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Isabella Bank Institute for Entrepreneurship

We are a dedicated institute for student entrepreneurs across campus and beyond. We aim to maximize your success by fostering your entrepreneurial mindset, promote inter-disciplinary collaboration and provide support for the creation and development of your new ventures. Jumpstart your ideas and get involved today!

Tune in for excitement!

Passion. Potential. Pitches. Don't miss any of the 2025 New Venture Challenge excitement.

Tune in Friday, April 11 at 1 p.m. for great ideas and fierce competition. Then, join the judges, mentors, spectators and teams as they see who is going home with thousands of dollars in venture financing. The awards broadcast begins at 6:30 p.m. and one team will walk away as the overall best venture. 

Start your entrepreneurial journey

Central Michigan University’s College of Business Administration is the home of the Isabella Bank Institute for Entrepreneurship and the first Department of Entrepreneurship in the state of Michigan. We are a student-centric hub where experiential, curricular, and external entrepreneurial opportunities intersect.

Our mission is to maximize student success by fostering a campus-wide entrepreneurial mindset that promotes inter-disciplinary collaboration and the creation of new ventures.

We aim to create innovative programming, boost cross-campus and ecosystem collaboration and provide a comprehensive mentoring program.

Our institute provides extracurricular opportunities and is open to all undergraduate and graduate CMU students.

Student opportunities

  • Meet experienced alumni, faculty, entrepreneurs, investors, and other business and political leaders.
  • Learn practical skills, innovative thinking, and connect with mentors and entrepreneurial resources.
  • Attend skill-building workshops and compete in pitch competitions and Hackathons.
  • Take part in special scholarship programs and travel experiences.
  • Pitch your venture at our signature New Venture Challenge event and compete for up to $20,000 in cash awards.

      Find your path

      Are you interested in becoming an entrepreneur?

      Every journey is unique. Explore the opportunities that interest you.

      NSF Grant Partners Faculty to Improve Student Experience

      by Ashley O'Neil

      When Kevin Cunningham, PhD, Doug Lapp, PhD, and Julie Cunningham, Director of the Center for Excellence in STEM Education decided to work with on a National Science Foundation (NSF) Grant, they were clear that this needed to be a collaborative effort. Their goal was to improve the education experience of a key group of students on campus - future teachers. 

      This grant focuses on faculty from the College of Education and Human Services and the College of Science and Engineering creating a professional learning community around Core Teaching Practices (CTPs). These nineteen practices are the researched foundations for classroom instruction, and they articulate the specific strategies and facets of instruction that are central to teaching. The Michigan Department of Education tasks teacher education programs with selecting five of these practices to work on in-depth with students. The NSF Grant addresses three of the university's five. This collaboration includes faculty from both colleges because teacher education students uniquely work with multiple colleges on campus; their education courses include those taken in the College of Education and Human Services and those taken with faculty in the college of their chosen major and/or minors. 

      Prior research suggests that, if CTPs are not explicitly modeled in teacher preparation courses, pre-service teachers are unlikely to use those same instructional techniques in their future classrooms. This grant focuses on a professional learning community that discusses what these CTPs mean for future and practicing teachers, how to explicitly talk about and model that practices for future teachers, and how to make the modeling of these strategies explicit for their students. In short, these faculty know that they are teaching both their content and how to teach it based on the CTPs. While most can often say that they really enjoyed or learned a lot from a teacher; the work this faculty is doing around these CTPs will help future teachers know exactly what made a lesson meaningful and how to replicate that in their own classrooms. 

      This NSF grant launched in August with a 3-day professional learning workshop led by Kevin, Julie, and others. This PLC is continuing to meet once per month during the academic year and will conclude in the summer of 2024. 

      Questions?