stance in favor of academic research. But prominent reformers acknowledge that public research universities need to change, and one UT professor thinks he has a way.

03/23/2020

Six years ago today IE founding director Dr. Rick Cherwitz, professor in the Moody College of Communication, was chosen to receive the DiversityFIRST [tm] Award. This award, given by the National Diversity Council, "recognizes individuals, community groups, non-profit organizations, and business establishments within the legal, academic, corporate, and/or health community that have demonstrated outstanding achievements and sustained commitment to the pursuit of cultural diversity and inclusion in the community and workplace. The award was created to recognize and commend organizations and individuals for their support of diversity and inclusion in the workplace, in turn transforming our diverse community into a truly inclusive environment where individuals are valued for their talent and able to reach their full potential."

Happy 10th Anniversary to the IE page.  We are grateful to our 6,000 fans and followers, as well as Aida P who ...
03/14/2020

Happy 10th Anniversary to the IE page. We are grateful to our 6,000 fans and followers, as well as Aida P who created this page.

03/09/2020

How can public colleges remain relevant to citizens of their state? By using the ideas their scholars generate to transform lives, Richard A. Cherwitz argues.

Even more true today!
03/02/2020

Even more true today!

Ten years ago today IE Founding director Cherwitz penned an op-ed for the Washington Post about preparing college students for careers and the challenges they will face after graduation. The “Intellectual Entrepreneurship (IE) Academic-Community Mentorship” Wha he proposed then seems even more apropos today.
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“Linking College Academics to Careers”
WASHINGTON POST

March 2, 2010

Rick Cherwitz

With tuition rising, many are concerned with containing the cost of higher education. As important as this is, shouldn't we also focus on ways to maximize the benefits of college education, capitalizing on knowledge purchased with tuition dollars?

How can students better negotiate the undergraduate curriculum, choosing what to study from the wide array of opportunities? How might students fully understand connections between academic knowledge and desired careers?

Many undergraduates are uncertain about academic disciplines; hundreds of specialized possibilities often make little sense, appearing to have limited connection to students' interests and professional goals. How can freshmen make thoughtful choices when they don't fully understand items on the academic menu?

Professional development comes too late in the game, at the back end when soon-to-be graduates seek employment. These career services are not only separate from academic work but frequently tend to be viewed as secondary to scholarship and study.

Hence, many students leave school not fully tapping their interests and aptitudes. They graduate not completely appreciating the potential contribution of academic knowledge to their future and to solving society's serious problems.

What is needed is an entrepreneurial laboratory where students discover how their interests might serve as a compass for navigating the university, how academic knowledge equips them to make a difference, and how education prepares one to live a meaningful life.

There is hope. Consider one among many terrific programs at the University of Texas at Austin: the Intellectual Entrepreneurship (IE) Pre-Graduate School Internship, part of the Division of Diversity and Community Engagement (DDCE). More than 800 students have had the chance to work with veteran graduate students to determine whether they should pursue advanced study, becoming empowered to own their education and to leverage knowledge for social good -- to be "citizen scholars."

Interns -- most of whom are upperclassmen -- continually ask why the Pre-Grad Internship was one of few student-centered experiences, often their only chance in college to assess the value and usefulness of what they were learning.

So why not provide a similar incubator -- an IE academic/community mentorship -- to students at the beginning of their college tenure, permitting them to discover the relevance of academic disciplines and devise a thoughtful plan of academic study?

The mentorship program could extend the already successful Pre-Graduate School Internship. With graduate student mentors and community sponsors, freshmen and sophomores would work simultaneously inside and outside the university, ascertaining the unique perspectives of different fields of study and unearthing tangible links between academic concentrations and their passions and career aspirations.

This would not be job-training but instead what a colleague of mine calls "core-strengthening"--something at the heart of the humanistic mission of colleges and universities.

It would be a rigorous exercise; students would study and reflect upon their discipline. Rather than defaulting to a particular major, they would learn about the many available options. Exploration would culminate in students designing an entrepreneurial plan for their academic and post-academic career. They then could meaningfully pick a specialized major and weave together a tapestry of courses across the curriculum, defining and linking their academic and professional identities.

The mentorship program might reduce the time and cost of earning a degree. By providing students greater agency in their education, the program could shift the model of education from one of apprenticeship to certification to entitlement to one of discovery to ownership to accountability.

Instead of simply offering students more courses, the mentorship program would equip underclassmen to take advantage of the already extensive catalog of courses, majors, minors and concentrations.

By demystifying education and forging connections between academe and society, the program also would significantly enhance the education of first-generation and underrepresented minority students, an effect already well-documented by the IE educational philosophy and Pre-Grad Internship (which since 2003 has enrolled a disproportionately higher percentage of underrepresented and first-generation students).

In addition, the academic/community mentorship would introduce a unique interdisciplinary learning laboratory, one that begins with students' interests rather than predetermined topics chosen in advance by faculty and administrators--a prospect that could stimulate student curiosity and increase engaged learning.

Finally, the mentorship program would afford valuable professional development for graduate students, permitting these future professors to acquire effective mentoring habits, enhance their marketability, and assist universities in forging long overdue connections between undergraduate and graduate education. In essence, the mentorship could help change the academic culture by educating a more enlightened generation of future academics.

Rising tuition is inevitable. So let's maximize the enormous value of college education. Why not boldly re-envision the undergraduate experience, permitting students to become intellectual entrepreneurs -- to study themselves, their disciplines and the ways scholarship can transform lives for the benefit of society?

The IE academic/community mentorship would be a modest first step.
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Rick Cherwitz is a professor of communication and the founder and director of the Intellectual Entrepreneurship Consortium (IE) in the Division of Diversity and Community Engagement (DDCE) at the University of Texas at Austin.

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