(Moderator) We have with us someone
who has been involved
in digital learning innovation
for more than 20 years
Please welcome the University of Western
Australia Pro Vice-Chancellor
of Education Innovation,
Gilly Salmon.
(Applause)
(Gilly Salmon) So I'm going to talk to you
about the impossible.
So if you're easily scared,
you can leave now or at any time,
that's OK with me.
So I come from the very young country
of Australia.
Most of you know I'm not Australian, but
I've been living there nearly 5 years now.
Probably another 20 .... except me (check)
But in the young country of Australia,
a university that's 100-years old
is very, very, very old.
So, and now, the University of Western
Australia is very, very old.
It's a research-intensive, one with the
most schools and campuses in the world,
on the mouth of the Swan River,
in Western Australia,
and I'm going to show you a 1-minute movie
to get a glimpse of our environment
and also our dreams.
So, you need to watch very carefully,
because I'm going to talk about
the brief glimpse you get of the buildings
because that's where my center is,
the Centre for Education Future.
So, we will move to the movie, please.
(strong rhythmic music)
(sirens, shouts)
(panting)
(narrator) When we start moving forward,
the world starts with us.
(strong wind in branches - panting)
(narrator) So chase your dream.
It's only impossible until it's done.
[Pursue impossible]
[The University of Western Australia]
(Applause)
(Salmon) Thank you. (Applause)
We made that movie to try and inspire
our students
but we actually found it inspires us
even more.
So, right at the beginning you saw
some work for
University of Western Australia
are true heritage buildings.
And I -- in there, we've put
a future's observatory
and a learning design studio,
to try and inspire the impossible
in both our faculty members and ultimately
our students, through new design.
So, I've got this weird job title,
Pro Vice-Chancellor
Education Innovation.
I'm sure when I was appointed,
just over 12 months ago,
nobody knew what that meant.
Fortunately, they did allow me to
invent it.
While you're listening to me,
just to say there's going to be
a bit of a poll at the end.
If you got the My OEB app,
you can look it up,
if not, there is a website,
there is a link there up,
so that you can take part in the poll
in a bit.
Now, I actually think an incredible
number of words have been written
about innovation, especially in the scope
of educational innovation
and disruptive technology.
And I did a bit of a survey.
i wasn't as knowledgeable
as some of those people
that you've just heard speaking,
but it was rather odd that probably
one of the very top things
that you can see, was how to promote
innovation
in the changing modes of teaching,
which I think is probably
one of our biggest challenges of all.
And actually, creating an evidence base
for that,
because you all know, in universities,
that's the way it goes:
If you haven't got evidence for it,
it doesn't exist.
And so, we did a bit of a survey;
there were the top universities,
we did some visits as well, in the US
as well as other parts in the world.
And everyone, just everyone has still
really not got into
achieving true innovation.
And so for me, that's
still a bit of a mystery, and I think
it's really rather extraordinary that
everyone in education,
all of you, at every level,
is trying to do this
and yet most organizations,
most institutions
are still striving to reorientate
themselves to an innovation culture.
What will distinguish them,
what will differentiate them?
What they offer their students
and stakeholders.
So, we could very very easily blame it
on the level of dogmatic approaches
and resistance.
And yet, by their nature, don't you think
that most staff working in education
are often the most open to change
and development, would you agree?
So I found it really quite a conundrum
to tackle this.
So, maybe, you heard the first keynote
this morning, David Price.
Maybe we're in denial
that we even need to change, possibly:
that's one answer.
So some of my answers:
I know the university sector best,
so I'll talk about that.
But I do actually think that
this may apply
to many of the other sectors
represented in this room.
The higher education sector,
across the world,
is very compressed but also
highly competitive now,
but also marginally differentiated.
It's mainly differentiated by
.......... (check) research profile,
research orientation,.........
reputation.
And also, everyone is upright
in an increasingly less and less and less
regulated world.
Those of you standing, there's a few
white pods, you can sit on them
in the front here......
if you're not too frightened.
Now, governments around the world
are pressing for larger proportions
of their populations to attend university.
