Dr. Marilyn Kourilsky
Co-Director
Marilyn Kourilsky is a Professor and Co-Director of the Institute
for the Study of Educational Entrepreneurship (ISEE) at UCLA and Chief
Education Advisor for the Kauffman Center for Entrepreneurial Leadership. In
her prior capacity as Vice President of the Kauffman Center, she created
nationally implemented programs including Entrepreneur Invention Society,
MADE-IT (Mothers and Daughters Entrepreneurs - In Teams), Making a Job, and
EntrePrep.
As an expert in economics, entrepreneurship and education, Ms.
Kourilsky has pursued internationally acclaimed research in entrepreneurship
education, economics education, teacher education and learning theory. Her
research reflects the clinical influence of her broad spectrum of teaching
experience at the elementary, secondary and university levels as well as her
earlier role as Director of Teacher Education at University of California, Los
Angeles. She has created extensively implemented education reforms including
the widely acclaimed Mini-Society and KinderEconomy ; these programs have been
actively featured in various media including the Today Show, The New York Times
and The Wall Street Journal. Dr. Kourilsky's extensive published record spans
numerous articles in refereed journals and 17 books.
Some of the awards and honors received by Dr. Kourilsky for
teaching, research, and leadership include: the UCLA Distinguished Teaching
Award, the Greenfield Applied Research Award, the National Freedom Foundation
Award for Excellence in Economic Education, The EUCLAN Award for Innovation in
Teacher Education, The John C Schramm National Leadership in Economic Education
Award, and the Henry H. Villard National Research Award in Economic Education.
Dr. Kourilsky has served as president and executive director of the
California Council on Economic Education and president of the Society of
Economic Educators.
Dr. Alfred E. Osborne, Jr.
Co-Director
Alfred E. Osborne, Jr., is Co-Director of the Institute for the
Study of Educational Entrepreneurship (ISEE) at UCLA, Director of the Harold
Price Center for Entrepreneurial Studies, and Associate Professor of Business
Economics in the Anderson Graduate School of Management at UCLA. Dr. Osborne
was educated at Stanford University where he earned a B.S. in Electrical
Engineering an MBA in Finance, an MA in Economics and Ph.D. in Business
Economics. He has served UCLA as an Associate Dean, Assistant Dean, and
Director of the MBA program, among other duties.
Besides his responsibilities at UCLA, Osborne is a director of
Nordstrom, Inc., K2, Inc., Equity Marketing, Inc. and E*Capital. Inc. He serves
as a trustee of the Washington Mutual Group of Funds and First Pacific Advisors
Capital and New Income Funds. Dr. Osborne, an expert on governance issues, is
an advisor to several venture capital organizations and entrepreneurs. Osborne
was recently elected to the board of governors of the Investment Company
Institute.
Among other honors and distinctions,
Dr. Osborne has been an Economic Policy Fellow at
the Brookings Institution, an Economic Fellow at the
Securities and Exchange Commission, a governor of
the National Association of Securities Dealers and,
most recently, a member of Governor Pete Wilson's
Council of Economic Advisors for California. He is
the first recipient of the Richard J. Riordan Entrepreneurial
Spirit Award for his support of entrepreneurial activity
in southern California.
Carol Kozeracki
Assistant Director
Carol Kozeracki is the Assistant Director
of the Institute for the Study of Educational Entrepreneurship
(ISEE) at UCLA. Carol has work experience in both
the for-profit and not-for-profit business worlds.
She worked in marketing and training for a large insurance
company, did fund raising and alumni relations for
a private university, and worked as an institutional
researcher at a community college. She has an undergraduate
degree from Fordham University in English and Philosophy
and a master's degree in education from UCLA. She
is finishing her doctoral dissertation on community
college faculty at UCLA. Her research interests are
remedial education, community colleges, and faculty
development.
Eileen
Lai Horng
Project Manager
Eileen Lai Horng is a Project Manager
of the Institute for the Study of Educational Entrepreneurship
(ISEE) and a third year doctoral student at UCLA's
Graduate School of Education and Information Studies
in the Division of Urban Schooling. She is completing
a dissertation entitled "Recruiting and Retaining
Teachers at Hard-to-Staff Schools: Examining the Tradeoffs
Teachers Make When Choosing a School." She is
currently a UC ACCORD Dissertation Fellow. Prior to
attending UCLA, Ms. Horng was a kindergarten and third
grade teacher in National City, California. Ms. Horng
received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Stanford University,
majoring in Human Biology with a concentration in
Child Development and Education. Upon completion of
her undergraduate studies, Ms. Horng worked at Stanford
University for a year as the Interim Schools Programs
Coordinator at the Haas Center for Public Service.
Bradley Burnam is a Project Manager of
the Institute for the Study of Educational Entrepreneurship
(ISEE) and a second year doctoral student at UCLA's
Graduate School of Education and Information Studies
in the Division of Urban Schooling.
Joseph is a Project Manager of the Institute
for the Study of Educational Entrepreneurship (ISEE)
and a first year doctoral student at UCLA's Graduate
School of Education and Information Studies in the Division
of Urban Schooling. His research interests include issues
of educational equity and charter schools. Prior to
attending UCLA, Mr. Kim received a Bachelor of Arts
in Political Science from Stanford University. He then
attended the Stanford Teacher Education Program and
received a Master of Arts of Education and a secondary
teaching credential in social studies. Mr. Kim went
on to teach social studies for two years at George Washington
Preparatory High School, which belongs to the Los Angeles
Unified School District.