The term “innovation” has been thrown around through the halls of education for several years. Its creation in our education system is a stated goal by our Department of Education. It is a reason, although some would call it a justification, for charter schools being formed. Charter schools were supposed to lead the way to innovation for public education. A problem with innovation however is that we often do not know it when we see it.
The whole idea of innovation is that it is something new. The other part of that, which is implied, is that it is also a successful improvement. That may be the piece that prevents recognizing innovation in education. Teachers, when it comes to education, are a conservative group. Change comes slowly, and there is a comfort in holding on to what has worked in the past. This has long been reinforced by the many trends and fads in education that have come and gone. Teachers have been programmed to believe that whatever the change being mandated by the powers that be, it will be gone with the next change of power. “If we wait a little while, this to will pass” becomes the educators’ mindset.
The newness of innovation is probably its greatest obstacle to acceptance. Teachers generally rely on the tried and true methods, proven to work over a long period of time. Innovation requires a leap of faith on the part of educators that the innovation will be a success. Unfortunately for innovation, the conservative nature of educators does not support taking risks. It may have something to do with self-perceptions of many teachers that as “content experts” they shouldn’t make public mistakes. Supporting innovation that fails would be a commitment to failure in the eyes of many educators. Obviously, this slows innovation acceptance.
This entire process has been further complicated by the rate of speed that technology moves and affects change. Committees, research and approval are very big parts of change in education. Today however, change comes faster and more significantly than in years past primarily because of the advancements in technology. These advancements continue to move forward regardless of anyone’s committee, research, or approval.
Collaboration has long been an element of learning. The term social learning is now creeping into discussions more and more giving collaboration a facelift. Face to face collaboration is the oldest and most easily recognized form. It is also a positive reason for department and faculty meetings. When learning individually we are good, but more often than not, learning collaboratively we are better. Technology tools for collaboration have moved collaboration to the forefront.
Now, let us combine collaboration with technology and see if it fits into our education system. Technology has most recently provided many tools, or applications for collaboration. Social Media is not one tool, but rather a network of many that overlap and intertwine. Educators can: join a Ning community,and meet a colleague from anywhere, converse on that site, connect and collaborate on Twitter, continue face to face collaboration on a Google Hangout, or Skype, collaboratively create and publish documents, presentations, Podcasts and videos. The potential ability for educators to harness this power and use it to model and guide learning for their students is mind-boggling to me, as a 40-year educator. It is only surpassed by the idea that the same potential ability in the hands of the students will take collaboration, creation, and learning even further.
We have labeled this innovation the Personal Learning Network. It is what we use to connect educators for collaboration beyond their buildings, districts, towns, and countries. It is technology-driven innovation that may profoundly affect education in regard to collaboration and professional development. It connects teachers with students, administrators, thought leaders, authors, and experts in all areas. It enables collaboration and creation on every level for educators to learn and teach. We become connected educators giving us insights and relevance that has been enabled by technology.
This innovation has been percolating for several years now, yet it has failed to be accepted as innovation. There is a growing gap between the adapters, or the connected educators, and the unconnected educators. The continuous discussions of the connected are directed and led by thought leaders and collaborative reflections, discussions, and content. The unconnected educators rely on the past and whatever direction is given by the powers that be in their districts.
If innovation is something new than the idea of technology-driven collaboration in the form of a PLN is old news and no longer innovation. Since it is no longer innovative, maybe educators will consider it, as a possible next step in education that will enable needed change. The idea that educators may be anti-innovative is my only explanation as to why the idea of a Personal Learning Network has not yet moved educators to accept it as a method to move educators, and education to a better place.
Hi Tom! Thanks for the interesting post on PLNs. Makes for an interesting argument that maybe it will catch on now since it is not exactly cutting edge anymore. Hope you are right. Maybe then it will be a vehicle for people see see some of the amazing innovative things that are going on out there. Locally, provincially/state wide, nationally and globally. So much great stuff …… Take care. Tim
[…] one last post regarding the purpose and next steps for PLN’s, Tom Whitby asks, “When is Innovation […]
[…] The term “innovation” has been thrown around through the halls of education for several years. Its creation in our education system is a stated goal by our Department of Education. It is a reason, … […]
Wonderful post. I believe that I am a better teacher because of the connections I am making and the collaborations that have presented themselves both inside and outside of my school. I believe in the power of sharing and modeling how innovation can get to the authentic learning I get inspired by. I hope that others will get inspired and want to try thinking more about how to reach all learners because we can. The technology gives us opportunities for this to happen. Your post captures so much. I hope everyone catches on.
Interesting post! I do wonder though how much teachers are resistant to innovation vs stifled? Put another way: how are teachers empowered to innovate?
I’m not sure that I agree with the statement “teachers, when it comes to education, are a conservative group”. I believe that many teachers have a strong desire to try new approaches. While big goals / plans may be dictated by the “powers that be” at the end of the day many of us hold unparalleled power in our classrooms to try new things. While we can’t reform the entire approach to schooling individually there are a lot of things I can push forward in my classroom and do for my own personal growth.
That being said, you do raise a good point. When does a practice no longer be labelled as “innovative” vs “the norm”? How do we shift things like PLN into normal teacher professional practice?
[…] The term “innovation” has been thrown around through the halls of education for several years. Its creation in our education system is a stated goal by our Department of Education. It is a reason, … […]
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Interesting take that the education world might adopt innovation once its not considered innovative anymore.
Expanding upon your thoughts about the conservative nature of educators not taking risks … In addition to this, there is a huge corelation between being risk adverse and teacher evaluations. Many teachers do not want to take a risk, try soemthing new, when thier job could be on the line. “Why try something new when I could get an “effective teacher” rating by repeating the teaching methods that are on the “approved” list?
There is no freedom to fail in education. No freedom to try new things and fail as teachers or students. Everything needs to be a success. Find a “Best Practice” that has been proven over time.
We need new best practices. We need freedom to take risks. We need freedom to fail. Fail at something? Good. Fail fast, Fail cheap, learn from, and move on to something new. Most importanly, share what you have learned with others so that other educators know what didn’t work and can spend their time trying something new.
I thoroughly enjoyed this post Tom – it’s one of your best! I agree that the combination of collaboration and technology is pretty darn tough to beat – definitely much more than a passing fad. Rock on Tom!
Bob