Archives For Innovation

This guest post by Matthew E. Rich, Ed. D., Principal of the Pleasant Ridge School in Glenview, IL explains why the iPad is a significant tool for teachers, students and administrators. The iPad matters for:

Teachers and Support Staff:

  • Progress Monitoring Student Performance
  • Truly mobile input in the class, around the school and even in the playground.

For Students

  • Learning Styles – the iPad is a genuinely visual, auditory, and kinesthetic device.
  • Learning of Content – the device is instantly on and teachers are able to send students links to content that can be accessed immediately. The flexibility of input and plethora of applications provide limitless potential.
  • Digital Portfolio –
  • Organization – digital text and assignments mean a saving in space, time and legibility
  • Assistive Learning – Dragon Dictation and many other promising apps level the playing field for those with disabilities.

Directors of Educational Technology and Administrators:

  • Cost – savings in software licensing fees, textbooks, paper, copy & reproduction and much more…
  • Computer Setup & maintainance – the iPad sync model simplifies this process.

Rich is also quick to point out that there is still great deal of room for improvement in the iPad but also points out that:

The elegance and simplicity of the machine allow for short training times while providing a level of technology integration simply unmatched by any other product on the market.

Read the full article…

I have to thank Kenny Jones for bringing the following article to my attention. Marc Benioff chairman and CEO of salesforce.com message to 60 CIOs in various meetings throughout America’s heartland is:

We are moving from Cloud 1 to Cloud 2, and the iPad is the accelerator….What’s most exciting is that this fundamental transformation—cloud + social + iPad—will inspire a new generation of wildly innovative new apps that will change entire industries.

Moving from Cloud 1 to Cloud 2 doesn’t mean dropping all the functionality of cloud 1 rather it means we add the functionality of Cloud 2 to Cloud 1. It is a  move from typing and clicking to touch and a move from chatting to video.

Is industry listening–time will tell and Benioff suggests that many CIOs may rather retire than change. What can the academy learn from this? We (the academy) are one of the largest industries in North America and we need to heed this message as well.

Read the full article…

21st Century learning requires a very different educational environment. 21st Century literacies are very different that what we see in our traditional model…

It is the death of education but its the dawn of learning

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I consider myself a student of learning which means I MUST also be a student of innovation. I follow a Blog called Innovations and the archived post Six Things That Innovative Companies Do Well caught my eye. I have modified these six things to suite academia rather than business. Here is my take on the Six Things That Innovative Universities Do Well:

  1. Question Everything – I agree with article’s author, that this is the most important factor in innovation and the most difficult to embrace. Like corporations, Institutions create big political and organizational impediments to change, making any challenge to the status quo a risky proposition. Innovative [institutions], on the other hand, reward challenges to conventional wisdom and take pains to position change as a positive part of the [institutional]/corporate culture.
  2. Accept failure — Without the willingness to be wrong or to even fail innovation will never happen.
  3. Don’t leave the innovation to the engineers/consultants – simplicity is often the best option for meeting the needs of learners. Engineers/consultants/specialists are great at designing elegant solutions to complex problems but these solutions often lack the elegance of simplicity. Faculty have the closest contact with the learner and will most ofen have the best solutions.
  4. Learn constantly – If you don’t prepare people to do their work/teach/learn differently, they’ll never change. It’s human nature for people to avoid situations that may embarrass or humiliate them. Businesses [Institutions] that ask people to embrace change without preparing them to handle it set themselves up for failure at best, revolt at worst.
  5. Try, try again – Institutions too often bail out of good ideas because they don’t succeed quickly.
  6. Be wary of market research – Innovative institutions are in touch with their learners. Use research on the desires of the learner to validate your assumptions, but not to create your courses and services. The consumerist attitude of the learner should NOT drive the learning environment development but is should influence how we communicate with learners.