innovation leadership in education 2015

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Nov 27 –29 Nov 27 –29 2015 2015 Davao City, PHILIPPINES Please text us at 09175147952. ED Soliman

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Page 1: Innovation leadership in Education 2015

Nov 27 –29 Nov 27 –29 20152015

Davao City,PHILIPPINES

 Please text us at 09175147952. ED Soliman

Page 2: Innovation leadership in Education 2015

Course OutlineCourse Outline Introduction Leadership, Innovation and Why Educational Innovation? 21st Century Teaching and learning

Innovation Leadership in Education

7 Steps to becoming an Innovative Leader

18 Steps to Better Educational Innovation Leadership (Advice from Christensen’s Innovator’s DNA)

Nov 27 –29 Nov 27 –29 20152015

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Innovative Leadership and its formal preparation is the most recent focus in education reform to improve schools to serve all children well. In recent years, schools have

charted new direction in their graduate leadership preparation programs using innovative approaches to student selection, content, instructional strategies and field experiences to address new priorities for leadership.

Inter-institutional collaborations in program delivery and evaluation drives these new directions and forms of innovation.

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Example:Example:

To be the center of excellence, To be the center of excellence, renown internationally for renown internationally for

Innovative EducationalInnovative EducationalLeadershipLeadership

exceeding expectation of 21exceeding expectation of 21stst

Century National Standards put forward By the Teacher

Training Agency

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Leadership : described as “a process of social influence in which one person can enlist the aid and support of others in the accomplishment of a common task”.

Good leaders- made not born.Effective leader- desire and will power through a never ending process of self-study, education, training, and experience (Jago, 1982). To inspire your workers into higher levels of teamwork, you must:- -be, know and, do.

These do not come naturally, but are acquired through continual work and study. Good leaders continually improve their leadership skills; they are NOT resting on their laurels.

Leadership Definition

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Innovation means first different, then better. That is, innovating is a fundamentally different way of doing things that result in considerably better, and perhaps different, outcomes.

Both the 'different' and the 'better' must be significant and substantial.

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‘‘But if you define innovation as doing things radically differently rather than just doing them well, right now many of the best charters are triumphs of execution rather than Innovation’’.

Washor's piece for The Huffington Post, published in October, 2009:

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When it comes to education, what does the word innovation mean to you?

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“Personally I feel that innovation in education should be defined as making it easier for teachers and students to do the things THEY want to do. These are the innovations that succeed, scale and sustain.” – Rob Abel, USA

Innovation in Education

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Educators need to think of innovating as those actions that significantly challenge key assumptions about schools and the way they operate. Therefore, to innovate is to question the 'box' in which we operate and to innovate outside of it as well as within.”

Innovation in Education

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If we redesign schools to get better results on 20th-century outcomes, our students will be poorly served.

Innovation requires risk and it requires patience -most inventions that are commonplace today are the results of thousands of iterations based both on success and failure.

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While many of the charter schools and charter organizations are making huge improvements in traditional outcomes for students, most are not new or different.

Many of the proposed improvements in teacher education and evaluation, student assessment, and school design in traditional public schools do not seem to be novel.

Yet the challenges that we face in improving learning and life outcomes require true innovation.

As Washor states, We need solutions that are both different and better.

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Driving Innovation and Collaboration

The stages Cycle of Innovation will help your organization become successful in identifying new ideas, implementing and integrating them into your operations. You must engrain this cycle into the DNA of your organization.

Innovations are commonly thought of as new and game changing. However, many innovations are improvements on something that already exists. It is important to create a culture of innovation within your organization, which means supporting productive failure.

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A brand new generation of institutional leaders is taking the reins. The world has continued to shrink and is much smaller.Technology continued an unabated, unchecked progression; what is now futuristic has become commonplace. Complexity is the daily norm, and CHANGE the only constant. Opportunities, problems and grand challenges abound.

Blink! . . ten years pass by. It’s now end of 2013!.

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The answer has everything to do with education . . . or how education is adapted to the realities and wonderful opportunities of the not-too-distant future.

Will this new generation of leaders be innovators, or followers?..., strong, resilient problem solvers, or servants of the status quo?

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If core competencies are assumed (engineers need to engineer, accountants need to account, writers need to write and so on…)What will be the key elements of an education that might help students become life-long learners, successful in multiple, varied career paths?

