In a previous post we described the team and goals for our 2018-19 Innovation Skills Catalyst project In Ontario. In this post we summarize some of the insights coming out of this project and include link below to other posts on specific resources and themes from our work.
Reflecting on Workplace Innovation for BioEngineering Technology and Services
In this post, Kevin Joslin, undergraduate BioEngineering student and Research Assistant with medical devices at the University of California San Diego, shares a student’s perspective on workplace innovation in the context of bio-engineering and technology services.
When I think of innovation, I always think of the product as new technologies and ideas, instead of the process of innovation itself. From my brief dive into a seeming Renaissance of new innovation and product development methods, I have seen the importance of further developing the way we approach inventiveness and technological progress.
How Can a Narrative Perspective Add Value to Innovation as a Social Process?
How can an understanding of Narrative add value to workplace innovation as a social process?
That’s the key question driving our development of a new learning resource on Narrative Perspectives for Workplace Innovation. Our team at Kwantlen Polytechnic University – English professor Jennifer Williams and myself as a recent B.A. graduate – are part of a Learning and Teaching Innovation initiative within the Faculty of Arts. Our aim is to equip graduates with an interdisciplinary perspective on innovation as a social process, so they can contribute distinctive value to innovation projects in the workplace (and in their other roles as community members and global citizens).
Lifting the Blinders on Innovation
WINCan workplace partner Galen MacLusky, Director of Community Innovation for the Tamarack Institute, discusses how taking the time to explore why you want to innovate can help you expose potential pitfalls that otherwise may have been missed. Galen describes three different community innovation drivers and the various risks that accompany each. With each risk, Galen provides some common questions that can help you uncover where a focus on innovation may take you away from your goals. (originally posted this month on the Tamarack Institute website).