Most of them, not here in Germany,
I understand, but most of us
have made paying for the experience
a lifelong one.
For most students, and even that
has done little
to dampen the enthusiasm
for higher education,
There's more people going to university
than really ever has in our lifetime.
Our children and our grandchildren
are going to go
forward and forward and forward.
So there does appear to be, using
the entrepreneurs' word,
reliable growth in the market place.
So therefore, we need to innovate.
We need to find ways
of reaching that growth.
Second. Of course we know -- it has just
been mentioned in the session just now --
that the number of university campuses
would have to increase
at an incredible alarming rate.
I've heard something like 1 per month
for the next 10 years
in order to meet the requirements
of teaching in traditional ways.
Clearly, that's not going to happen,
it's also not practical to extend
the existing campuses that we have
with physical capacity and real estate.
So therefore, innovation, again,
is needed.
Third. We know much of the way
that we are teaching in Universities
at the moment, will not provide
the citizens of the future
with the right skills,
nor will they graduate with the ability
to undertake multiple careers
during their life times.
We've also heard most babies being born
today will live to over 100.
I mean, we really need to be educating
those people, don't we? Not ourselves.
So in short, the nature of work
is changing.
So whatever our educational purposes,
the need for change is striking.
And everyone of us has
a shared responsibility, as educators,
to innovate to meet these and
many other challenges that we face.
So, why would we turn to technology
to assist us in this conundrum
is one of my questions.
But one of the things I've done,
since I've been at the University
of Western Australia,
and as I mentioned, we put
a physical space.
It's kind of a cross between a space
for the community to gather,
a bit of a makers' space too;
somewhere a bit different,
a bit different from the traditional areas
and it's actually for staff,
not for students.
Most universities in the world
are changing their libraries
and many of their traditional buildings
into informal spaces for students,
so we thought we might do that
for staff too.
And we called it The Future's Observatory.
So why put some technology in it?
Well, many forces, of course,
in our society,
can bring about large scale changes
in economics and societies, but
since the Industrial Revolution, say,
the late 18th, early 19th centuries,
technology has had this unique role,
empowering growth
and transforming economic value.
It has to be technology.
Technology represents in itself
new ways of doing things
and once mastered, creates lasting change
which, applied to universities
and schools, and training of all kind,
we won't immediately unlearn, you know:
our teachers, ways of teaching,
our campuses, physical and virtual,
finally, through technologies, the ideas
become implanted as innovations
and our world starts to move faster.
We can make it faster.
So, the most interesting part of this,
for me,
is that some technologies
have the potential
to disrupt the status quo in education,
-- and we've just been talking about
some of them --
and lead finally to true innovation
in the service of learning
and alter the way we imagine our teaching,
teach our students, choose a curriculum,
assess their ability,
instill new coaches in them,
so they live and work differently
in the future:
in practice, create entirely new products
and services.
And others simply do not.
And for me, things like lecture capture
simply does not,
because it reproduces the ways
we've undertaken learning for centuries.
So I think we need to be very careful
in what technologies we choose
to disrupt and drive our innovations.
Otherwise, we simply embed the old better
than we did before.
And the other thing to say is that
education leaders cannot wait
until the meager, meager evolution that
I've seen in my 20 years in this field
catch up, somehow, and we're not going
to do it with Learning Management Systems
and we'll really not, you know, they're
simply not moving.
I've just chosen a new Learning Management
System
for the University of Western Australia.
I got the best I could,
but the original values
of the way people teach and learn
are still in there,
and we need to change that, we need
to move forward on that.
And we also cannot be held back
by other industries on which we depend.
You know, so the patch defense, going on,
for example, with publishers.
We cannot let that happen,
we do need to change this.
So it's time -- referring back
to this morning --
to stop being 12 white men
sitting around the table,
to stop rearranging the furniture
and actually move on with the world.
And if we don't do it,
no one else is going to.
It's those of you who are here
with me today
that's actually going to do that run
that you saw my students do earlier.
So at the moment, the link definitely
between height and potential
is very unclear.
