I’ve been putting my mind to the whole notion of innovation lately. It’s really easily to jump on board the innovation bandwagon. As this train departs the station I can, hand on heart, say I was a…
Source: Your SCHEEME is Rad Man
30 Monday May 2016
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inI’ve been putting my mind to the whole notion of innovation lately. It’s really easily to jump on board the innovation bandwagon. As this train departs the station I can, hand on heart, say I was a…
Source: Your SCHEEME is Rad Man
30 Monday May 2016
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analogue digital, BCEC, Charles Dickens, Copurnicus, Design Conference 2016, EduTECH, Einstein, Gradgrind, Jessica Hische, Powerhouse Brisbane, procrastaworking, rad, SCHEEME, STEM
I’ve been putting my mind to the whole notion of innovation lately. It’s really easily to jump on board the innovation bandwagon. As this train departs the station I can, hand on heart, say I was an early passenger. That said, I feel somewhat fraudulent up here in first class. To transition our economy we have been told we must innovate. No arguments there…but how?
I’ve been to two conferences lately, one being the Design Conference at the ever funky Powerhouse in Brisbane and the other the massive EduTech conference at the Brisbane Convention and Exhibition Centre. They couldn’t have been more different. The former was an exploration of issues of creativity and how to marry this with client demands and the latter was all things education with a real push on promoting STEM. STEM seems to be everywhere at the moment. You could be forgiven for thinking that STEM is the new black. It would appear we have too few students taking these subjects through school and higher education and this is a roadblock to the transitioning of our economy and our nation’s future prosperity.
What’s remarkable about this assertion is that it is in and of itself putative i.e. it has no evidence base. Clearly our future can only be measured when we get there and when we do if STEM didn’t deliver the transition or prosperity we envisaged how can we disaggregate that cause from other causative factors, known in science as variables? Truth is we can’t. Just seems odd to me as the STEM community should know better than to promulgate their cause with such poor advocacy. I’m lucky; I’m not a scientist. I believe much more nowadays in intuition and based on my gut feel (becoming increasingly scientific by the way) I think STEM is not the way to go at all. Let me explain.
I attended by neighbour’s son’s BBQ on Sunday. He’s a really smart young man with a good mature head on his 6ft 9inch shoulders (yes I’m already looking up to him) and he’s just turned 15. He has just decided on the subjects he will be taking for his Year 11 and Year 12 (final two years of high school). The three key electives he has chosen are Maths C (the really hard subject), Physics and Chemistry. The STEM community will be chuffed as this is the calibre of candidate they want – smart, focused and hard working.
Given I had just attended a conference that did not use the acronym STEM once, but was constantly using the word ‘rad’ as a key descriptor in their lexicon, this got me reflecting. A quick trip to Google perfectly argued my point in the kind of succinct way I never could. ‘Rad’ is defined in the Webster Dictionary (around since 1828) as:
‘A unit of absorbed dose of ionizing radiation equal to 100 ergs per gram of irradiated material.’
‘Rad’ is further defined in the Urban Dictionary (I suspect established a lot more recently than 1828) as:
‘An abbreviation of ‘radical’ – a term made popular by the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Still primarily used by people on the West Coast who find words like ‘cool’, ‘awesome’, and ‘tight’ to be tired and overused; ‘rad’ is generally considered to be a much higher praise than the aforementioned superlatives. Also used as a general expression of awe.’
You get my point. Two opposing sides of the brain with a completely different view of things, with a differing lexicon. So which direction should you take? Clearly those of a left-sided brain bent will, of necessity, gravitate to the more science-based subjects. Those more creative, drawing on the right hemisphere, will take the more ‘arty-farty’ route. Those trying to influence Governments in terms of education and industry policy are clearly pushing a left-hemisphere agenda to the potential detriment of those not of this persuasion. I think this is not only wrong but may have a deleterious impact on our economy. Here’s my reasoning (and intuition). STEM is unashamedly based in the world of science. Einstein though, perhaps the foremost scientist ever, suggests that creativity is essential when he says:
‘It is the supreme art of the teacher to awaken joy in creative expression and knowledge.’
So I’m going to posit a new acronym that I think is a much better recipe for success or subject line-up for year 11 and 12 students. I’m calling it SCHEEME. It works too because it is so catchy! It stands for Science (yeah I’m not dissing it entirely), Creativity, History, Engineering, Economics, Mathematics and Environment.
In more detail here is my pitch for each.
