Search Results For "disruptive innovation"

Good fast cheap work

I first heard this phrase when I was in my teens working as a lot boy/mechanic’s helper at a car dealership. A former race mechanic was explaining to a customer that there are always trade offs when it comes to performance and one has to choose what is most important. He told the customer to “pick two… good, fast or cheap.” Since that time I have heard this constraint triad referenced in IT, Educational Technology, Instructional Design, Web Design and many other projects. The challenge is that all three constraints of a project are interrelated and it is impossible to realize all three. One of the contraints or properties will always suffer.

Personal experience with many projects confirms that if you want something that is good and cheap then it won’t be fast… if you want something that is good and fast… then it won’t be cheap and if you want something fast and cheap… then it won’t be good. I have yet to find an situation where this principle doesn’t apply and more recently I have seen an expansion of this constraint triad apply to another area – the glacial pace of change in Education.

Consider the following constraint triad for Education:

“Pick any two—innovation, change or stability”

To ensure that we don’t get caught up in semantics I will use the following definitions sourced from dictionary.com:

  • Change: to transform or convert or make something different from what it is or from what it would be if left alone.
  • Innovation: the introduction of new things or methods.
  • Stability: the state of being stable or the status quo.

If you want innovation and change in Education then you won’t have stability. If you want innovation and stability then you won’t have change and if you want change and stability then you won’t have innovation. This is NOT a new idea. Clayton Christensen the author of the concept of disruptive innovation points to the challenges that Education faces in the book Disrupting Class which focuses on K-12 Education and the book Innovative University which deals with Higher Education. Christensen points to years of research that confirms that true innovation is disruptive because it introduces something new and upsets or disrupts the status quo. He also uses the term of sustaining innovation that explains that a product or service can improve over time but this type of innovation has no real transformative effect because it doesn’t introduce something new or significantly different.

Therefore, when you examine the stated positions of the leadership and faculty in Education you will note that while they may be willing to talk about innovation in Strategic Plans, Vision and Mission statements, Academic Plans or even list innovation as part of their organization’s Core Values, their actions reveal a preference for stability. Once again I am not the first author to point to this inconsistency. In the article Innovation in Higher Education? HAH! Ann Kirschner Dean of William E. Macaulay Honors College at the City University of New York argues that College leaders need to move beyond talking about transformation to actually transforming Higher Education before it’s too late. If you have any doubt about the lack of innovation and proactive change in Education please refer to the dozens of articles, blog posts and books that I have reviewed or summarized in the Change category on this blog.

Since stability is so important to many of the leaders and faculty in Education it comes at the expense of innovation. When you pick stability and innovation you do so at the expense of change and at best you may get sustaining innovation which really is just a slight improvement on the status quo – blackboards to whiteboard, overheads to PowerPoint, large lecture halls to MOOCs and so on. When you pick stability and change you loose out on innovation all together. Unfortunately, educational reformers dating back to the likes of John Dewey and earlier (see post Progressive Education – Are We There Yet) have been pointing to the need for innovation in our educational system.

Perhaps if we challenged the leaders and faculty in Education to “pick any two—innovation, change or stability” then we would at least be able to account for why things change so slowly…or better yet may be able to motivate educational leadership and faculty to face the reality that if they really want innovation then they can’t have the levels of stability that are they are so accustomed. The renowned educational reformer Ken Robinson argues that we don’t need evolution in Education we need a learning revolution. Where do we start?

Stop hiring so many traditional risk adverse leaders and faculty. I have sat on many selection committees where the majority of the group is simply looking for the “safe bet”. Rather than embrace an individual’s potential, entrepreneurial spirit and unconventional career path or out of the box thinking most selection committee members will look for a stable work history, a traditional promotional path and other safe factors. We need to heed the advice often attributed to Albert Einstein. Although he never actually offered the following quote this notion of challenging conventional thought is still useful:

Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.

It is impossible to become an innovative or entrepreneurial organization by continually hiring traditional and conventional people. Educational organizations need to hire innovators and entrepreneurs and once they do, let them do the work that they were hired to perform. This takes courage. Innovative, entrepreneurial and out of the box thinkers push the limits, ask uncomfortable questions, offer unique solutions and make some people feel uncomfortable. But this is good. Educational institutions should be learning organizations and learning must be at their core. Learning is a messy, uncomfortable endeavour and innovation and change is just part of the learning process–shouldn’t it be part of organizational culture?

Does your organization genuinely embrace innovation and change? Or is stability and the status quo the top priority?

