Teach Middle East Magazine Sep-Dec 2019 Issue 1 Volume 7 | Page 45

Sharing Good Practice to grow innovators’ mindsets in our students require conducive policy environments in which to flourish, in education we often assess and evaluate that which we value. If one was to sample the types of assessments most routinely being designed and delivered to our students, would they currently demonstrate the value we place on innovation, open collaboration and cognitive flexibility? Most likely not. However, encouragingly UAE's Knowledge and Human Development Agency (KHDA) has taken significant strides to evaluate that which it values, in order to foster innovation in schools. The UAE School Inspection Framework (2017) makes clear and unequivocal commitment to the importance of education for innovation and the aptitudes and dispositions that bring it about in our students. The Dubai Future Foundation and the Future Accelerators facilitated an important discussion at Area 2071 on 'The Future of Education' with four key questions: 1. What is the role of technology and design in creating an education system that matches the requirements of the 21st century? 2. What are the structural and curricular changes required in order to allow integration of transformative solutions? 3. How can educational institutions empower 21st-century learners for the future of work through exploring innovative data architecture? 4. How can we enable a transparent and collaborative ecosystem between academia, the industry and government to allow for better knowledge sharing/decision making/positive change? (Dubai Future Accelerators, 2019) It is my contention that there is another highly complementary driver within the UAE educational environment that will also be instrumental in bringing about this shift. the Dubai Future Foundation mission of making UAE the global hub for educational innovation that is so required. Since 2014, the KHDA have fostered a strong relationship with the Commission on International Education at the New England Association of Schools and Colleges (NEASC). NEASC International is leading the way within the global international education sector in building a new model of transformative accreditation. Its ACE Learning protocol is already proving its tremendous value in supporting schools throughout their shift to becoming future-focused learning environments that nurture among our young people the necessary ways of thinking, ways of working and skilled use of the tools for working to drive innovation. Adam Pisoni, one of the founders of Yammer, uses the metaphor of bridges and islands to describe his experience of innovation within particular sectors. Islands are out there on their own, but they stand as examples of how innovative transformations can be fully achieved in practice; they are trail-blazers and thought leaders. For Pisoni, Yammer was an island within the enterprise social network sector. However, after Yammer, Pisoni sidestepped into US K-12 education, where he is now building 'bridges'. While not as radical, there is a value in bridges as they start from where school is, and they can find immediate footholds in the middle of the market as they address critical challenges that schools are facing right now. Bridges also build towards the vision of what is possible. By foregrounding the necessity of a school's strong commitment and deep conceptual understanding of this notion of vision-driven modern learning environments, NEASC International is using its significant leverage as an accreditation agency to facilitate significant transformations. In addition to this, providing frameworks for impact design, guidance and support, ACE Learning is also supporting the development of schools' capacity and competence, to achieve their ambitions. The strengthening of the strategic partnership between KHDA and NEASC International will, in my view, be hugely productive in achieving the aspirations set out in the National Innovation Strategy, Vision 2021 and As a new academic year begins, and as you consider this year's strategic goals and your accreditation timelines, I would encourage you to think about the future challenges facing our young people. We need islands of innovation to inspire us. But we also need bridges to lead schools towards this vision, and to build them we need useful tools like inspection frameworks and transformative accreditation protocols. This way, in the coming years, all international schools in the region can contribute to the development of UAE as a hub of outstanding innovation in global education that would make Sheikh Maktoum bin Butti bin Suhail proud. Tim Logan is a freelance consultant supporting schools in UAE to use accreditation to drive innovation and school transformation. He is also a doctoral student at the University of Bath studying the role of evaluative tools in 'measuring' schools' impact on 21st century skill development. Twitter: TimLogan_FLD; Email: [email protected] Class Time Term 1 Sep - Dec 2019 45