What do educators need to provide for the next generation of positive, innovative leaders?

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Before

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Now!

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or, Should we play it safe and have them attend schools that look like the schools we attended 30 years ago and our parents 60 years ago and grandparents, 90 years ago?

Is it better for students to be involved in innovative practices than participate in highly effective traditional programs?

Currently, most schools are not much different than the one our grandparents attended in the 1920s!.

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So, What is Innovation Leadership?

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Innovation Leadership is……….

The key role in the practice of innovation leadership is the… Innovation Leader. 

synthesizing different leadership styles in organizations to influence to produce creative ideas, products, services and solutions.

Dr. David Gliddon (2006) developed the competency model of innovation leaders and established the concept of innovation leadership at Penn State University.

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As an approach to organization development, innovation leadership can be used to support the achievement of the mission or vision of an organization or school.

Innovation Leadership

In an ever changing world with new technologies and processes, it is becoming necessary to think innovatively in order to ensure their continued success and stay competitive.

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Adapting to new changes in Leadership

“the need for innovation in organizations has resulted in a new focus on the role of leaders in shaping the nature and success of creative efforts” in order to adapt to new changes.

Without innovation leadership, organizations are likely to struggle.

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The 21st century shift, Innovative Thinking

This new call for innovation, a shift from 20th century traditional view of organizational practices, which discouraged employee innovative behaviors, to the 21st century view of valuing innovative thinking as a “potentially powerful influence on organizational performance”.

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None of this is to say that everything must change, hardly. There are many, oh-so-many thing we do that should never change.

21st Century Teaching & LearningOur students are waiting for 21st century learning, and our world is awaiting graduates who can succeed and flourish in fast-changing times.

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•21st Century Careers

•The new “3 C’s” of Education

•21st Century Skills

•21st Century Skills & Literacy

•Upgrade your Lessons

21st Century Teaching & Learning

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‘If a Child can’t learn the way we teach, maybe we should ‘teach the way they learn’.

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21st Century Careers

A need to keep yourself current, resilient through continuous learning, as well as connected to your values is the career of the 21st century.

21st century careers is all about CHANGE in our thinking, strategies and behaviors to those that work in the new ever-changing and challenging environment to meet the challenges of the times.

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Where are we today? Browse horizontally across the 21st Century Skill &

Literacy. Put a ‘tick’ if you are familiar with the skill.

Your 21th Century Skills & Literacy score is as below,

(Total)19 X 100%

54

Literacy Score = 35%Total: 19

Go through the 6 Skills from top to bottom. Sum up the total and see your Score!.

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CHANGEConstant Change -today’s era. To stay competitive, -manage the present and plan the future. -problem is, can’t have the same people doing both jobs.

If present time people with operational responsibilities are asked to think about the future, they will kill it.

Without Change for the better (Kaizen), there will be no Continuous Improvement to be Competitive in the current Global competition.

IMPROVEMENT IMPROVEMENT WITHOUT WITHOUT ENDINGENDING

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To live and succeed in the present world, students will need for an increased focus on communication, collaboration, andcreativity and an emphasis on teaching them to use technology in order to learn how to learn, solve problems, and think creatively.

The new “3 C’s” of Education

21st Century Teaching & Learning

Create CollaborateCommunicate

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21st Century SkillsStudents must be taught how to use technology efficiently and effectively, ethically and appropriately, safely and respectfully to learn how to learn, solve problems, and think creatively.

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??

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-shared by Cheryl Lemke on Innovative Leadership.

Seven steps to becoming an Innovative Leader.

President and CEO of the education technology consulting firm Metiri Group

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And innovative leaders cultivate a culture of critical and creative thinking that takes on challenges.By the way, creativity topped the list of the most important leadership qualities needed over the next five years. (according to a 2010 IBM poll of 1,500 CEOs.) 

Embrace the challengeStep1.

Innovative leaders do not delegate creativity and innovation; they lead it.

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They presented the staff with the challenge and asked them to come up with a creative solution. As a result, the teachers created a new schedule. In the morning, one educator teaches language arts and social studies. And in the afternoon, another educator teaches math and science.

At a high tech school in the San Diego area, leaders challenged the concept that they had to move students from class to class throughout the day.