Back in 2008 I wrote about the Blackberry Storm RIM initial response to the iPhone as an example of RIM missing the boat and only offering an example sustaining innovation in response to Apple disruptive innovation – the iPhone. Two years later and RIM’s latest response to the iPhone (4 this time) is yet another example of sustaining innovation. Don’t just take my word for it this time. The following authors offer their comments:

We still feel like this device is a generation behind the market. Instead of meeting the rising stars of the smartphone world (Apple and Google) head-on, RIM has taken something more like baby steps toward innovation…For all the improvements in the browser, the more upscale fit-and-finish of the UI, and the thoughtful changes in basic functionality, we still feel like this device is a generation behind the market. Instead of meeting the rising stars of the smartphone world (Apple and Google) head-on, RIM has taken something more like baby steps toward innovation… Joshua Topolsky – Engadget

Overall, the phone feels like the result of an array of decisions made to keep current BlackBerry owners comfortable… Harry McCraken – Technologzier

While RIM met the bar, they didn’t do much to raise it higher or push the envelope in either hardware or software design. In world where every vendor is working to up their game, raise the bar and drive new innovation in hardware and software, it felt RIM barely stepped up. Michael Gartenberg – Slashgear

The Torch and BlackBerry OS 6 take what BlackBerry’s already doing and move it forward slightly-they’re not reinventing, overturning, or blowing up things. Gizmodo

While the Torch does address some of the needs of existing Blackberry users and could give cause for some to upgrade RIM really hasn’t done much to move itself back into the innovators realm. Time will tell just how much of the market share RIM will continue to loose.

EdTech Tips

Dwayne Harapnuik —  March 21, 2022

In the Applied Digital Learning (ADL) program students develop an innovation project that they work on throughout their time in the program. In contrast EdTech students only have 4 courses in the ADL. To help you with the adjustment to the ADL program and to deal with the authentic learning opportunity/project focus of the ADL we have put together the following resources specifically for EdTech students.

EdTech and Educational Leadership students will need an innovation project to work on for the 4 courses you are taking in the ADL program. The Leadership Project that is part of your practicum log can/should be used as the project in the ADL courses. It will add 20 hours to the overall Internship/Practicum Log so you need to pick a project/topic that fits under the Leadership umbrella and that you can then build on in each of the ADL courses. You have control over the choice of the project/topic and we encourage you to use the Choosing your Innovation Project section below to help you decide on what you can do. If you have spent any time at all in an instructional environment you can easily see many things that may need to be fixed. Focusing on fixing one of these problems is a good start for your innovation plan project. The ADL Why & Principles page provides the theoretical background for why authentic projects are so important for what we ask you to do in the program.

The ePortfolio (eP) is another very important component of ALL ADL courses. You will need an ePortfolio to complete all of the assignments in each of the courses. We suggest creating one with a simple tool such as Wix or WordPress. Both applications have lots of video help. You must include a blog page on your site, so Google Sites is not typically recommended because there is no built-in blog page. The Minimalist Fundamentals of ePortfolios section below will point you to the same resources that ADL students use to create ePortfolios.

Hopefully, the following information we have put together will give you a better idea of the how, the why, and the what you are heading into. In every course from the ADL program, there are facets that you will be able to include in the practicum report.

What to Expect from the ADL

The Applied Digital Learning (ADL) at Lamar University is designed with and uses constructivist principles that make it different from traditional programs. We believe that it is important to more than talk the constructivist talk and actually walk the constructivist walk have moved beyond the rhetoric by a creating significant learning environment (CSLE) in which we give learners choice, ownership, and voice through authentic learning opportunities (COVA).

To better understand the CSLE+COVA vs Traditional table comparisons in the video please take a few moments to review the full tables and explanations found at:

CSLE vs Traditional
COVA vs Traditional
CSLE+COVA Mindset vs Traditional

How the ADL is Different and What That Means to You

You will NOT find checklists, progress bars, completion status checks, competency or activity-focused rubrics, quizzes, and other related lower-order thinking or behaviorist tools or methods that will help you to check a completed activity off a list in the ADL program. The post Why I Don’t Use Checklists, Progress Bars & Other Activity Monitors will help you to understand and work through the constructivist and outcome-based education foundation that we use in the ADL.

Change in Focus

Shifting your focus from traditional information and content-focused instruction to using authentic learning opportunities, summed up as projects, will help you to make the adjustment to the ADL program. You can view Part B of this video series and explore additional resources that will help you with your Change in Focus.

Minimalist Fundamentals of ePortfolios:

I make the argument that ePortfolios can and should be simple to understand and, more importantly, simple to create and maintain. Especially if we keep the academic and scholarly jargon down to a minimum and focus on what we need to know and do to effectively use ePortfolios to enhance learning.
Dwayne’s Minimalist ePortfolio Fundamentals

Why Do You Need to Have an Innovation Project?

In EDLD 5315 you will be asked to create an action research plan to measure the impact of your innovation project. Being able to effectively measure the impact of a learning innovation project is a key responsibility of all educational technology leaders.

In EDLD 5317 you will be asked to create a podcast or long-form video and a publication about some aspect of your innovation project. As educational technology leaders, we need to be able to share how others can bring out an effective change in the learning environment. Being able to promote these enhancements to learning is an essential part of our professional responsibility.

In EDLD 5318 you will be asked to create an online or online blended course that will be related to your Innovation Project. If you consider the above example moving your Professional Learning online would be a great option that will benefit you and your learners.

In EDLD 5389 you will be asked to create a Professional Learning Plan/Strategy that will be based on your Innovation Project. Once again we encourage you to look to your organization and consider what needs to be improved or enhanced. The remote teaching that most people have resorted to because of the pandemic doesn’t work that well and you may want to look at how you can move from remote teaching to blended learning; this would be a great innovation project that will require considerable professional learning.