Science – of course we need science to keep pushing the boundaries and improve the lot of humankind. Also without the scientific method we can fall prey to all manner of charlatans and opinion, however expressed, can become the abuse of power. It was only in the 16th Century that the earth was the centre of the universe. Without Copernicus and colleagues we would still be laboring under this misapprehension. Perhaps the modern day analogue is the denial of climate change. That’s why we need scientists.
Creativity – this is the way I see it. You can have the best looking, most advanced TV with the most rad streaming service but if the content’s shite then what’s the fun in that? We need creativity for our well-being but more fundamentally we need it to help solve problems by thinking outside the square. My experience at the Design Conference last week showed me a whole world of bright, focused and gifted people with so much to offer from their particular right-sided brain perspective. We ignore this demographic at our peril. Gradgrind, after all, is not one of Dickens’ heroes.
History – Simply put we will commit the sins of our forefathers if we have no understanding of what went before us and the context in which such events unfolded. The current rise of fascism in Europe and America is a reminder that the horrors of not that long ago could re-emerge if we do not keep a weather-eye on whence we have come. A few more Wall Street types could have fared better if they had just done some economic history instead of throwing dwarves.
Engineering – we are in the post-industrial age so engineering is a core plank of how we progress. Key health breakthroughs will involve engineering whether it be genetic or robotic. You will get no argument from me here.
Economics – Economics is at the art-science nexus. Part science with a set of laws, it also requires a more expansive mind to really understand its full complexity. In economics one will find their core beliefs in terms of social policy. To know that is to begin to know oneself.
Mathematics – I guess maths sits as the immutable laws underpinning science so let’s throw it in there. About time we got some of the art teachers to teach it though. Kids learn mathematics (or not as the case may be) in different ways. I suspect we need a different modality to teach left-sided concepts to right-sided people. I’ve heard mathematical geniuses describing numbers in colours in the same way as artists might of a work of art. Surely there is something further to be explored here?
Environment – I’ve not seen anyone throw this into the mix. Climate change is real and it’s happening now. If we cannot imbue in our STEM students an appreciation for and love of our planet then solutions that might be in science may not come to the fore. Biology is that poor cousin subject in the sciences that often gets dropped because the curriculum calendar can’t stretch to one more. The mathematically-minded struggle more with the natural world, which is a real shame. Einstein himself recognized the need for a deep contemplation of the environment.
If there is no planet the STEM versus SCHEEME debate becomes arbitrary anyway.
So next time you see STEM being advocated in our schools and learned institutions, it is worth considering the motivations of those pushing this agenda. The key question to ask is what are they trying to achieve by pushing us headlong into a future world that looks overly dispassionate? When all is said and done what do most famous scientists do of an evening? I suspect it’s to put on a great record or go to the theatre where the breadth and complexity of the human spirit is laid bare. For it is only through this can we continue to grow as individuals, community and a nation.
18 Wednesday May 2016
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accidental vagina, Am I Black Enough for You?, Billy Paul, Catonsville 9, Daniel Berrigan, El Wakrah Stadium, Elton John, Gamble and Huff, George Orwell, Grammy, Grammy Awards, legacy, London Aquatics Centre, Me and Mrs Jones, obituary, Paul McCartney, Philadelphia, Plowshares Movement, Pritzker Architecture Prize, Stirling Award, The Peak Hong Kong, Vietnam War, Vitra Fire Station, Your Song, Zaha Hadid
George Orwell wrote ‘A man who gives a good account of himself is probably lying, since any life viewed from the inside is simply a series of defeats.’ That’s why obituaries are important. I’ve been wanting to write an obituary for someone I really admire but thought on its own it might be less than uplifting. However with the recent passing of two other persons I have long admired I thought, hey, why not throw them all together and be done with it? Those who know me well know that two of my passions are architecture and music and as I am steeped in Irish DNA I am drawn to radicals. I think the reason I am drawn to music and architecture is that they blend that perfect contradiction, when at their best, – art and science combining to create the ethereal. Both, as it happens, are capable of being radical; of contradicting and challenging the status quo and getting us to look at things in a whole new light.
My first tribute goes to Zaha Hadid, the Iraqi-born British-based legendary architect. She is regarded by me as one of the great architects of modern times. I saw an obituary written about her that described her as the greatest female architect in the world today. Strange that, I thought. Surely we throw gender out the window when frequenting such lofty corridors? That aside, she has left behind a significant catalogue of stunning architecture that allows edifices to transcend from mere buildings into something magnificent. For those of a spiritual mindset transformation and transcendence are never far from one’s mind which leads me to my next ‘hero’.