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When they drive change, they both tolerate and criticize digital technology — and the way kids use it.

Drive change through collective creativity and knowledge

Step2.

Innovative leaders show creativity and seek knowledge.

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They think for themselves, and not just follow rules blindly. A shift from rules to principles.Schools are open to different ideas and break established rules when they no longer make sense.

Shape the culture

They ask hard questions and expect the school community to grapple with the questions alongside them. And they really listen to what educators say.

Step3.

Innovative leaders create a culture of risk, change, critical and creative thinking.

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Lemke said,A number of years ago, a new principal in Illinois met with his staff and said they had one year to turn their school around. If they didn't, the Illinois State Board of Education would shut it down.

"As a leader, if you’re in a meeting, you should be talking the least of anyone else in that meeting”

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He said they had to break some rules and wanted to know what they really wanted to do."By the end of the year, they had a plan in place, and the following year they were off probation! " Lemke said,’’It was really astounding.’’

The principal didn't change any of the staff members in the school when he arrived. Instead, he asked for their ideas on how to meet the challenge.

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effective professional learning is:sustained over time, content-based in professional learning communities focused on concrete tasks in teaching, assessment, observation and reflection modeled in authentic settings.

Establish a Professional Learning SystemStep 4.

Innovative leaders create professional learning communities in their schools. According to Professional Learning in the Learning Profession:,

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Then they get out of the way and let their staff figure out the details.

Step 5.Decide and systematizeInnovative leaders create a blueprint of principles, professional development, strategies, approaches and resources.

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"Without that, you’re not going to be able to orchestrate a lot of the things that they’re doing,” Lemke said.

Ensure digital access and infrastructure Step 6.

Innovative leaders will build the capacity for teachers and students to learn through blogs, wikis and virtual environments by laying a solid infrastructure foundation.

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"The people that you have in your system right now are capable of doing the kind of innovation we want to happen," she said. "Many of them just don’t have the opportunity.”In conclusion, she said that Innovative leaders need to give them that opportunity!.

Step 7. Demand accountability

Innovative leaders delegate responsibility but put accountability in place. Begin by setting low stakes for people to be comfortable with taking risks, failing and learning by experience.

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Once affirmed, it needs to be able to be articulated by all.- when achieved, all can then align their efforts behind the vision and through self-reference and development the school will reach.Translated into reality by means of a Teaching Framework or belief system.

Successful schools have a clear sense of direction through Vision Statement. – shared & derived through a visioning process involving all members of the school.

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(Hallinger, 2003)

Commu-nicating school goals

Supervising & evaluating instruction

Providing incentives for teachers

Widely used Instructional Leadership model

Framing school goals

Coordinating curriculum

Monitoring student progress

Protecting instructional time

Promoting professional development

Maintaining high visibility

Providing incentives for learning

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What You Can Do to become Stronger Innovation Leaders in Your School, and…

...What are we doing to do more of and become better at…

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Associating,Questioning,Observing,Networking,

Experimenting. 

Five Core Skills of Innovators Framework

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The focus of above five traits, particularly for teaching and learning is upon School Leadership concluding three chapters,  People, Processes, and Philosophies

to draw and to offer 15 takeaways for Principals and School Leaders:

School leadership

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“Nearly two-thirds (63 percent) of school administrators who responded to a recent survey said 1:1 computing classrooms where teachers act as a coach for students are the future of education.” (T.H.E Journal)

Heidi Hayes Jacobs: ”If you’re not updating your curriculum, you are saying that nothing is changing.”

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“Innovative teaching supports students’ development of the skills that will help them thrive in future life and work.” (IT Research)

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We examine and analyze the situation, looking for logic.Unfortunately, the rapid analysis and rational decision-making used has serious limitations.Current problems and circumstances become so complex, they don’t fit previous patterns. We don’t recognize the situation. We can’t automatically know what to do.

The pressure to adapt is the need to innovate. But how? When faced with confusion or a problem, our instinct is to repair it with order.

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To make effective sense of unfamiliar situations and complex challenges, we must have a grasp of the whole situation, its variables, unknowns and mysterious forces.

What worked before doesn’t work today.

This requires skills beyond everyday analysis. It requires Innovation Leadership.

