Showing posts with label innovation day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label innovation day. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Innovation Day 2014

Year two of Innovation Day went down on Friday. As always, I’ve got a few thoughts.

Similar to last year, students showed up and created. They made things in areas they were passionate about. Though this is the point of Innovation Day, it merits mentioning here: too often, kids are forced to go to school and do what we tell them to do. The choice students have around Innovation Day is always a nice reminder.

Similar to last year, kids worked well. As with last year, it was important this year to recognize that kids needed time to take breaks and process; time to go for a walk and collect their thoughts. Time to refocus.

This year, turning 110 tenth graders loose on Hillsdale’s campus resulted in a grand total of zero behavior issues. Just like last year.

Screenshot from Google
However, things were different this year. It seemed to our teacher team that the Innovation Day projects this year were areas projects that our students had fun doing, but weren’t necessarily innovative. Kids were excited about the projects, but most projects didn’t seem to stretch students’ skillsets or interests. The projects didn’t innovate.

Could this have been the case last year? We may have been too busy trying to keep track of our students last year to notice students not innovating. We may have been too excited watching the day unfold to realize that the students weren’t innovating.

So what is next? We’re definitely doing Innovation Day next year. However, we are going to put in a few additional stipulations. Student projects will have to build a new skill or build on an existing skill. We will share with students several models of possible ways to think about innovation: for example, forcing students to introduce a new or better way of doing an ‘old’ thing or fixing a flaw in the way a thing is done. We hope to force students to articulate how what they are doing is new, how it is innovative.

Does this mean that students can’t make a how to basketball video? No. But it does mean that we are going to make students watch how to basketball videos on YouTube and explain the shortcomings they see in these videos. How they plan to address these shortcomings in the video they create will be part of their project proposal.

Was Innovation Day a failure? Absolutely not. Was it worth doing this year? Yup. Do we want to make it better for next year? Most certainly.  

Pictures from Innovation Day can be found here. Students projects will be posted soon here.

Saturday, April 26, 2014

Innovation Day 2014 in Pictures

Yesterday was the second Innovation Day that I have been lucky to have been a part of. I'll have something substantive to say about it - like a real blog post, not just pictures - later: that post is still being written.

Interested in running your own Innovation Day? All of our prep materials are in a publicly viewable Google Drive folder here - please steal away!

Here are some photos of the day.

Handmade volcano 

The beginnings of a Lego project 

Artwork! Not all Innovation Day projects are tech-intensive.

Okay, some projects use tech. A music project, I believe.


A panoramic shot of my classroom


The music section


Stop motion military actions movie 

The beginning of a zombie vs human board game


Creating a video game mod


Flip book artwork underway


Interview project


The whole gang: Innovation Day 2014 participants

We even had visitors: David, Rebecca, and Rachel stopped by to check out Innovation Day!
Thanks for letting me use this photo, David. 

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Innovation Day: Cross-post From CUE's Blog

This article was written for CUE's blog post and can be found here. It was cowritten by Sarah Press, Liz Tompkins, Rian (a student of ours) and me. We were were part of the team of teachers at Hillsdale that put on Innovation Day. Thanks also to our student Rian for adding her perspective on the day above, and for contributing the awesome video embedded above! Thanks to Kate Petty for the opportunity to share Innovation Day with the CUE community!

What Is Innovation Day?


Many teachers and administrators are creating time in their students’ days to allow for passion-based learning. You might have heard of Genius Hour (check out the #geniushour hashtag on Twitter) or 20% Time (#20time on Twitter). Instead of a chunk of time each week being used for passion-based learning and creation - like with Genius Hour and 20% Time - Innovation Day allows for a whole school day of student creation. Kind of like an on-campus field trip, on Innovation Day students come to school and spend the whole day doing projects they have planned based on their own interests.


Why Do Innovation Day?


Several reasons, really.
  • It’s fun. Let’s not overrate kids being excited to come to school.
  • It gives kids a sense of ownership and voice. We ask students to come to school and do what we ask them to do on a regular basis. Why not give them some--or, in the case of Innovation Day--a lot of ownership and choice?
  • It fosters intrinsic motivation. According to Daniel Pink’s Drive, motivation comes from the ability to have autonomy in a task, the ability to show mastery, and a purpose for the task to be completed. We want motivated students, and Innovation Day provides a forum for students to experience autonomy, mastery, and purpose.
  • Innovation Day foregrounds talents and interests that don’t necessarily get revealed at school that often.
  • It’s a great place to develop 21st century skills like collaboration, problem-solving, and project management.
  • Innovation Day serves as a community builder as students who don’t often get a chance to collaborate academically get to work with each other for purposeful, not just social, work.
  • On year-end reflections, students loved Innovation Day. It was universally a high point for our students.
  • Lastly, we felt like we saw increased engagement in tasks in our classes after Innovation Day, though this is hard to quantify. The day seemed to pay off in student focus and attitude for the rest of the year.


How Did We Engage All Students on Innovation Day?


7 hours is a long time.


How do you keep over a hundred kids engaged in completely unique projects?
  • Discussion. In the weeks before, students have to reflect on what matters to them. Innovation Day is engaging when you are passionate.  Discussion, innovative YouTube clips, and models help kids realize the exciting autonomy they’ll be facing.
  • Open Options. Group work vs. independent work, indoors, outdoors, on computers, on instruments—since all kids learn differently, different options are better for different kids.
  • Structured, Hour-By-Hour Proposals. The proposals reveal the logistics of the project and the realistic level of engagement it provides.  Broad guidelines, i.e. projects will: produce a deliverable, address a larger audience, and have an impact on the audience, allow for independence but add a helpful structure.
  • Formative Feedback on Proposals.  It’s a place you can ask follow-up questions and suggest an added layer of complexity or a different medium if necessary.
  • Excitement! Have kids talk about what they are planning to do.
  • Breaks. Allow a few breaks in the day so kids can see what the others are doing— and be sure to check in with them throughout the day! There is a fun buzz in the room when all the projects are being completed.



