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New national partnership of major
universities to support Vets with
disabilities
Newswise — Building on an innovative program
created in 2007 by Syracuse University to
expand the reach of educational programs in
entrepreneurship available to veterans, the
Whitman School of Management at Syracuse
University will lead a nationwide
partnership with UCLA Anderson School of
Management, Mays Business School at Texas
A&M University and Florida State
University’s College of Business to offer
cutting-edge training in entrepreneurship
and small business management to veterans
with disabilities.
The year 2007 was the most violent for
American troops serving in Iraq and
Afghanistan in support of operations
Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom. The
number of military personnel wounded in the
war on terror is now nearly 40,000. For many
of these Americans, traditional employment
may represent a lifelong challenge.
Throughout American history,
entrepreneurship has been a means for
veterans to make a way for themselves and
their families, and to re-engage the
economic engine of their communities and
ultimately the nation.
Business ownership offers veterans the
opportunity to “own their futures” while
also offering the flexibility to accommodate
the unique challenges associated with a
service-connected disability.
This consortium represents one of the first,
significant partnerships since WWII among
some of the country’s most prestigious
business schools focused specifically on
opening the doors of America’s colleges and
universities to veterans motivated by
business ownership.
The consortium is an extension of SU’s
Entrepreneurship Bootcamp for Veterans with
Disabilities (EBV) program, first offered in
summer 2007 at SU, which enrolled 20
veterans with disabilities. The EBV
integrates world-class faculty,
entrepreneurs, disability experts and
business professionals in an educational
program focused on training veterans in the
competencies associated with small business
ownership.
“Syracuse University and the Whitman School
are proud to lead this new nationwide
partnership,” says SU Chancellor and
President Nancy Cantor.
“By expanding our innovative Bootcamp
program across the nation, we will provide
disabled men and women who have served
abroad the resources and training to help
them follow and pursue their dreams as they
rejoin their communities at home.”
The four-university EBV partnership will
dramatically expand the ability to offer
this valuable program to veterans with
disabilities. At all four institutions, the
EBV curriculum will be standardized,
ensuring that all participants receive a
consistent, high-quality experience.
“This consortium is an important and
meaningful extension of the EBV program
offered at the Whitman School and is the
only academic partnership of its kind aimed
at this unique group of American citizens,”
says Melvin T. Stith, dean of the Whitman
School of Management and a former U.S. Army
captain.
“On behalf of all of the four participating
national universities, we are proud that
institutes of higher education are stepping
in to fill what is clearly a void for these
veterans.”
The EBV program is offered in three phases.
Phase I is a self-study session in which the
veterans complete courses through online
discussions moderated by university faculty.
Phase II requires that participants travel
to their participating EBV university, where
they will become immersed in a nine-day
residency, learning to develop their own
business concepts and understanding the
basic elements of small business management.
Phase III involves 12 months of ongoing
support and mentorship provided to the
veterans from the faculty experts at the EBV
universities.
Throughout the EBV experience, students
engage in experimental workshops to write
business plans, raise capital, attract
customers, and develop a marketing strategy
that is most effective for their business
model.
The program is entirely free to the
veterans, including travel and
accommodations.
“By offering veterans with disabilities the
tools to create and grow their own
businesses, we are helping them fight yet
another battle—the battle for their own
economic freedom,” says Mike Haynie,
assistant professor of entrepreneurship in
the Whitman School, creator of the EBV and a
former U.S. Air Force major.
“There is, perhaps, no better way to thank
them for their extraordinary service than to
demonstrate our confidence in their bright
futures.”
Applications for the EBV are accepted on a
rolling admissions basis, which means
application for the program is always open.
Early application is encouraged. To create
disability-related curriculum and assist
participants in understanding and leveraging
programs at the intersection of disability
and entrepreneurship, the EBV is offered in
collaboration with SU’s Burton Blatt
Institute, which seeks to advances the
civic, economic and social participation of
persons with disabilities.
To apply, or for more information, visit
http://whitman.syr.edu/ebv
or contact the Dean’s Office in the Whitman
School of Management at (315) 443-8736 or
EBVinfo@syr.edu.
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