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Adapted from Christensen’s Innovator’s DNA, a fine resource for thinking about practical and inspirational steps we can all take as school-leaders to advance educational innovation within our schools.

Seeking to facilitate our students’ development of more innovative mindsets from Clayton Christensen (et.al)

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1. Own as Principal the role of Innovator-in-Chief: You can’t delegate innovation:

“Innovation distinguishes between a leader and a follower’’Steve Jobs.

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2. Make your practice of “active innovation” visible

It is not just practice innovation ourselves, but find ways to demonstrate it publicly to model it for our communities and inspire those with whom we work.

In faculty meetings, student assemblies, or online via blogging and social media, find ways to showcase your innovation leadership.

-such that “everyone sees or hears about it.”

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…in school leadership, balancing innovation to discover strengths at the top with delivery skills very nearby.

3.Create complementary teams…

”Delivery skills” analyzing

planning

detail oriented implementingself-disciplined

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My own most powerful learning and innovative-mind developing activity has been, visiting other schools shadowing students, and blogging my observations.

Take initiative as Principal to observe closely what other schools are doing, from across many educational sectors: K-12 and post-secondary, private, public, charter, etc.

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Swap elementary and high school teachers for a week, swap admin and teachers inside the same school or better with schools with sharply different methodologies or philosophies.

5.”Arrange for employee swaps”-with other schools and organizations. This is something almost never heard of in education, but what a great Idea!

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At our school we are embarking on teacher swaps with our two new “sister” schools in Hermosillo, Mexico, and believe the result will be greater innovation in both schools.

5.”Arrange for employee swaps”

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6. Ask Why?

”When confronted with a problem, ask yourself why at least

5 times to unravel causal chains and spark ideas for innovative solutions.”

Use this method as school-leader with your team and with your constituencies:

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“seek people who held deep expertise in a particular knowledge area, and demonstrated a passion to change the world through excellent products and services.”

7. Seek people who “had invented something”

”Clearly if companies want innovative ideas from employees, they should screen for innovation potential in the hiring process.”

-when hiring….,

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 With each innovation hire, and each positive step modeling and positively reinforcing innovation, you are turning the flywheel in your school for increased momentum towards becoming an innovation hub.

8.”Innovators want to work with, and for other innovators.”

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Ask every teacher every year in self-evaluation and performance review to identify and reflect upon their innovative practices, risks taken, and lessons learned. Hold everyone accountable for the practice of innovation.

9. Embed innovation as an “explicit”, consistent element of performance reviews

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We need to help our fine people share more than they do at present in our schools; we need to lift them up out of classroom silos and into collaborative exchanges. Is there more we can do to help teachers and administrators have lunch together?

10. ”Develop formal and informal processes to facilitate knowledge exchanges.”

Can we set up online sharing networks for people to contribute to from across the organization?

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Are we doing enough to generate PLC’s? ”It’s totally possible for you to be sitting by someone who has been working in an area that you were not interested in. And then suddenly a discussion with that person may trigger some new ideas for both of you.”

10. ”Develop formal and informal processes to facilitate knowledge exchanges.”

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Our silos are not only within our schools, but our schools themselves are too often silos, isolated from strong networks. “Over the last few years, companies have increasingly looked outside their own walls for new ideas.” One example I have seen of highlighting this kind of external networking comes from New York’s Riverdale Country

11. Network externally.

School, which has a web-page celebrating all its many external organization connections, a page they are regularly seeking to add to and strengthen. To quote: “Riverdale is a great school, but great institutions are measured by their collaboration with other great organizations.

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It is not enough to come up with ideas; as Principals we have to put them in place and see what happens. The book quotes leading innovators: “How do I do this now?” ”Screw it. Let’s do it.”

12. Practice Beta testing and Prototyping.

As at Google, “Institutionalize experiments by using “beta” labels to release products early and often for public trials, allowing Google to quickly get direct customer feedback. It pursues innovation by having hundreds of small teams persue and pilot new projects simultaneously.”

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12. Practice Beta testing and Prototyping.

My favorite word in educational leadership is “pilot.” I regularly attach it to experiments underway, letting people know there is room here for multiple iterations, and if it doesn’t end up being effective, we’ll take it down and try another approach.

