This PowerPoint helps students to consider the concept of infinity.
Disrupting Class
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2. Sustaining and Disruptive Innovations Copyright Clayton M. Christensen Performance Time Sustaining innovations Incumbents nearly always win Performance that customers can utilize or absorb Pace of Technological Progress
3. Disruptive Innovations create asymmetric competition Copyright Clayton M. Christensen Performance Time Sustaining innovations Incumbents nearly always win 60% on $500,000 45% on $250,000 Entrants nearly always win Non-consumers or Non-consuming occasions Different measure Of Performance Time Disruptive Innovations: Competing against non-consumption 40% on $2,000 20% Performance that customers can utilize or absorb Pace of performance improvement
7. Different Systems Architectures Proprietary, interdependent architectures: Microsoft Windows; Apple products 02/14/10 Copyright Clayton M. Christensen Customization is very expensive Customization is straightforward Modular, open architectures Linux; Dell PCs
8. We all learn differently Copyright Innosight Institute, Inc.
9. Conflicting mandates in the way we must teach vs. The way students must learn Copyright Clayton M. Christensen Need for customization for differences in how we learn Standardization !! Learning Styles Paces of Learning Multiple Intelligences Interdependencies in the teaching infrastructure Temporal Lateral Physical Hierarchical Customization !!
10. Historically, most schools have “crammed” computer-based learning into the blue space Copyright Clayton M. Christensen Non-consumers or Non-consuming occasions Different measure Of Performance Time Performance Time Core curriculum Path taken by most schools, foundations and education software companies
11. Prime examples of non-consumption Copyright Innosight Institute, Inc. Looming budget cuts and teacher shortages are an opportunity, not a threat
12. The substitution of one thing for another always follows an S-curve pattern Copyright Clayton M. Christensen % new % new % old .001 .0001 .01 0.1 1.0 10.0 09 11 07 05 03 13 15
18. Assessment in today’s monolithic system Copyright Clayton M. Christensen Deliver content to students Testing & assessment Progress to next grade, subject, or body of material Receive results
19. How should assessment work? Copyright Clayton M. Christensen Copyright Clayton M. Christensen Deliver content to students Testing & assessment Progress to next grade, subject, or body of material Receive real-time interactive feedback
20. Copyright Clayton M. Christensen 7 Centralization followed by decentralization: Computing
21. Copyright Clayton M. Christensen 8 The decentralization that follows centralization is only beginning in education
22. Why does an organizational model lock us in? Copyright Clayton M. Christensen PROCESSES : Ways of working together to address recurrent tasks in a consistent way: training, development, manufacturing, budgeting, planning, etc. REVENUE FORMULA : Assets & fixed cost structure, and the margins & velocity required to cover them THE VALUE PROPOSITION: A product that helps customers do more effectively, conveniently & affordably a job they’ve been trying to do RESOURCES: People, technology, products, facilities, equipment, brands, and cash that are required to deliver this value proposition to the targeted customers
23. Copyright Clayton M. Christensen PROCESSES : Ways of working together to address recurrent tasks in a consistent way: training, development, manufacturing, budgeting, planning, etc. PROFIT FORMULA : Assets & fixed cost structure, and the margins & velocity required to cover them THE VALUE PROPOSITION: A product that helps customers do more effectively, conveniently & affordably a job they’ve been trying to do RESOURCES: People, technology, products, facilities, equipment, brands, and cash that are required to deliver this value proposition to the targeted customers Business units don’t evolve. Corporations do.
24. When launching disruptions, autonomy is key Copyright Clayton M. Christensen Improve performance of each component Level of change Product architecture : What are the components, and which ones interface with others? Organizational model in which product is used Change the specifications for how components must fit together VP VP VP VP Autonomous VP VP VP VP Heavyweight VP VP VP VP Lightweight VP VP VP VP Functional
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26. Copyright Clayton M. Christensen Non-consumers or Non-consuming occasions Different measure Of Performance Time Performance Time Path taken by Educational software developers The instructional materials business historically has been a value-adding process business
27. Stages in instructional disruption Copyright Clayton M. Christensen Different measure Of Performance Performance Teacher-led courses Different measure Of Performance Online courses Tutoring tools Little Extensive Degree of customization Teacher-led monolithic instruction Online learning Student-centric learning facilitated user networks
28. Student-centric software will be a facilitated-network business Copyright Clayton M. Christensen Non-consumers or Non-consuming occasions Different measure Of Performance Time Performance Modules Custom classes Tutoring Facilitated Network: parents, teachers, students, entrepreneurs
29. When education is not delivered in an intrinsically motivating way, prosperity is an enemy to education Copyright Clayton M. Christensen Why do we need to innovate?
So you need to nail the job, but still, innovation seems unpredictable. Are there different kinds of innovations? Do certain ones work well in certain circumstances and not others? How can I make innovation more predictable?
Now, this isn’t just a technology phenomenon. For-profit, non-profit, governmental – point out 2 nd to last one in particular.
Now, this isn’t just a technology phenomenon. For-profit, non-profit, governmental – point out 2 nd to last one in particular.
School system is very interdependent, which has led to monolithic, factory-model school system and prevented customization.
35,000 PA students did not graduate from high school in 2008-09. Despite stimulus that has allowed luxury not to change, it is temporary. A cliff is still coming. Must be strategic about cuts – e.g. summer school
The school system’s business or organizational model that gave it the capabilities to address the first 2 jobs quite well, however, equally defines what it is not capable of – it is incapable of addressing these 2 new jobs (the last one in particular) of educating EVERY child. Explain what an organizational model is and why it matters. For “profit formula” tell school leaders to think of it in terms of revenue they need to support the costs for the system since they don’t turn a “profit” per se.
So if we need to address a totally new value proposition or job, how can we create that model? Autonomy is vital. Different teams for different types of tasks. Target and IBM examples.
Back to you Clay if you’d like
Clay – do the beginning of this and then hand it off to me to finish this slide and I’ll finish up the presentation
OK, so I bet you’re saying, “This is interesting, but do schools even need to innovate? We teach it; it’s their fault if students don’t learn it, right? In certain Asian countries, they seem to be just fine lecturing at them and they get it, so what gives in the U.S. Is it the parents maybe or family structures? Why does what you just taught us matter to us?”
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