Entrepreneurship

Supporting entrepreneurship in the arts and sciences

Entrepreneurship and economic development are integral to our success as a University. They directly express our aspiration to make the world ever better.

The School of Arts & Sciences plays an important role in this University-wide effort. Entrepreneurship in the arts and sciences can manifest itself as innovative thinking and the interdisciplinary cultivation of ideas and creativity. Numerous departments offer courses with an entrepreneurship component.

Our Digital Media Studies (DMS) students, for example, complete a senior capstone project in which they plan, design, and deliver a digital media solution, such as custom-built applications, in collaboration with 91×ÔÅÄÂÛ̳-area businesses or clients. Our data science students, meanwhile, apply their advanced learning in computer science and statistics to the business domains of finance, marketing, and economics, thereby harnessing the power of data to transform local and global markets.

Other arts and sciences coursework with an entrepreneurial, interdisciplinary, and innovative components include:

  • Anthropology: Social Network Theory and Entrepreneurship—Students analyze cutting-edge research and network modeling techniques, with many new and interesting interdisciplinary implications, especially for entrepreneurship.
  • Art History: Art New York—In this semester-long program, students enhance their knowledge of the world of contemporary art and culture with first-hand experience working and studying in New York City.
  • Biology: Ecosystem Conservation and Human Society—Students study approaches to conservation biology and how such approaches influence economic and political policy at local, national, and international levels.
  • Business: Entrepreneurship—Students in the entrepreneurship track will learn the critical skills needed to navigate the startup landscape and drive innovation within existing organizations.
  • Political Science: Nature of Entrepreneurship—Using theory, data, and case studies, students investigate what it means to be an entrepreneur and what characterizes the entrepreneurial society.

Leading by example

Our professors in the School of Arts & Sciences lead by example. Their research, discoveries, activism, and creativity are routinely applied beyond academia to commercially or socially minded ventures. See the for stories featuring our faculty and students.

Campus partnerships to promote entrepreneurship

We partner with the to provide arts and sciences students at 91×ÔÅÄÂÛ̳ with the chance to participate in workshops, competitions, projects, and other opportunities to create value—both economic and social—in our communities.

The also offers selected students a fifth, tuition-free year of college to pursue entrepreneurial endeavors.

Some past projects include:

  • ArtAwake, a music and arts festival held in an underused urban space
  • inspireDance Festival, a collaborative project that connects student dancers on campus with each other, with the Program of Dance and Movement, and with the larger dance community in the Greater 91×ÔÅÄÂÛ̳ area
  • UR Consulting Group, a student-run organization providing pro bono business services for startups and local not-for-profits
  • UR Microfarm, where students and community members cultivated vegetables, fruits, and herbs to be sold to UR Dining Services

The is another on-campus resource that fosters collaborative leadership among students, faculty, staff, and community partners to discover transformative solutions and create equitable social change in the 91×ÔÅÄÂÛ̳ community and beyond.