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At Google, “engineers typically work in teams of only three to six people. ‘We try to keep it small. You just don’t get productivity out of large groups.’ The result is an empowered, flexible organization with small teams pursuing hundreds of projects, an approach that Schmidt claims ‘lets a thousand flowers bloom.’”

13. Build many small, diverse teams for projects.

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Remember Margaret Mead:

13. Build many small, diverse teams for projects.

”Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.”

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To read and realize that “the Think Different campaign at Apple “targeted Apple’s employees as much as its customers.” Steve Jobs explained: “The whole purpose of the Think Different campaign was that people had forgotten what Apple stood for, including its employees.” What are we doing to convey effectively that “innovation is everyone’s job”  

14. Communicate and reinforce that Innovation is everyone’s job.

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”Companies incorporate innovation, creativity, and curiosity into their core values, in word and deed.” At my current school, we embedded the importance of “innovation” in our mission and our slogan: “Creating Leaders and Innovators.”

15. Make innovation an explicit core value of your school

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 ”Innovative leaders know that innovation doesn’t just happen but requires a significant time commitment… budget more human and financial resources to innovation activities.” One of our greatest opportunities as school leaders is also one of our most challenging, but let’s not yield in the face of the difficulty: Find, carve out, insist upon more time for collaboration, more time for shared reflective practice, and more time for innovation.

16. “Give more time for innovation.”

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 Encourage questions, especially tough ones, and watch and listen. Encourage everybody to ask why on a daily basis.

17. Create “a safe space for others to innovate.”

”Researchers call this psychological safety in which team members willingly express opinions, take risks, run experiments, and acknowledge mistakes without punishment.”

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Principals can make more visible their risks, their failures, and their learning from failure, to better model these practices. ”The most essential part of creativity is not being afraid to Fall.

18. Model your risk taking and your learning from failure.

For innovators and innovative companies alike mistakes are nothing to be ashamed of. They are an expected cost of doing business. ‘You do enough new things and you’re going to bet wrong,’ says Jeff Bezos.”

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Sitting in a classroom learning information is rapidly disappearing.

Innovative ways to become engaged in the learning process and to increase content knowledge ,

- occurs in the community, working on projects or to sustain the school itself.

Innovative learning - inside or outside of school walls?

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◦Practice skills in a realistic setting, more likely to see the big picture behind what they are learning. Field-based learning provides that opportunity. An innovative program gives student a chance to perform work in a real-life setting.

Field-Based Learning

For example, students who are learning about ancient history might spend time working on an archeological dig in the area.

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◦Mentoring programs train students to mentor other students are on the rise - helping new students to integrate into the school, assist in conflict resolution and do peer tutoring. Mentoring provides opportunity to be leaders and can help unify a student body.

Mentoring- an innovative practice being implemented in schools across the nation. Often, mentoring consists of experienced teachers assisting teachers who are new to the field.

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Project-Based Learning Projects can show students how disciplines as diverse as English, science and math are interrelated - can be developed to accommodate almost any curriculum.

For example, A science teacher builds an Electrolyzer with the students to demonstrate Electrolysis of water with soda to its gases form , who learned all of the skills that accompany the built and implementation and were engaged in the process. The students enjoyed the recognition the project and gained confidence in their abilities.

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Be Blessed!Timothy Wooi

Innovator & Lean Principal Consultant, Certified Kaizen Specialist cum TPM Trainer Add: 20C,Taman Bahagia, 06000, Jitra, KedahEmail:[email protected]/p: +6 019 4514007 https://www.facebook.com/timothywooihttps://www.facebook.com/pages/Tims-Waterfuel/112328142120279?ref=hl

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Principal Consultant for Lean Management. Certified ‘Train the Trainer’ & Kaizen Specialist

with 30 over years working experience.

Provides Technical Consulting Services on TPM, Kaizen, Cellular system & Moonshine.

A Green Innovator with Mechanical background that innovates by Recycling & Reusing Idle resources

topromote Green. Founder of Tim’s Waterfuel, an alternative fuel

supplement using Water that adds power and reduce Co2 emission on automobiles.

An NGO Community worker for Prison, Drug

Rehab and CREST North (Crisis Relieve & Training) Malaysia.

Timothy Wooi

Add: 20C, Taman Bahagia, 06000, Jitra, KedahEmail: [email protected] H/p: 019 4514007 (Malaysia)

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