And of course,
there are still surprises to come.
The future is like that,
the future is like that.
Nobody can be certain.
We need now to understand
how we can experiment,
how we can take risks,
how we can ............. (check)
how we can prototype.
In practice, to learn from the future
as it emerges; be ready to respond.
In short, create
much more radical innovation
and stop taking baby steps:
it's time to shift.
This is the Future's Observatory.
Objectives we saw are
in this rather nice buildings
that look a little bit like Stanford
at the beginning,
but flow by the river.
And we are reaching out to the impossible.
So I'm trying all sorts of different ways
to try and reach out,
to achieve the impossible.
We're looking to partner with those
who say Yes
rather than shake their heads in sorrow.
We're seeing the Observatory for staff
as a location used for observing
terrestrial and celestial events.
Historically, of course, observatories
were as simple as containing
an astronomical sextant
for measuring the distance between stars
or perhaps something like Stonehenge,
which has some alignments
on the astronomical phenomenon.
Now, the way we're seeing this, is
we're trying to observe the future.
And I guess, some of the celestial events
will be some of the digital life
and educational purposes.
So, it's a metaphor, OK, but
we're trying to push people to understand
how a technology might help you
to imagine an action, a future.
So this is what we're doing in here, and
we've got some technologies in there,
I mean, this -- you can see the cruiser table
that you can stand around,
so it's focusing very much on collaboration,
which a lot of our students tell us
they actually want.
And of course, we're trying
virtual reality:
everyone is in there playing around.
Yes, try some ramification (check),
bring it into the classroom,
see how it works.
None of this is costing us this much:
it's all consumer technology
that we can readily buy.
Obviously, we're trying out
the robotic stuff too,
and we've had quite a lot of fun
with that, actually.
I think someone mentioned earlier
how much fun that is working with students
and helping them to understand
a bit about coding.
So we've learned quite a lot ourselves.
.............. that sort of thing (check)
So we're actually bringing it to the staff
to enable them to play, and to hope
they can imagine the pedagogical purposes.
And this is one of the key differences
between consumer technology
and stuff that's been produced
for learning purposes.
You invent the pedagogy,
you identify the learning challenge
and then work out
how the technology can support it,
not the other way round.
So, did you get the idea?
You got a bit of the how,
of what these technologies might actually
help you.
Does anyone want to go back to the URL
at the beginning, there?
You should be able to find it on your
My OEB.
I've given you 10 -- are we going back? ..
I've given you 10: robotics, 3D printing,
internet of things where both
virtual reality, space exploration
predictive and cognitive analytics
(check list on big player)
Now, opportunity with this particular
software to add your own three.
You'll have to pick three, one vote each
for those.
Just to remind you, these are
some of the things
that you might like to look at.
We're looking for fast development.
We want something that if we found
a pedagogical purpose for it,
it would be easy to embed it.
We want very wide and broad potential
and we definitely want to disrupt
age-old educational models.
So if you can't choose, use those three.
So we'll give you a bit of time to vote
and then we'll be able to get it up
on the screen, yes?
So, all vote now.
OK - can you see it? Quite small.
can you see, at the back?
No? OK, so the top one we're getting
is virtual reality,
almost everyone voting for that.
I think there's one -- no votes
for wearables, I'm surprised about that.
Keep going, it'll keep coming.
......... (check) augmented reality
analytics.
OK, I'll just leave you a few moments.
Has everyone finished voting?
Anyone still voting?
Still shifting.
I think this will stay on the app,
so you can have a look later if you want.
So it looks to --
oh no, we're still moving,
Somebody else has just got in.
So it looks to me like internet of things,
virtual reality
and predictive and cognitive analytics
are ..... (check) with augmented reality,
3D printing coming soon after.
My challenge to you is to take
some of the wackier ones,
like the space exploration and the
mobile scanning and ultrasounds
and see how they may affect your teaching,
because within the riskier ones
is the greatest potential.
So thank you very much for taking part.
Have we any time for questions?
Yes, sure, OK.
So, questions and challenges...