Title: Innovation and Creativity: A New Education for a New Era
1Innovation and CreativityA New Education for a
New Era
- Eduardo O C Chaves
- eduardo_at_chaves.com.br
2A New Era
- The last 60 years have introduced a new era
- The new era has been variously described
- Information / Knowledge / Post-Industrial Society
- Post-Capitalist / Post-Socialist / Post-Ideology
Society - Post-Modern Society
- The Creative Society
- The Third Wave (Alvin Toffler, 1980)
3The New Era and Change
- Change is the most visible feature of this
society - Change greatly increased in quantity
- Change greatly increased in speed
- Change became pervasive (affects all domains)
- Change seems to have a basic direction
4Founding Period Late 40s 50s
- End of last really global conflict
- Creation of the United Nations
- Beginning of the Cold War
- Great expansion of automobile use
- Great expansion of air travel
- Invention of the computer
- Appearance of truly mass media television
5Middle Ages The 60s
- Appearance of counter-culture and protest
movements (It is forbidden to forbid) - Expansion of civil and social rights
- Invention of the pill and the appearance of the
sexual revolution and feminism - Invention of the Internet (1969)
6Modern Period the 70s, 80s, 90s
- 70s Personal computers are invented
- 80s The digital revolution begins in the
workplace - 80s Women invade schools and the workplace
- 90s No more Communism (almost!)
- 90s Internet becomes comercial and truly global
- 90s Cell phones and wireless communications
- 90s Cable and satellite TV
- 90s Economic and cultural globalization
7Present Day the New Millenium (the 00s)
- Digital revolution in the overall culture
- Access to multimedia information over the
Internet - Mass media converge to the Internet
- Leisure over the Internet (Web, Chats, Games,
etc.) - E-Mail and instant messaging (business and
personal) - Distance Education / Learning
- Digital revolution in the home
- CDs, CD-ROMs, DVDs, Digital TV, home theaters
- Digital cameras (still photography and video)
- Latest generation videogames, digital toys of all
types
8The Old Era One-ness and Stability
- One country, one region, one city
- One culture, one set of values, one language
- One house, one partner, one family
- One profession, one job (for the man of the
family) - One religion, one church
- One political loyalty, one party
- One club, one team, one hobby, one kind of
leisure - Clear distinction between work, leisure, learning
- Little virtuality in life (literature, cinema)
9The New Era Multi-ness and Instability
- We live in multiple countries, regions, and
cities - We combine multiple cultures, values, languages
- We have multiple houses, partners and families
- We go through various professions and jobs
- We are flexible towards religion and churches
- We do not have long-lasting political loyalties
- We are members of various clubs and associations
- Boundaries of work, leisure and learning are
fluid - We work, communicate, access information, shop,
play and sometimes love largely in virtual space
10Change, Creativity and Innovation
- Stability means no or little change
- A society or an organization is stable when it
does not change or changes very little or very
slowly - A stable society or organization has little need
of creativity and innovation it faces few
changes and generally knows how to deal with the
changes it faces - Change, however, especially when pervasive and
rapid, makes creativity and innovation imperative
11The Role of Technology
- Technology is important as a catalyst for change
(the automobile, the airplane, the pill, TV,
computers, Internet...) - But changes starts with individuals
- When widely adopted, however, they become social,
cultural, economic, and political changes
sometimes of the greatest importance
12Education
- Education does not take place in a vacuum it
happens in a historical context - What we do in education must be clearly affected
by changes in the social, cultural, economic and
political context in which education takes place - It is difficult to conceive that we could enter a
new era in social, cultural, economic and
political aspects and yet continue to educate the
same way weve always done
13Changes Relevant to Education
- Quasi-universal availability of information and
ease of access to it - Globalization of communication and ease of travel
- Learning taking place anytime, anywhere, anyhow
- (All of these reasons have to do with
technology!)
