ILC Proposal

Attached to this post is the original proposal for the establishment of the ILC.

The centre was approved September 2012

I am pleased to approve the creation of an Innovative Learning Centre within the Faculty of Education.  This approval is for the creation of a centre without any presupposition as to which outside partnerships or funding streams may develop.

The Centre should be managed and governed in accordance with UBC policy.

Best wishes in this exciting endeavor,

Wes

********
Professor W. Wesley Pue
Provost,
University of British Columbia,
Okanagan Campus

From: Bosetti, Lynn
Sent: Thursday, August 23, 2012 9:41 PM
To: Pue, Wesley; Darling, Kimberly
Cc: Crichton, Susan
Subject: FW: Proposal to Establish ILC

Dear Wes,

Please find attached our proposal to establish the Innovative Learning Centre in the Faculty of Education.  It is a Faculty center and will focus on applied research.
There does not appear to be a template for proposals so we have modeled ours on others we have seen.

We have aligned it with our Faculty Strategic Plan which is pending approval at our September Faculty Council meeting.

Thanks very much for your consideration  of this request,

Sincerely,

Lynn

ILC proposal

3 Cs

Connection – how learning connects

Context – how things are placed together

Complexity – getting used to ambiguity

Connotation – making meeting based on contexts

Mark Federman – http://ww3.tvo.org/video/184224/classroom-2030

New culture of learning

A New Culture of Learning:
Cultivating the Imagination for a World of Constant Change

by DOUGLAS THOMAS and JOHN SEELY BROWN

http://www.newcultureoflearning.com/resources.html

The 21st century is a world in constant change. In A New Culture of Learning, Douglas Thomas and John Seely Brown pursue an understanding of how the forces of change, and emerging waves of interest associated with these forces, inspire and invite us to imagine a future of learning that is as powerful as it is optimistic. Our understanding of what constitutes “a new culture of learning” is based on several basic assumptions about the world and how learning occurs:

  • The world is changing faster than ever and our skill sets have a shorter life
  • Understanding play is critical to understanding learning
  • The world is getting more connected that ever before – can that be a resource?
  • In this connected world, mentorship takes on new importance and meaning
  • Challenges we face are multi-faceted requiring systems thinking & socio-technical sensibilities
  • Skills are important but so are mind sets and dispositions
  • Innovation is more important than ever – but turns on our ability to cultivate imagination
  • A new culture of learning needs to leverage social & technical infrastructures in new ways
  • Play is the basis for cultivating imagination and innovation

By exploring play, innovation, and the cultivation of the imagination as cornerstones of learning, the authors create a vision of learning for the future that is achievable, scalable and one that grows along with the technology that fosters it and the people who engage with it. The result is a new form of culture in which knowledge is seen as fluid and evolving, the personal is both enhanced and refined in relation to the collective, and the ability to manage, negotiate and participate in the world is governed by the play of the imagination.

Typically, when we think of culture, we think of an existing, stable entity that changes and evolves over long periods of time. In A New Culture of Learning, Thomas and Brown explore a second sense of culture, one that responds to its surroundings organically. It not only adapts, it integrates change into its process as one of its environmental variables.

Replete with stories, this is a book that looks at the challenges that our education and learning environments face in a fresh way.

ABOUT THE BOOK: THE ASSUMPTIONS

Our understanding of what constitutes “a new culture of learning” requires us to share several basic assumptions about the world and how learning occurs.

First and foremost is the realization that,

The world is changing faster than ever and our skill sets have a shorter and shorter life.

Strategies which resist or even adapt to a constantly changing world are insufficient to keep up. We need ways to embrace change and even enjoy making sense out of a constantly changing work.. Denying change has become a losing strategy.

We need to fundamentally rethink learning and strive for ways to amplify learning and make it scalable.

Understanding play is critical to understanding learning

Play is universally recognized as a critical tool for children. It is how they come to understand, experience, and know the world. As we get older, play is seen as unimportant, trivial, or as a means of relaxation and learning switches to something you do in school where now you are taught. What we fail to fully grasp is that play is the way that children manage new, unexpected and changing conditions, exactly the situation we now all face in the fast-paced world of the 21st century. Play is more than a tool to manage change; it allows us to make new things familiar, to perfect new skills, to experiment with moves and crucially to embrace change —a key disposition for succeeding in the 21st century

The world is getting more connected that ever before – can that be a resource?

Access to information and to other people is both unparalleled in modern history. Our “connectedness” is not only to resources, but to people who are helping to manage, organize, disseminate and make sense of those resources as well. This interconnectedness is creating a new sense of peer mentoring enabled by access to multiple levels and degrees of expertise.

In this connected world, mentorship takes on new importance and meaning

Where traditionally mentoring was a means of enculturating members into a community, mentoring in the collective relies more on the sense of learning and developing temporary, peer-to-peer relationships that are fluid and impermanent. Expertise is shared openly and willingly, without regard to an institutional mission. Instead, expertise is shared conditionally and situationally, as a way to enable the agency of other members of the collective.

