The Lowth Entrepreneurship Center in The University of Tampa’s Sykes College of Business was recently awarded the National Model Program Award for undergraduate entrepreneurship programs by the United States Association for Small Business and Entrepreneurship® (USASBE) at its annual conference in San Diego.

National model program awards are given to colleges and universities that have developed and offer high quality and innovative programs, the purpose of which is to educate and train future generations of entrepreneurs. The awards are given for exemplary programs that reflect innovation, quality, comprehensiveness, sustainability, transferability, depth of support and impact.

Rebecca White, director of the Lowth Entrepreneurship Center and professor of entrepreneurship, said this model program award highlights the success of UT’s students, faculty and alumni in pursuing entrepreneurial activity.

“This award is arguably the most coveted award among entrepreneurship educators in the United States,” White said. “To be judged by our peers as offering a comprehensive and high quality entrepreneurship program that is worthy of the highest level of discipline recognition is confirmation of the dedication and talent of our faculty, staff and students in our program.”

Ted Zoller, president of USASBE, said this award not only recognizes UT’s undergraduate curricula in entrepreneurship as not only the leading program in the United States, but as a model for other universities to emulate.

The award comes less than six months after UT built a dedicated top floor of its new building, the Innovation and Collaboration Building, as the location of the entrepreneurship center. The space is creatively designed to bring together prospective student entrepreneurs, educators and experienced executives to generate, define and develop entrepreneurial concepts and to launch new ventures.

In 2015 the Lowth Entrepreneurship Center was awarded the Entrepreneurship Teaching and Pedagogical Innovation Award by the Global Consortium of Entrepreneurship Centers.

The entrepreneurship major is one of the largest on campus and provides students with skills that are critical for anyone who wants to be an entrepreneur or think like one, White said. In 2015, a team of UT entrepreneurship students (Tembo) were finalists – and the only U.S.-based team -- in the $1 million Clinton Global Initiative Hult Prize, amongst 20,000 student participants.

For more information, see the Lowth Entrepreneurship Center website at www.ut.edu/entrepreneurcenter/.