Fr Daniel Berrigan died in the Bronx on April 30. He was an intellectual, like all Jesuits, and true to his order embraced a fiercely independent and challenging disposition. It’s Berrigan’s anti-war stance during the Vietnam War that brought him and his brother Fr Philip Berrigan to prominence when they removed government property and burnt draft cards. This earned the duo (along with seven others known as the Catonsville 9) prison sentences. Berrigan went into hiding and on the run but was ultimately captured by the FBI and went to prison in 1972 coincidentally the same year Billy Paul received his Grammy. An avid writer of poetry and books (over 50), Berrigan was also a reformer and an AIDS activist remaining true to his pacifist beliefs to the end. He first came to my attention in 1980 when, with his brother and six others as part of the Plowshares Eight, he created the Plowshares Movement. As a group they broke into a nuclear facility in Pennsylvania where they damaged nuclear warheads and blood was spilt literally and metaphorically. Here was a life lived in total dedication to a firmly held set of beliefs.
Talking of Pennsylvania, Billy Paul, my third ‘hero’ was born in Philadelphia. He was an iconic soul man who had longevity in the music industry and used it for social reform. Reflecting on it activism, music and architecture have a lot in common – they can soothe and challenge in equal measure. I recall hearing ‘Me and Mrs Jones’ on the radio when it first came out. Likewise I have a clear recollection of my parents’ moral outrage to it given it dealt with the scandalous (in 1972) notion of a man having an extra-marital affair. The fact that I had heard it and enjoyed the guilty pleasure made this 12 year old feel somewhat complicit in the whole matter. Unlike Berrigan, the easy lyrics which Paul made sound his own in fact belonged to others most notably Gamble and Huff, McCartney and Elton John. Like few others though, he was able to put such an indelible stamp on these songs they sounded like they were written especially for him. In listening you know their origins but they uniquely also retain few traces of the original version. I commend for fantastic listening Paul’s version of Elton John’s ‘Your Song’ which at a riotous 6.23 minutes is way longer than the original at 4.03. How does he manage to pad out the extra 2.20 minutes? I can only urge you to Google his version and enjoy.
Hadid’s architecture, like Paul’s voice or Berrigan’s poetry, is not without its verdancy or its radical undertones. No stranger to the middle-east and the religious and political contradictions contained therein, she embraces curves like few others in both physical and metaphysical form. Her design for the World Cup stadium in Qatar (the El Wakrah stadium) is now described as an ‘accidental vagina’ and it’s easy to see why. Some have seen it as a deliberate middle finger up to the phallic architecture of her male counterparts. To view it now feels like guilty architectural voyeurism. It also challenges the male-oriented Qatari society and the irony of 22 players chasing one little ball (i.e. sperm and egg) being played inside will not be lost on many. Radical..yup!
Hadid leaves a fantastic legacy of buildings including the London Aquatics Centre for the London Olympics, The Peak in Hong Kong, Cardiff Opera House and the Kurfurstendamm in Berlin, all of which I have had the privilege to visit. She’s multi-award winning including twice winning the RIBA Stirling Prize and the Pritzker Architecture Prize being the first woman to do so. She set her stall out, as it were, from the outset with the internationally acclaimed Vitra Fire Station in Germany in 1993: symbolism in that she really did set the world alight with some of the arresting architecture she created.
Daniel Berrigan was an award winner too, despite his modest lifestyle. His poetry secured him the prestigious Lamont award. Billy Paul was a Grammy Award winner and would arguably have received more accolades but for his embracing songs that dealt with post 60s civil rights issues such as ‘Am I Black Enough For You’ and McCartney’s ‘Let Em In’ which he re-tooled from a soppy love song into one about racial tolerance. Awards come and go – legacy remains.
Great people never really die of course. Legacy is something tangible and gives immortality. In the case of Hadid, Berrigan and Paul they have a catalogue that can be accessed time and again allowing us to ‘connect’ with them in a quite visceral way. This has me reflecting on what legacy will I leave? In management terms it can be hard to leave tangible evidence that you were here unless your job is the commissioning of things that last. Our legacy may be in the creativity of others; the vision, space and calm we create that allows others to achieve on our behalf. The very least we should set in terms of a legacy goal is positively touching and shaping those whose careers we have had in our custody. Get this wrong and we become destroyers of creativity and dreams. Get this right and we help grow the economy, create harmony and enable great things to happen. Through this perhaps life is breathed into our own legacy. There’s a quiet radicalism in this that I’m sure Hadid, Berrigan and Paul would embrace.