14Information and Knowledge
- Information, today, is easily available, to be
acquired as needed, and access to it is simple
and easy - Knowledge (differently from information) is seen,
today, as something to be built by each person - So, information need not, and knowledge cannot,
be transmitted, transferred, delivered . . . - This is the collapse of the view that education
is content delivery, transmission of information
and knowledge
15Communication and Travel
- Not only is access to information easy but access
to experts anywhere in the world has become
possible, costless and easy (from a technical
point of view) - If an urgent face-to-face encounter is necessary,
technically it can take place within 24 hours - So, the teacher is far from being the only expert
to whom the student can resort, in case of need
16Learning
- Anyone can now learn anytime, throughout life
- Anyone can now learn anywhere, wherever one has
access to the Internet - Anyone can now learn anyhow, in tacit, non-formal
and formal ways - So, learning need not, and perhaps even should
not, be concentrated in a given period of life
(school age) and in a particular place (the
school) nor ought it to be standardized, one
size fits all
17Education
- Education, and especially schooling, needs to
face considerable change if it is going to be
able to do what is expected of it in the new era - These changes will probably be drastic, profound,
broad, far-reaching not gradual and incremental
- These changes should lead to true transformation
(going beyond present form) not to mere reform
- These changes will certainly require great
creativity and innovation
18Schools
- Schools are complex organizations that are
supposed to provide the best environment for
learning - In the ecology that schools provide for
learning, many factors affect performance that
is, learning outcomes - Teachers
- Principals and administrators
- Vision of education, of children, of learning
- Curricula and methodologies
- Resources (among which are books, computers,
etc.) - Infrastructure (libraries, laboratories, etc.)
19Technology and Schools
- By changing only one of these elements we will
not bring about the changes that are necessary
for schools to deal competently with the changes
that the 21st century presents - These changes will not happen without technology
but the mere introduction of technology into
the ecology, all the other elements left
unchanged, will not be enough - The School of the Future still needs to be
invented
20The Focus of Change
- The focus here is on positive, voluntary change
in organizations and individuals responsible for
education - Organizational change What changes are needed in
present educational organizations (mostly
schools) - Individual change What changes are needed in us
as educators (mostly teachers and school
administrators) - Effective change is a product of both individual
and organizational change - Effective change begins with individuals even
if their goal is to change organizations
21Types of Change
- Changes can be incremental or radical
- Positive incremental changes lead to improvement
- Radical changes lead to transformation
- A series of improvements leads to reform, a
process in which present form is maintained but
perfected - Transformation means transcending present form
and can only be reached through innovation a
process in which there is search for a totally
new form
22Technology and Change
- Technology can be used
- To sustain and support what we are already doing
(conservative use does not lead to change) - To supplement and extend what we are doing (leads
to improvement and reform) - To subvert and transform what we are doing
(leads to transformation and innovation) - (George Thomas Scharffenberger, 2004)
23Reform or Transformation?
- As the quality of a given school or school system
goes down, the degree of radical innovation that
is acceptable in it goes up ! - As the quality of a given school or school system
goes up, the degree of radical innovation that is
acceptable in it goes down ! - (Nicholas Negroponte, 2005)
24Transformation and Innovation
- Innovation has to do with what is new, with
searching a new form - The new is not the old, refurbished, warmed over
- Innovation is more radical than mere improvements
that lead to reform it is a true
transformation, that leads to transcending
present form - New and old are context-bound terms and the
context, in this case, is defined by the changes
that have been taking place in the last sixty
years
25How does Innovation Come About?
- Creative people
- Open environments
- Resources and tools
26Present Schools and Innovation
- There certainly are creative people in our
schools - There are resources and technology in our schools
- But there is no culture of innovation, that is,
the right kind of environment is missing - So innovation is rare and difficult to sustain
(and technology is not used innovatively)
27The Right Environment for Innovation
- Creative people, even when they have resources
and tools, have difficulty generating sustainable
innovations if the environment is not right . . .
- The right environment for innovation . . .
