Knowledge Alliance congratulates the nine states and the District of Columbia for their winning applications in the round 2 Race to the Top (RttT) competition at the US Department of Education. Read More...
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Knowledge Alliance congratulates the nine states and the District of Columbia for their winning applications in the round 2 Race to the Top (RttT) competition at the US Department of Education. Read More...
Education has its own inconvenient truths. See what we said several years ago here and here. So now does education have its own oil spill? Find out what the Knowledge-able Sourcerer has to say about that.
Knowledge Alliance’s Center for Knowledge Use convened its fourth invitational Big Ideas Retreat “Succeeding in the VUCA World in Education” August 2-4 in Tamaya, NM.
Monday, August 2 – 1:00 pm
Presentation Slide Links
Tony Bryk – Improvement Research
Louis Gomez – Nuts and Bolts: The Innovation Collaborative
Lindsay Martin – IHI’s 90-Day Cycles: Bringing New Ideas into Action
What a breathtaking whirlwind of cutting-edge information! Tony, Louis, and Lindsay challenged our thinking in their presentations and gave us an opportunity to prototype rapid prototyping itself in our intimate breakout sessions. Our five big takeaways from this innovative experience were:
Please feel free to share your own insights and observations in the comments!
Monday, August 2 – 6:30 pm
Jillian Darwish – Presentation Slide Link
Exploring the Future and the VUCA World in Education, hosted by Jillian Darwish from KnowledgeWorks, was a thought-provoking presentation in which participants were asked to envision the future and try to grasp how rapidly evolving innovations will undoubtedly affect the future generation of learners. Here are five main takeaways from this presentation:
Please comment on the above 5 takeaways, and feel free to add in your own thoughts and ideas.
Tuesday, August 3 – 8:30 am
Denise Borders & Jim Kohlmoos – Presentation Slide Link
Last year at the Knowledge and Innovation Summit West Wind Ed Policy, the Stupski Foundation, and the Knowledge Alliance unveiled a vision for research, design, and development in education. Denise Borders of AED and Jim Kohlmoos of Knowledge Alliance kicked off Day 2 of this year’s retreat by quickly reviewing the vision introduced last year as a frame of reference to inform and invigorate the day’s discussions. Here are the basic assumptions and elements of this new vision for research, design, and development to transform education for the future.
Assumptions:
Elements:
Jim Kohlmoos concluded this session with the observation that we (Knowledge Alliance) have identified the basic features for an R&D system including: a problem solving mission; a knowledge ecosystem; design process; networks of innovation; centers and teams; and funding. Today, he said, “let’s hang out in the stratosphere, test the big ideas, and surprise each other as we imagine a new future.”
Tuesday, August 3 – 9:00 am
Three main points:
There are some Game Breakers we need to consider right up front:
What can be said about implementation? Remember that implementation is 90% of the game – we deal with adaptive problems all the time in education and less with the technical.
Look at the context, at who is involved with this implementation, and use a scorecard for accountability and to monitor implementation.
Looks very familiar across the world. Scoring system actually just measures how well, if at all, each item is implemented.
There are nearly 40 states with plans for systems reform-linked to Race to the Top. How might the RD&D system inform these efforts? How does this move us to the next phase?
Tuesday, August 3 – 1:00 pm
Tom Vander Ark – Presentation Slide Link
Ted Kolderie – Presentation Notes Link
More big ideas gathered late in the afternoon on Day 2 as Tom Vander Ark and Ted Kolderie presented their thinking as to why innovation is a strategy to systemic reform in education. Both presentations focused on innovative forms of school-organization, on innovative approaches to learning (including the greater use of digital electronics) and on, innovative, broader, concepts of achievement. Here are a few takeaways from both presentations:
Tuesday, August 3 – 6:30 pm
Documentarian Links
Mike Bowler – Retreat Summary
Peggy Siegel - Reflections and Implications
The penultimate session after dinner Tuesday was a call to action. Five of the major presenters, Tony Bryk, Louis Gomez, Mike Smith, Tom Vander Ark and Ted Kolderie, were asked to sum up their impressions of the retreat and make recommendations. The overall message: Let’s get going.
Tony: Ideas are great, but the challenge is to make them work on the ground. Try to do something without worrying first about organization; let organization evolve. A few individuals often make something work — ie, IHI started with six. So a subset of you must step forward.
Louis: Reasons to be encouraged: There’s a commitment to practice. Encouragement about the road ahead, which could be a “wedge for equity.” And there’s evidence that people are embracing a diversity of methods, although more is needed.
Ted: VUCA is the normal state of affairs. He “ended up with a sense that in a situation where nobody can be sure, try different things.”
Mike: He quit the group in the early ’80s because it was an advocacy group that “hustled for dollars.” Today it’s much different, “but at some point you’ve got to do something, got to prove to yourself that you’re different than you were before.”
He made a specific proposal to the Alliance: Pick two topics, recruit five KA members to concentrate on 1) technology in education, now and in the future, and 2) the new common standards with an eye toward helping all the children in the country.
“Now is the time to act. If you spend two years and don’t act, you’ll never act….You can change the education environment. You know more about the education environment than just about anyone else.”
Jim K in concluding: The collective power [represented here] is one of a kind. The two days’ discussions had been “robust far beyond the expectations of the planning committee…. It’s a game-changer.” To quote Burwick: We can change the world.
TwitterFeed BigIdeas11
During the retreat there was a lot of chatter on Twitter. Check out the collection of tweets! Read More...»