Friday, May 2, 2008

Shad Valley: The Olympics of entrepreneurship – where dedication, passion and drive produce champions of innovation

Shad Valley’s alumni entrepreneurs are the athletes of business, stretching to attain business goals of Olympic proportion

While the 2008 Olympic summer games will have the world’s eye focused on athletic talent, there is no particular time of the year when people are scheduled to tune in to business. Daily, leaders of innovation are showcasing their strengths, ideas and talents that are shaping the economy year-round. However, during the month of July, for the past 28 years, students from across Canada have been taking part in their own Olympic event, dedicated to focusing on academic talent.

Shad Valley is a program that offers youth in Grades 10, 11, and 12, with strengths in science, math, and technology, the opportunity to develop an entrepreneurial mindset. Students emerge with a better concept of the business world at a young age and can begin exercising their entrepreneurial muscle. From the get-go, these young entrepreneurial athletes are equipped with the skills to enter the real-world of business, to think and plan like leaders, and develop innovative ideas that will fuel the economy in the coming years.

“At Shad, students are given the opportunity to think and come up with ideas on a larger scale than they would initially conceive. Shad Valley is the training ground for tomorrow’s global business leaders,” explains Barry Bisson, President of Shad International. “We have alumni working on the multi-national front, whose ideas are influencing global changes. They got there because they each carry a torch for innovation.”

With many established alumni since the program began in 1981, and 620 new students welcomed every summer, Shad Valley has conceivably a very large roster of intelligent, motivated leaders. Those who have made it to the proverbial Olympic level are among these alumni. They have embraced their talents, pursued a marketable idea, and expanded that idea into their own business.

So where is the Olympic level for Shad Valley’s entrepreneurs? “It is always growing and changing,” explains Kunal Gupta, a 2005 Shad Valley alumnus. Kunal’s organization, Impact, based in Waterloo, Ontario, is a non-profit organization which promotes entrepreneurship to youth across the country. “To compete on a global scale, you have to think globally or else your venture will never break into other markets. Shad Valley taught me to embrace my talents and transfer them to a larger degree of entrepreneurial thinking.”

Another alumna making big waves is Jennifer Corriero, Shad ’98, co-founder of Taking IT Global, bringing technology and communication to nations around the world. She describes her hard work in business as being, “The marathon of a lifetime.” She explains that to compete with others on a larger scale, you have to envision something outside of your realm and break boundaries frequently. “Shad Valley prepared me to become a leader and opened my eyes to the winning formula of entrepreneurship. Sacrifice, success, hard work, team work, and of course innovation – these are the elements of a gold winning team.”

Michael Brown, a fellow alumnus, would agree. He has held a position at Research in Motion in Waterloo, Ontario since his Shad work placement there in 1995. Working in software development, Michael’s work has led to many patents under his name and a spot in a globally recognized company. “Shad provided the launch pad for my career and readied me for the high stake world of business at RIM. There is so much investment put into innovation – all great ideas were once in someone’s mind – and Shad recognizes the key to unlocking them and generating success.”

Some people are born with the ability to compete in either physical or mental situations. Similar to the role that the Olympics play in recognizing the most talented athletes around the world, Shad Valley has done the same for youth in education.

Shad Alumna receives prestigious thesis award

Amanda Jernigan, a 1996 Shad Valley alumna, has received the prestigious Master’s Thesis Award from the Northeastern Association of Graduate Schools. Amanda was honoured in April of this year at the awards luncheon ceremony in New York City for her thesis in the category of Arts and Humanities. As a recipient, she also received a monetary award of $1,000, from UMI Dissertation Publishing.

The Master's Thesis award rotates, on a four-year schedule, amongst the following subject areas: Arts and Humanities; Agricultural, Biological and Health Sciences; Physical Sciences, Mathematics and Engineering; Social Sciences and Education. The prestigious award is open to students at all leading Eastern Canadian universities (Ontario to Newfoundland) and all Northeastern U.S. universities, including the Ivy League schools. The Arts and Humanities award will be granted again in 2012.

Amanda earned her Bachelors degree in English from Mount Allison University, followed by her Master of Arts from Memorial University in Newfoundland. Her winning dissertation focuses on the work of Canadian poet Richard Outram, specifically on the significance of whole-part structures, in theme and form, in Mr. Outram's oeuvre.

Congratulations to Amanda for this outstanding honour!