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Archive For October, 2011

Tapping into the Past

October 11, 2011 · by emergentformau

iPad-in-education-classroom

It’s been a funny week. For some reason a recurring theme has been comprised of both ‘history repeats’ and ‘why don’t we learn from history?’ Not necessarily in those words but some of this is fuelled by my having to tackle mountains of research papers that stretch back 20 years and are currently taking over much of the dining and lounge rooms – ideas that never got full exposure or were before their time.

For example a recent discussion on new iPad apps for learning quickly turned into an explanation of the thinking about rich media, interaction and engagement was done in the early 1990’s where we drew from many influences including psychology, painting and even theatre. I still think Brenda Laurel’s thinking on that hasn’t finished playing itself out, especially on the design of things like digital exhibitions and learning spaces. Then you see iPads issued to kids sitting in rows as if it were 1899.

A separate conversation extrapolating the new world facing Universities of nimble outsourced players, distributed students and intermittent engagement bringing the Universities to be brands, assessing authorities and at the core a return to the Oxbridge model of 500 years ago. Similarly, the implication of a design-driven economy on an appropriate capability network to support it. Some answer seems to have been there long ago in crafts, guilds etc. but what is the modern equivalent and where does this intersect with education and workforce learning?

Not that all of the answers lie in the past, some things around us are new and unique.

Its more about casting an eye across a range of options, some of which can be drawn from the past or from different fields, circumstances and even conditions. What seems to be happening is that many decisions (and the people making them) are so overwhelmed by complexity, change and speed that considering the past is an option too far. Yet considering how someone else has resolved an issue before, making logical links to similar circumstances and even seeking inspiration from the past can all contribute hugely to dealing with today’s thorny issues. This is where the notion of using the capability network and a framework for evaluation to support complex decisions and strategy  is essential. It is this thinking that is helping EF develop an evaluation framework for learning technology in different contexts. More on this project soon.

Creative Communities

October 10, 2011 · by emergentformau

Recent thinking around innovation systems, creativity and the creative class has influenced economic policy in many countries over the last 5 years. In 2005, EF’s Paul Houghton chaired a review of the current practice and thinking with a view to the development of a strategy that would integrate this thinking into productivity and Innovation strategy for the Department of Training. This cross agency, multi-disciplinary project was complex, diverse and at times a shifting target.

The body of thinking, skilfully researched and analysed with Larry Quick and Associates, influenced a wide range of initiatives in Perth such as Form’s Creative Capital and the establishment of the Committee for Perth. Other Departments involved in the project also picked up on some of the recommendations.

The resultant report was hailed internationally as one of the most complete in the field and the team that produced it went on to be involved in many aspects covered by the report. The Department of Training failed to implement even a small portion of the findings and research because the topic was too far beyond their perceived brief or capability. In addition to the report and findings, a key lesson was to always involve an assessment of capability in the process.

Ultimately it was a catalyst for new thinking around innovation platforms, design thinking and capability development. The expected outcomes and even the funded outcomes are not always the ones that have lasting impact. The coming advent of the NBN rollout offers a new context into which this work can be re-applied.

Project: Creative Communities

Year: 2005-2006

Client: Department of Training

Focus: Innovation

by:  KT Studio

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