If our goal as educators is to truly cultivate a culture where authentic innovation is occurring both within our staff and student communities, then we need to first give our staff and students consistent opportunities to create. Creation precedes innovation. Some may argue that creation and innovation goes hand in hand, that one does not precede the other; and once both are an established part of the culture, I think so too. However, without the opportunity and mindset to create, innovation simply does not happen, at least not outside of small pockets. If we want innovation to be the norm, then our students need to be creators every single day.
A creator looks at the world through the lenses of problems that need to be solved and questions that need to be answered. We want our students to be more than just isolated consumers. Instilling this type of mentality within our students and embedding it into our instruction will begin to create the type of culture that will ultimately lead to innovation. Design thinking, the maker movement, technology, and project based learning can help support this, but like anything else, it all needs to be grounded into instruction. We want our instructional and social culture to build purposeful creators who create from a foundation of knowledge and empathy.
Invest the time in your students and give them the opportunity to struggle and to fail; to become creators. Innovation doesn't come easy, don't short change yourself or your students the time to develop their creative identity. They control their future.