Cover image for The Routledge international handbook of innovation education
Title:
The Routledge international handbook of innovation education
Publication Information:
Abingdon, Oxon : Routledge, 2013
Physical Description:
xxix, 632 p. : ill. ; 25 cm.
ISBN:
9780415682213
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30000010305665 Q181 R68 2013 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

The Routledge International Handbook of Innovation Education is the international reference work on innovation education and potentially opens an entirely new direction in education. The overall goal of the handbook is to address the question of how to develop innovators in general and how to develop the innovative potential of today's young people with exceptional talents in science, technology, engineering, and maths (STEM) disciplines in particular. Today many governments around the world are interested in the development of STEM innovators.

This handbook provides the first and most comprehensive account available of what should be done in order to develop innovators and how to do it successfully. It includes chapters by leading specialists from around the world responsible for much of the current research in the fields of innovation, gifted education, scientific talent, science education, and high ability studies. Based on the latest research findings and expert opinion, this book goes beyond mere anecdotes to consider what science can tell us about the development of innovators.

By enlisting chapters from innovation experts, educators, psychologists, policy makers, and researchers in the field of management The Routledge International Handbook of Innovation Education will allow all of these scholars to speak to each other about how to develop innovators via innovation education, including such issues as:

the nature of innovation education, its basis, main components and content, its criteria and specificity in various domains and contexts, societal demands placed upon it.

This ground-breaking and potentially field defining work will thus serve as the first authoritative resource on all aspects of theory, research, and practice of innovation education.


Author Notes

Larisa V. Shavinina, PhD, is a Professor at the Université du Québec en Outaouais, Canada. She has been an innovation consultant to the governments of Canada, the USA, Dubai, Singapore, and other countries, and has acted as editor-in-chief of two other field-defining handbooks.


Table of Contents

1 Innovation Education: The Emergence of a New Discipline
2 Innovation Education: Defining the Phenomenon
3 The Fundamentals of Innovation Education
4 How Advances in Gifted Education Contribute to Innovation Education, and Vice Versa
5 Where Innovation Education Meets with Conceptual Change Research: A Conceptual Analysis and Implications for Education
6 New Brain-Imaging Studies Indicate How Prototyping is Related to Entrepreneurial Giftedness and Innovation Education in Children
7 How Can Scientific Innovators-Geniuses be Developed? The Case of Albert Einstein
8 From Creativity Education to Innovation Education: What Will It Take?
9 The Three-Ring Conception of Innovation and a Triad of Processes for Developing Creative Productivity in Young People;10. New Creative Education: When Creative Thinking, Entrepreneurial Education, and Innovative Education Come Together
11 Torrance's Innovator Meter and the Decline of Creativity in America
12 Do Not Overlook Innovators! Discussing the "Silent" Issues of the Assessment of Innovative Abilities in Today's Children--Tomorrow's Innovators
13 Innovation Education: Perspectives from Research and Practice in Gifted Education
14 An Application of the Schoolwide Enrichment Model and High-End Learning Theory to Innovation Education
15 Future Problem Solving as Education for Innovation
16 The Trajectory of Early Development of Prominent Innovators: Entrepreneurial Giftedness in Childhood
17 Educating Wizards: Developing Talent through Innovation Education
18 Where Did All Great Innovators Come From? Lessons from Early Childhood and Adolescent Education of Nobel Laureates in Science
19 Settings and Pedagogy in Innovation Education
20 Exploring Innovation Schools with Preservice Teachers
21 The Dynamic Curriculum: A Fresh View of Teaching Mathematics for Inspiring Innovation
22 School Textbooks as a Medium for the Intellectual Development of Children during the Mathematics Teaching Process
23 The Interfaces of Innovation in Mathematics and the Arts
24 NASA Press Releases and Mission Statements: Exploring the Mathematics behind the Science
25 Innovation in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) Disciplines: Implications for Educational Practices
26 The Importance of Informal Learning in Science for Innovation Education
27 Designing an Innovative Approach to Engage Students in Learning Science: The Evolving Case of Hybridized Writing
28 An Integrated Approach to the Study of Biology
29 Socioscientific Innovation for the Common Good
30 The Role and Place of Science and Technology Education in Developing Innovation Education
31 Nurturing Innovation through Online Learning
32 E-Learning Innovation Using the ICARE Framework
33 Developing an Understanding of the Pedagogy of Using a Virtual Reality Learning Environment (VRLE) to Support Innovation Education
34 Creating an Innovative and Entrepreneurial Collegiate Academic Program
35 Educating the Innovation Managers of the Web 2.0 Age: A Problem-Based Learning Approach to User Innovation Training Programs
36 What Can Innovation Education Learn from Innovators with Longstanding Records of Breakthrough Innovations?
37 Entrepreneurs' Career Solidarity and Innovation: Unreplaceable Relationship Leads to Creative Outcome
38 Modeling the Firm--Constructing an Integrated Entrepreneurship Course for Undergraduate Engineers
39 Igniting the Spark: Utilization of Positive Emotions in Developing Radical Innovators
40 Introducing the Phenomenon of the "Abortion" of New Ideas and Describing the Impact of "Saved" Ideas and thus Implemented Innovations on the Economy in the Case of Distinguished Innovators
41 Innovation Education through Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) Subjects - The UK Experience
42 Policy on Knowledge Exchange, Innovation and Entrepreneurship
43 The Worldwide Interest in Developing Innovators: The Case of the Center for Talented Youth
44 How Does Singapore Foster the Development of Innovators?
45 Overall Perspectives on the Future Promise (and Forward Thrusts) of Innovation Education