|
 |
 |

NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2007
April
Students
become micro-lenders, assisting entrepreneurs around world
Melissa
Mitchell, News Editor
217-333-5491; melissa@uiuc.edu
 |
Click
photo to enlarge |
Photo
by L. Brian Stauffer |
| Bruce Wicks,
a professor of recreation, sport and tourism,
incorporated a Web-based component into his course
on entrepreneurism this
semester that allowed his students to become
micro-lenders. |
|
|
Released
4/24/07
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
University of Illinois students who enrolled in Bruce Wicks’ recreation,
sport and tourism course on entrepreneurism this semester did so thinking
they would be learning how to create a business plan and finance, begin
and market a small business.
They are. But they’re also learning first-hand what it’s
like to be on the other side of the business start-up process –
as lenders.
That’s because Wicks, a professor of recreation,
sport and tourism, decided to incorporate a new Web-based component
into the lesson plan of the course he has been teaching for 17 years.
With the assistance of a Web site maintained by the San Francisco-based
non-profit Kiva, Wicks’
students have become micro-lenders. So-called “micro-loans”
are small-denomination loans, typically issued by non-profit or non-governmental
agencies to entrepreneurs in developing countries who may not qualify
for traditional loans.
“I got the idea (for using Kiva in the classroom) from reading
a little blurb in The New York Times Magazine that listed ‘100
neat things in 2006,’ ” Wicks said.
At the beginning of the semester, the professor asked his students if
they would be willing to commit their own resources – “the
cost of a couple of lattes or beers” – in order to help
individuals in developing countries around the globe who are seeking
relatively small infusions of capital to start or sustain small businesses.
The vast majority stepped up to the plate. Wicks estimates that 45-50
of the 70 students enrolled each voluntarily contributed $10 to the
enterprise.
Class members next studied the Kiva site – which includes a selection
of loan applicants, their pictures, background information and business
plans – and, over the course of the semester, supported four loan
applicants. The students have provided funds to a tailor in Afghanistan,
a grocer in Azerbaijan, a used-clothing broker in Kenya and –
most recently – a clothing storeowner in Honduras.
Wicks said Kiva reports a repayment rate of nearly 100 percent. Lenders
don’t receive interest on the loans; when they are repaid, the
funds can be withdrawn or channeled into new loans. In the meantime,
lenders receive periodic reports on the progress of the businesses they
support.
“It’s a small part of the overall course,” Wicks said,
referring to the online
micro-lending enterprise. “We use it when we talk about finance.
For instance, we talked about what makes a good lendee. What are the
criteria for why you’d loan someone money? Because they’re
a single parent? Because they have a good repayment history and you
want to preserve your money?”
That discussion, he said, segued to “What about you? Why would
someone lend you money to start a business?”
The Kiva-based exercise also prompted discussions of the practice of
micro-lending, social entrepreneurship, gender issues related to starting
a business, and what it means, in general, to help others. Wicks said
the class also has studied the work of Bangladeshi banker and economist
Muhammad Yunus, who won the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts to
make small loans available to impoverished Bangladeshis seeking self-sufficiency
through entrepreneurial pursuits.
As the semester draws to a close, Wicks said he believes the experiment
with Kiva has provided a positive, engaging experience for most of his
students.
“This has been a situation where they’ve been able to learn
something and do good at the same time.”
That’s exactly what Shannon Smith, a junior majoring in recreation,
sport and tourism from Savoy, Ill., is taking away from the course.
“The micro-lending portion of the class is an entirely new notion
for me and many other students in the class,” Smith said. “This
project has shown me that, as an individual, I can help and assist smaller
businesses. A family in Hungary may only need a $500 loan to purchase
a cow to help produce and sell milk for the family business. I now see
that I am able to be a part of that.”
The social entrepreneurship aspect of the course also happened to mesh
well with her own career interests.
“My heart lies in not-for-profit work, especially as it relates
to urban communities,” said Smith, who is hoping to land an internship
with an organization that provides playgrounds for inner-city kids.
“I want to be able to use the skills I have learned to make a
difference in the lives of the community.”
As for Wicks, he’s just hoping to make a difference in the lives
of his students, one class at a time. By the time the current group’s
Kiva loans are repaid, those students will have moved on to other things.
So – with the support of this semester’s class – Wicks
plans to use the original pool as seed money for future investments
by the next class.
Meanwhile, the instructor says his current crop of students has reinforced
something he also has become more aware of this past year as the new
director the U. of I.’s East
St. Louis Action Research Project, a program that promotes service-learning
and volunteerism among students.
“Most of our students are socially responsible,” he said.
“They’re just not being asked to show it."
|
 |
 |
|