09 Monday May 2016
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Business School, China, Daenerys Targaryen, Game of Thrones, GOT, Griffith University, Henley, Henley MBA, innovation, Khalessi, MBA, Nobel Prize, Peking University, Queensland University of Technology, QUT, THE, Times Higher Education, Tsinghua University, UMIST, University of Manchetser, University of Melbourne, University of Queensland, UQ, Wolrd University rankings
Something of great significance happened last week that in the hubbub of the budget and forthcoming election seemed to pass with a mere whimper. All the more surprising because this event happened at the very time we are looking at innovation and talking about transitioning our economy from resources to services. Put simply – from digging to innovation. And where do we expect to see much of this innovation to come from? Our universities of course.
Last week the Times Higher Education World University Rankings published their top 100 most influential universities. For the first time two Chinese universities are featured in the top 100. The most influential university in China according to THE is Tsinghua in at a very creditable 36th. Established in 1911 and located in Beijing it has over 33,000 students just over 50% of whom are postgrads.
It will not be a surprise to most that the quality of tertiary education in China is on the rise. After all with rising affluence comes an aspirational middle class who see the road to prosperity for their children very much rooted in a sound education at a university of repute. In the past this has ordinarily meant going offshore and Australia’s learned institutions have only been too willing to oblige. When we look more parochially at Queensland, my home State this means our academic powerhouse the University of Queensland (UQ).
What’s wrong with this picture now though? Well for starters only five Australian universities have made it into the top 100 with our top performer University of Melbourne falling short of Tsinghua by some seven places at 43. UQ comes in at a dismal 81-90 (they bracket quite a few this low in the rankings). Even Peking University out ranks our number one performer coming in at 41.
How long before middle class parents in China decide that their aspirations for their children can be better realized without leaving home? The knock-on impacts to the Australian economy could be quite far-reaching, especially as the transitioning of the economy envisages a significant role for higher education as a revenue generator. We are looking at innovation and services to take up where coal and iron-ore once held sway. If we consider education as a commodity we might find it will quickly move to where the biggest bang for the buck can be achieved. We might well be in for a shock if this means Chinese universities preferred to our own.
Riding the tail of the Asian Dragon is beginning to prove a darn sight more challenging than just jumping on board, Daenerys Targaryen style, and holding on for dear life. Our offering to foreign students needs to be made highly relevant and worth the extra money that parents and students have to shell out to support their studies. I suspect we need to work a lot smarter and harder in this area.
If we are to regain reputation perhaps we need to start thinking the unthinkable? And what is the unthinkable? The merger of universities to create institutions of scale able to cut a swath in the cut-throat world of attracting foreign students and securing research funding. For many this is impossible given the tradition and legacy of these venerable institutions. To that I say think again. In 2004 The University of Manchester merged with the University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology (UMIST). This wasn’t a mere case of a big university swallowing up some lower rated minnow. UMIST was where Rutherford and his team split the atom. Between them they have 23 Nobel Prizes. An institution dating back to 1824 surely has more tradition than one (UQ) which was established in 1909. If they have done the unthinkable it is beholden on us to at least consider it.
Perhaps it’s too big a step to merge two universities from the outset. Management theory would suggest undertaking a pilot study. A more palatable way and I think almost an imperative, would be to ‘float off’ a faculty. I could think of no better candidate than the business schools. Brisbane, our capital city has three universities (UQ, QUT and Griffith) each sporting their own business school with competing MBA programs. The joining of these in pursuit of the lucrative Asian market would create an institution of real scale, capable of making its mark internationally. It could be named Queensland Business School or Brisbane Business School. The name though is much less important than the concept.
What is slightly concerning is that there doesn’t seem to be a push for such an initiative. I remember mentioning it one time at an MBA fair to all three business schools only to be told in no uncertain terms that it was both unthinkable and unachievable. I have a Henley MBA. We were taught to critically and constantly challenge the status quo. Why then have the Deans of the three Brisbane business schools not done likewise? Surely as a strategic option it is what many of the textbooks used to teach in their courses would promote as a sensible way forward. The world of business – the domain in which they teach – is a constant changing environment where mergers and acquisitions, in the best interests of the business, are quite common. Tradition, in business, is a sentiment that is seldom part of the decision making process. Going down with the ship, or sliding in the world rankings cannot be allowed to continue. We have a reputation to hold and improve. Perhaps only innovation can enable us to claw our way back before it’s too late?