High school students to learn entrepreneurship


FE Online Desk | Published: December 24, 2018 13:37:21 | Updated: December 27, 2018 00:42:45


High school students to learn entrepreneurship

 

Young Founders School (YFS) launched the first Weekend Bootcamp in Dhaka recently to educate young learners on entrepreneurship.

 

Young Founders School is a technology-focused non-profit educational organization which aims to change the way entrepreneurial education is taught to secondary school students.

 

YFS is the world’s first global entrepreneurship program for high school students.

 

“As Pathao is a young startup itself, we’ve faced entrepreneurial challenges first hand and are pretty familiar with what the struggles can be like. At Pathao we promote ownership among our employees, inspiring the entrepreneur in them as well. And so, partnering up with an organization that is working tirelessly to empower young entrepreneurs is an absolute pleasure.” said Hussain M Elius, CEO, Pathao Limited.

 

YFS was founded in Hong Kong in 2016 by Billy Naveed. Billy himself began as a ‘young founder’, having established two startups in his teenage. This program is sponsored by international investment bank Credit Suisse, Alibaba Entrepreneur Fund and locally by Pathao and Osiris Group.

 

After successfully launching in major cities across Asia such as Hong Kong, Singapore and Shenzhen YFS recognised Dhaka for its entrepreneurial spirit and been chosen as the next location.

 

At the Bootcamp, the students learned from mentors from the tech industry, ​the latest startup techniques such as lean startup, product market fit and competition analysis. They also had an opportunity to develop their startup ideas into fully-formed business pitches, and present to a panel of three Venture Capitalist judges for funding. The judges were Samad Miraly, Co Founder, Startup Dhaka, Masud Ul Haque, Associate, IDLC Asset Management Limited and Nirjhor Rahman, CEO, Bangladesh Angels.

 

 

Commenting on the program, Mr. Naveed said, “The YFS is the world’s first global entrepreneurship program for high school students. It aims to give high school students real-world startup experience and CV-boosting skills, as well as unique mentorship opportunities with inspiring entrepreneurs. The organization is growing quickly. We are currently live in Hong Kong, Shenzhen, and Singapore and this was our launch in Bangladesh. We will expand to other markets across Southeast Asia, such as Jakarta and Bangkok in the second half of this year. We also plan to launch our online platform to reach high school students anywhere in the world. We look forward to also welcoming other corporates, schools, parents and their children, as we train the next generation of entrepreneurs.”

 

Business ideas from the winning teams at YFS’ previous Bootcamps include an Internet of Things (“IOT“) enabled device for walking aids to prevent falls for the elderly or those with disabilities and inform their loved ones in real time, an app that helps people facing mental health issues by suggesting mood-improving tasks, and an online platform for high school internships.

 

After the launch in Dhaka YFS intends to reach out other cities such as Chittagong and translate the course to make it available in Bengali as well.

 

In the past 24 months since its inception, YFS has run nine startup Bootcamps and seven Ideation Days in Hong Kong, Shenzhen and Singapore involving more than 1300 students, 57% of whom were female students, and more than 300 mentors from companies such as Alibaba Group, Google, 9GAG, Microsoft, Techstars, PricewaterhouseCoopers, GoGoVan and many more. The Bangladeshi mentors' list consisted of industry experts coming from backgrounds such as Pathao, BRAC Social Innovation Lab, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, Plaantik, Selise rockin’ software, and a few renowned startups.

 

"Of so many things that I have learned through this bootcamp, my focus hit especially on how entrepreneurship is actually about connecting with more people and genuinely helping them reaching a depth to simplify their problems." said Nafisa Anwar, an A-level student from Mastermind School.

 

-rmc//

 

 

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