|
April 21, 2012How can schools teach students to be more innovative? Offer hands-on classes and don't penalize failureMost of our high schools and colleges are not preparing students to become innovators. To succeed in the 21st-century economy, students must learn to analyze and solve problems, collaborate, persevere, take calculated risks and learn from failure. To find out how to encourage these skills, I interviewed scores of innovators and their parents, teachers and employers. What I learned is that young Americans learn how to innovate most often despite their schooling--not because of it.Posted by Jim Zellmer at April 21, 2012 1:03 AM Subscribe to this site via RSS/Atom: Newsletter signup | Send us your ideas Comments
Taking risks and learning from failure along with creativity and problem solving are also the results of participating in the arts--be it drawing, pottery, music, poetry or dance. It seems if this country wants to encourage innovation, it is not the time to cut out arts classes. I believe the often-repeated anecdote about Steve Jobsis that his interest in how the mouse worked and fit in a person's hand was a result of participating in a dance class at Reed and discovering the importance of body movements. Business leaders and scientific figures frequently give the arts the short end of the stick, yet how many times have we read that mathamaticians relate to and enjoy music? It seems to follow logically that engineers can learn from working with pottery, and scientists can glean nuggets of information about human emotions from reading and writing poetry. Posted by: malbrecht at April 23, 2012 3:17 PMPost a comment
|