Logistical Concerns For Innovation Day


Even with the detailed planning that went into pre-Innovation Day preparations, we still had several logistical concerns to work out.


Facilities
Some kids needed quiet, others (like the student writing a heavy-metal guitar solo) needed to make noise. Some needed room to spread out, others needed space to focus. We surveyed students a week ahead of time to assess their needs in terms of space and materials, and then worked with the spaces available to us to accommodate what students needed. We ended up having a collaborative, relatively noisy work space in our cafeteria, a computer lab, a quiet classroom, and a variety of students in outdoor spaces and special rooms (e.g. music practice rooms on periods without music classes).


Materials and Technology
Our school is quite limited in our technological resources. We encouraged students to work in groups, to bring their own devices when possible, lent out several Chromebooks, and opened a (slow, but functional) computer lab with internet connectivity. There ended up being enough devices to go around.


Supervision
All Innovation Day participants wore a special name tag that served both as a hall pass and as identification in case of behavioral concerns. We also created a shared Google Doc that listed all of the work spaces available. Each of the four advisory teachers on our team then listed which students should be in which spaces, and updated the list as student needs changed so that we always knew where kids should be. We had five supervising teachers (the four advisors and one student teacher), so each of the three main workspaces had one supervising teacher, with two roving the other locations.



What Innovation Day Looked Like: Student Documentarian Perspective


Innovation Day was a really good way to let us experience something we are truly interested in while in an educational environment. There were so many different project ideas that people were doing, like song writing/singing, story writing and movie making. After about two hours some people started to lose focus, because their projects had only just been started and they weren’t all the way into it yet, but they did get back on track fairly quickly. It would have been nice for them to take a break to go and look at everyone else's project throughout the day, just so they could take their minds off their project and do something else, while still participating in Innovation Day. Toward the end of the day people had either finished their projects and were sitting around, or were working really hard in trying to get to a good stopping point. It seemed to work well with the amount of people we had; it might have been really hectic if there had been more people participating in it.



How Innovation Day Went: Teacher Perspective


The day was hard to beat for positive energy. Students were excited, by the time the day actually rolled around, to implement their meticulously planned projects. They were equally excited to see what others were doing. Many concerns, such as behavioral problems, never materialized for us, and many positive surprises--students teaching other students, students shocked at the talents of their peers, honest and sincere praise for work--arose. And clearly, the true measure of success was in students demanding to know, even before the day was over, if we were going to do Innovation Day again next year.

What did our Innovation Day look like? Check out our student author Rian’s Innovation Day video!




Really, though, the last word on Innovation Day should be left to our students. Why should you run an Innovation Day at your school? See what they had to say below!




Interested in running an Innovation Day at your school? Let us help you get started! Check out the Florence Innovation Day Website with a ton of awesome student products from our spring 2013 Innovation Day. All of our Innovation Day prep resources can be accessed here - feel free to modify and use the heck out of them!

Friday, April 12, 2013

Innovation Day at Hillsdale

So at some point this past summer, I came across Innovation Day; I’m not sure if it was from Pernille Ripp or Josh Stumpenhorst. I leaned heavily on their blogs and expertise throughout the process - a huge thanks to both of them! 

As my team and I saw down and planned our advisory curriculum this summer, we set aside a couple weeks to devote to this day. There were concerns that all students would create something meaningful, something that they were proud of. We took some intentional steps to make sure that would be the case.

We introduced the idea of passion driving people to create awesome, innovative ideas by first asking students what showed up in a ‘normal’ music video.Then, the students watched the OK Go video for the song “This Too Shall Pass.” You’ve seen the video - the one with the crazy Rube Goldberg machine. If you haven’t, check it out. After this, it was pretty clear that passion created a dedication that was pretty darn evident in this video. Students then brainstormed things that they were passionate about or were interested in learning. 

The following day, we watched this video about ways to stay creative. Students then brainstormed how they would make sure their creativity would shine through in their creations on Innovation Day. On the third day of advisory, students looked at possible deliverables for their project: we wanted to make sure students had lots of ideas to sort through for their possible creations. 

Next, students created multiple possible project outlines that stressed the four key ideas for this project: that they focus on something they are passionate about, that a deliverable product was created, and that their product would have both an audience (it didn’t have to be a huge audience, but it needed to have a possible audience) and would create an impact on their audience. Finally, students choose the favorite of their brainstormed ideas and wrote up a formal project proposal. Group projects were fine, but projects that incorporated multiple people had to legitimately require a group effort. These formal project proposals required some detail and typically took two or three revisions in order to be specific and complex enough to take an entire day. 

My advisory proposed to create the following things: a fantasy world with lore, a presentation about why school is the way it is, a zombie movie, necklaces to raise money for anti-bullying charity, football safety videos, an anti-bullying video, a presentation about beaches, two separate piano and vocals songs, a children’s book, a choreographed dance piece, two different board games, chalk art, satirical movie, a brony video, and a horror story. 

We’re just about at the end of Innovation Day right now. I’ll write more about what the day felt like and show off the products of my students created soon. Promise. Want to check out the materials we used to prep our students for Innovation Day? Click here - feel free to copy and modify any of the documents and use them for your school’s Innovation Day.

Late addition: I just received this awesome video from our student photographer. Check it out below!