Challenges we face are multi-faceted requiring systems thinking & socio-technical sensibilities

As part of what Hagel & Brown call “The Big Shift” change is happening on an exponential scale. This requires our learning environments to match the speed and degree of change happening in the world around us. Our current educational models neither scale sufficiently nor provide a robust enough set of solutions to meet the needs of the current complexities that we face.

Skills are important but so are mind sets and dispositions

It is no longer sufficient to teach skills or even meta-skills (e.g. learning how to learn). These approaches only tell us what needs to be taught, whereas dispositions shift the ground back to learning, grounding education in passion, imagination, and arc of life learning.

Innovation is more important than ever – but turns on our ability to cultivate imagination.

Contrary to popular myth, imagination and innovation are actually spurred by constraints. Too much freedom can be paralyzing, too many constraints can be stifling and we currently have a situation where our classrooms are suffocating and the outside resources (e.g. the Net) are unstructured and unguided (apart from the collectives that form to manage that issue). What a new culture of learning points to is the fusion of freedom and constraint, helping us understand how collectives can provide a sense of institutional structure while enabling personal and individual agency.

A new culture of learning needs to leverage social & technical infrastructures in new ways.

We believe a new culture of learning does this in four ways:

1) By thinking about the problem as a crisis in learning rather than teaching
2) By looking at the incredible power of new cultures of learning that are happening already and understanding what makes them successful
3) By tapping new resources: peer to peer learning, amplified by the power of the collective, which favors things like questing dispositions over transfer models of education and embraces play as a modality of exploration, experimentation, and engagement.
4) By understanding how to optimize the resources (and freedom) of large networks, while at the same time affording personal and individual agency constrained within a problem space created by a bounded learning environment.

Play is the basis for cultivating imagination and innovation

The essence of play is twofold: 1) the freedom to act in new ways which are different from “everyday life” and 2) a set of rules that constrain that freedom. Think of any game a kid creates of make-believe. It is both fantasy and it has to have rules (which may be arbitrary and even ridiculous), but what it results in is a world of imagination and something entirely new and innovative.

It is easy to understand that play is a perspective or modality for learning. But we have been framing innovation too narrowly. Innovation is not an outcome. It too is a perspective and that perspective is governed by play which in some cases might be thought of as tinkering.

Design Institute Links

Thanks to Serveh for these links …

 UIA(UNION INTERNATIONALE DES ARCHITECTES) Built environment education network.
http://uiabee.riai.ie/

And also some institutes in North America there have been and continue to be numerous efforts to integrate design into children’s education. For example:

The Canadian Center for Architecture in Montreal
(http://www.cca.qc.ca/en/education-events/236-the-abc-s-of-architecture
The US National Building Museum
http://www.nbm.org/schools-educators/design-education/
The Boston Society of Architects
http://www.architects.org/programs-and-events/learning-design

3D printers

Technology starts out expensive, experiments with formats, then prices plummet as the technology settles and becomes an affordable product. Laser printers, when invented 1969, were $20,0000 but are now around 0.5% of that price, $100. This already happening with 3D printers. Sure, you can buy a $20,000 professional HP 3D printer but a $1200 3D printer is already available.

Donald Clark Plan B: 3D printers: gimmick or game changer

http://chronicle.com/article/3-D-Printers-Arent-Just-for/134440/

 

ICT purchase ideas

Hi Susan!

As per our discussion last week here is a list of items for the Computers/AV in EME 1123:

Projector: ($1892)
1 x NEC NP-U310W-WK1 (includes mount) – $1,165
1 x Apple TV for projector – $109
1 x Extron SI 26CT Speakers – $262
1 x Extron MPA 152 Amplifier for speakers – $206
1 x Kramer wall plate with VGA for legacy connections – $150

Computers: ($7899)
3 x iMac 27” 3.4GHz i7, 8GB DDR3 RAM, 1TB Drive, Radeon HD 6970M 1GB, Applecare – ($2,308 x 3) = $6,924
3 x iMac Vesa mount adapters – ($45 x 3) = $135
3 x Kramer 1Gang wall plate with two WU-AB USB plates (Provides two USB ports in the wall for students) – ($80 x 3) = $240
I will need to find a mount that will adapt to the in-wall boxes in the south wall. I don’t have the manufacturer of those boxes in my notes to make sure I can find the plate. Guesstimate of about $200 each for $600 total.

Media Table: (Size depends on table decided, appx $2100 upper limit for AV gear)
1 x 50” Panasonic Plasma TH-50PF30U – $1,641
or
1 x 46” NEC LED Display X461S – $1,499
or
1 x 47” Panasonic TH 47LF5U – $949
and
1 x Extron SI 26CT Speakers – $262
1 x Extron MPA 152 Amplifier for speakers – $206
1 x Apple TV for Display – $109

All in all it is looking like $11,000 for the Computers and  AV gear. This allows for an ultra short-throw projector to have VGA input from the wall plate and Apple TV for Airplay mirroring of the iMacs or of any other iOS devices that can connect to the network in the room. The sound will be through ceiling speakers above the area in front of the projector. The display will have a similar setup, with cables for connecting VGA if needed as well as an Apple TV for airplay to the screen. Sound as well will be through ceiling speakers above the area.

Let me know if you have any concerns or wish to discuss any alterations to this.

Thanx!
Paul