I have been extremely thankful of the feedback and comments that I have received on the ideas I have written about on innovation in education. Sharing my thoughts openly, has helped me to shape my thoughts about the topic and why it is important in education. I really think in education it is more than a “buzzword” now, but we are still struggling to understand what it means for most schools. The wrong approach is assuming that “innovation” is simply a substitute for the word “technology”; education technology leads have become “innovation officers”. The title has changed but has the approach? In some cases it totally has, while others it is not the case. To me, it is about learning new ideas and creating something new and better for kids. Sometimes it is invention (a totally new idea) and sometimes it is iteration (remix of an old idea), but it is always better. That is key to “innovation”.
One of the most important thoughts that has shaped my thinking was from Kelly Christopherson who really pushed the idea that there have been “innovative teachers” long before our present time in schools, and I would totally agree. I remember one of my teachers discussing world wars, and instead of just teaching us about the past, he actually immersed us in activity where every single decision we made either lead to peace or conflict. That sparked my love for history but it immersed me into a much deeper appreciation for learning. There was no use of technology, no Internet, but just a better way of teaching and learning that I had not experienced as a student.
So why is innovation in education moving to the forefront? There are a few reasons that I can think of but I would love for your thoughts as well.
1. Access to one another. – The power of social media is not in the sharing of information but the connection to one another. For innovation to happen in any field, it is important that there are places where people can connect easily one another, often referred to as “spikes”. A “spike” is a congregation of people coming together that are in a similar field, like Silicon Valley for startups, Nashville for country singers, and so on. Social media has provided that “spike” for different fields (specifically in this case education) where we can come together to share ideas and build upon the ideas that we bring to one another. For innovation to happen culturally in education, a “spike” is essential. People drive innovation. Always.
2. Unlimited access to ideas. – In university, every book I read was on the topic of education. My guess is that many of the same books I read in my courses were similar to the ones that other students were reading in different programs. Now though, we do not only have access to practicing teachers and educational thought leaders (who are not only researchers, but are present in every aspect of the field), but we also have access to a huge amount of people outside education at our fingertips. Those ideas can be reshaped and applied to education in much easier way than a time when that access was limited. We need to take advantage.
3. Schools as a whole need to get better. – One of my favourite quotes on change from William Pollard is, “Those who initiate change will have a better opportunity to manage the change is inevitable.” With the world outside changing, schools need to help our students become leader in a world that expect a lot of different things from when I was a kid. It is not that there aren’t great things already happening in schools. For example, relationships will be the most important thing in schools yesterday, today, and tomorrow, but that is only a foundation of our institutions. If the world is asking for people to be innovative and think differently, schools can no longer shape students to all think the same.
4. Schools can see what other schools are doing. – This is not meant to put schools into competition with one another, but it is in a hope that we do simultaneously and push one another. Other than the occasional face-to-face interactions educators had with each other, it was hard to really hear about what was happening in other schools. Now with so many educators sharing what is happening, there is (and should be) a pressure to do create better learning opportunities for our students. From what I have seen, the majority of schools are not trying to contain this and make it exclusive to their students, but to share and collaborate with others to help students, no matter where they attend. We will always serve a diverse community of learners and the more we can help each student, the better we all are.
As Kelly reminded me, innovation is not isolated to what we do in our schools today. We just now have more of an opportunity to move it from “pockets of innovation” to a “culture”. The access and tools are there, we just need to embrace them.