- Is open, relatively flat, non-bureaucratic
- Stimulates initiative and risk-taking
- Requires and promotes continued learning
- Views mistakes as an integral part of learning
- Rewards competent, successful innovation
28The Right Environment for Innovation
- This kind of environment attracts creative
people see Richard Florida, The Rise of the
Creative Class and The Flight of the Creative
Class
29What Innovation in Education is NOT
- Teaching technology to students
- Integrating technology into the present
curriculum - Using technology to improve teaching
30Real Innovation in Education
- Real innovation in education requires us
- To reconceptualize education
- To reinvent schools
- To transform ourselves (educators, teachers,
school administrators)
31In Other Words . . .
- How can we reconceive education, so that it goes
beyond (transcends) the present paradigm? - How can we reinvent our schools, so they can
become open environments that stimulate
initiative, require continued learning and reward
innovation? - How can we recreate ourselves, so we can become
truly creative and innovative in facing the
demands and the expectations that the 21st
century places upon education?
32Education and Human Development
- Education has to do with human development, with
realizing human potential - Human beings are born totally incompetent and
dependent - But they are born with an incredible capacity to
learn - Education is the process by which incompetence is
translated into competence, dependence into
autonomy - This process takes place through learning
33Learning
- To learn is to become capable of doing that which
one was not able to do before - To learn is to build ones competence to act with
autonomy - The learning that is essential to human life has
two sides to it - To become able to freely define ones life
project - To become competent to transform it into reality
34How do we Learn?
- Observing expert or acceptable behavior
- Desiring to do the same (motivation)
- Attempting to do it
- Generally failing
- Receiving feedback (collaboration)
- Attempting to do it again
- Succeeding in a limited way
- Receiving incentive and more feedback
(collaboration) - Improving behavior until its performance becomes
acceptable - Sometimes seeking to become experts
35Education, Learning and Collaboration
- No one educates any one else. Nor do we educate
ourselves. We educate one another, in communion,
in the context of living in this world - (Paulo Freire, 1979)
36Creative Learning Environments
- Living a life that is fulfilling and leads to
personal realization is the most creative
accomplishment anyone can achieve - Helping students to learn how to live this kind
of life is the most challenging task of education
- This type of learning requires rich and
stimulating learning environments that are
centered on the needs and interests of the
learners and that are clearly focused on human
development and on competence-building
37A Learner-Centered, Creative School
- Learning is active, hands-on
- Learning is collaborative and yet individualized
to the level of personalization - Learning takes place when needed (just in time)
in small modules (just enough) - Learning is lifelong and always focused on the
future
- Built into life (related to the learners life
project) - Centered on the learners needs and interests
- Driven by demand
- Aimed at problem-solving (project-based)
- Focused on building competence autonomy
- Learning is deeply personal and yet always
enhanced and often mediated by technology
38Innovative Teachers (1)
- The most innovative thing teachers can do in this
kind of school is stop teaching ... (well, unless
students insist that they do so !) - Teachers should listen and watch first, and then
try to orient, advise, support, cheer,
facilitate, instigate, ask questions (rather than
give answers), open exciting new horizons, gently
provoke, give incentive, be coaches, mentors,
role models . . . - These roles for teachers are more important than
their role as content deliverers !
39Innovative Teachers (2)
- Innovative teachers are the ones that use their
creativity in order to help students become truly
creative in the living of their lives - Innovative teachers are the ones that use their
creativity to support the building of this kind
ofschool of the future (needed in the present)
- Innovative teachers are not the ones that learn
to use technology well, but rather the ones that
empower their students to use technology to learn
40Leadership
- Leadership, to be effective, must be spread
through-out the organization - A leader seeks to develop the leadership
potential of others - Leader, therefore, is not only the manager or the
boss everybody should be a leader in their own
sphere of action - The success of a leader is directly related to
their ability to make other people successful - It is only this way that an organization can
succeed
41Leading for Change in Schools
- An innovative leader is one that is capable of
making the school the sort of open environment
that is conducive to ongoing innovative change - An innovative leader is one that is capable of
developing leadership in others on an ongoing
basis - There is no other factor as important to creating
and maintaining an organization culture conducive
to ongoing innovation in a school as innovative
leaders be they principals, supervisors or, nor
infrequently, teachers themselves
42Thank you !
Eduardo O C Chaves eduardo_at_chaves.com.br