This is an adapted repost from a popular article on my blog. Take care, -Matt
As an idea, innovation is getting tossed around a lot in education.
Anytime I see something accepted en masse, I get suspicious. I find it helpful to go back to the meaning and origin of these concepts. Merriam-Webster defines innovation as "something new or...a change made to an existing product, idea, or field". The Latin root of innovate is innovatus, meaning "to renew, restore; to change".
Given this understanding, I believe innovation is used too loosely in the context of teaching and learning. Will Richardson aptly points this out in his article for The Huffington Post, Stop Innovating in Schools. Please.:
Our efforts at innovating, regardless of method, idea, or product, have been focused far too much on incrementally improving the centuries old structures and practices we employ in schools, not on fundamentally rethinking them.
I would continue this argument by stating that innovation should not be limited to science, technology, and mathematics. We go there, mentally, when we hear the term "innovate". It's a misconception that needs clarification.
Consider writing. It is a process as well as an output of information and experiences we have gathered to create a new product. This product - an article, a book, a blog post, a tweet - is almost always an iteration of a person's prior knowledge. Not a lot new here; mostly remixed. Sound like innovation to you?
Dana Murphy, an instructional coach and a writer for Choice Literacy, offers a visual of the writing process that speaks more authentically to me (also a writer) than anything offered during my many years of formal education.
Important: Murphy notes that one person’s process for writing (innovation) is likely different than another writer’s process.
“Here is what I want kids to know about writing: writers have a unique writing process. All writers approach writing differently. There is not a right way and a wrong way to write. There are many ways—endless ways—to approach the task of writing. The process that works best for you is the right process.”
Maybe this is why effective instruction, literacy or otherwise, has taken so long to become embedded in all schools. Teachers have to be prepared for a variety of ways students experience success in the classroom. This approach requires a long-term commitment from leaders to guide a school or district to make instructional changes based on sound beliefs and values.
Changing curriculum is easy. Changing teacher practices is hard.
It is not just us holding ourselves back. Too many standards, nonacademic demands, and not enough time are a part of our struggle to truly innovate in the classroom. Yet we have to start somewhere.
Consider the following questions as you think about next week’s plans:
Where in the literacy block could you include opportunities for student choice and voice?
How might you integrate STEM and literacy activities?
Where could you demonstrate for your students that one discipline is dependent on the others?
When might you celebrate process in your classroom, instead of only products?