Choosing Your Innovation Project

Links to pages highlighted in the video:

Applied Digital Learning
ADL Why & Principles
ADL Program Map
ADL/EDLD 5305 Assignment Examples

Blended Learning Resource we use in the ADL:
Horn, M. B., & Staker, H. (2014). Blended: Using disruptive innovation to improve schools. John Wiley & Sons.

Course Design & Fink’s 3 Column Table

The online course you will be asked to create in EDLD 5318 will require the development of a course map that will take the form of Fink’s 3-Column Table. Consider the following video to help you develop the course map for the course you will be putting online. Even though I refer to EDLD 5313 where ADL students have the opportunity to develop their course maps this applies to the course map you will be asked to develop for EDLD 5318. Also note that the development of the course map was one of six activities students addressed in EDLD 5313 and this task can be accomplished in over a few hours. Once you are familiar with the process you can develop a course map for an existing course in very short order so this is a very useful tool to learn how to use.

4 Keys to aligning outcomes activities & assessment – There is an easy way and a difficult way to work through Fink’s taxonomy and the 3 column table – please take my advice and use this post and use the easy way.

Mapping Your Learner’s Journey – It is our responsibility to guide our learners through their personal development journey and help them take ownership of their learning.

Why Create Significant Learning Environments – Are you looking at the bigger picture or have you intellectually stepped far enough back to see the full learning environment?

Why you need a BHAG to design learning environments – Use a Big Hairy Audacious Goal (BHAG) to help define a visionary type goal that is more strategic and emotionally compelling rather than being simply tactical.

Why You Need to Rethink Your Role as an Educator – If you really don’t want to be replaced by an inspirational robot then you need to not only talk the talk of Dewey but walk the walk.

Difference Between “Doing Projects” and “Project-Based Learning” – Project-based learning is very powerful but we tend to limit its impact by focusing on just doing projects.

 

Revised August, 2024

Course Goal
Learners will identify technology innovations and embrace them as opportunities rather than challenges and proactively use those changes as catalysts to enhance their institution or district’s learning environments.

Learning Outcomes:
Aligning learning outcomes with activities and assessment:

Learning Outcomes Assessment Learning Activities
Foundational
Learners will identify and apply the principles of Disruptive Innovation.Learners will analyze technological innovation and change as a proactive catalyst.
Innovation Plan

 

Discussion

Blended Learning, Disrupting University or Innovator’s Dilemma and apply the principle of Disruptive Innovation to your particular educational setting.
Application
Learners will be able to identify, analyze and evaluate the impact of recent examples of Disruptive Innovation.
Literature review

 

Discussion

Review and examine the major and relevant data sources to identify disruptive trends that are currently or will be potentially impact your innovation plan.
Integration
Learners will be able to highlight the opportunities technological innovation spawns and develop strategies to proactively use these opportunities to move their institution/districts toward developing active learning environments.
Case studies –

Implementation strategy outline

 

Discussion

Examine exceptional examples of organizations using disruptive innovation to move their organizations forward.  Identify and apply lessons to the development of your own implementation strategy to move your organization forward.
Human Dimension/Caring
Learners articulate their role in leading change and their responsibility in leading their learning communities through this process.
Video/Digital Story
Portfolio BlogDiscussion
Locate and identify an assortment of Ted, Youtube and Vimeo resources that convey the message of significant and active learning and bring these resources together in your blog that can be used to promote this perspective. Develop a your own video that conveys this message.
Learning How to Learn
Learners will locate, evaluate and compile web-based resources, experts and communities that will help them to promote current and future disruptive innovation opportunities.
Project plan

Portfolio Blog

Finalize innovation plan.

Add and organize the resources in your eportfolio/blog that can help you identify future disruptive innovations.  Reflect on your role in leading the adoption of disruptive innovation in your learning environment. Organize your blog resources to support your change agent role.

 

 

Harapnuik, D. K, Thibodeaux, T. N., & Cummings, C. D. (2018). Creating significant learning environments through choice, ownership, voice, and authenticity.
The COVA eBook is an open educational resource (OER) and can be downloaded for FREE at https://www.harapnuik.org/?page_id=7291

American Psychological Association. (2020). Publication manual of the American Psychological Association (7th ed.). https://doi.org/10.1037/0000165-000

Please note: Only one of the following text is required — select the text appropriate to your current situation:

K-12 educators:
Horn, M. B., & Staker, H. (2014). Blended: Using disruptive innovation to improve schools. John Wiley & Sons.

Higher Education:
Christensen C. M., Horn M. B., Soares L., & L. Caldera. (2011). Disrupting college: How disruptive innovation can deliver quality and affordability to postsecondary education. http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/labor/report/2011/02/08/9034/disrupting- college/

Business focus:
Christensen, C. (2013). The innovator’s dilemma: when new technologies cause great firms to fail. Harvard Business Review Press.

Supplementary Text for Higher Education:
Christensen C. M., & H. J. Eyring. (2011). The innovative university: Changing the DNA of higher education from the inside out. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

Other course resources include media and readings that can be accessed within the weekly folders in the Classroom/Modules in BB.