Thursday, June 22, 2017

Need to update your mission statement?






Mark Zuckerberg just announced a change in the Facebook mission - the updated version is to:  

"Give people the power to build community
and bring the world closer together."

CNN Tech reported Zuckerberg's explanation, "We used to have a sense that if we could just do those things, then that would make a lot of the things in the world better by themselves, but now we realize that we need to do more, too. It's important to give people a voice, to get a diversity of opinions out there, but on top of that, you also need to do this work of building common ground so that way we can all move forward together."

There are whispers that this word change in the mission is more about advertisers than customers and making the world a better place, but Zuckerberg is implicitly acknowledging that a mission statement can be of importance in an organization that wants to stay relevant.  And, while we can't know for sure what the motivation is for Facebook changing their mission, Zuckerberg and Facebook are great at engagement (well over 1 billion members) and mission statements can be effective engagement tools ... if we speak them often and live them daily.    

The mission and vision statement for the college where I teach are:

Mission:  to educate the whole person and to serve our students and our communities by providing learning opportunities that are designed to help them achieve their goals.

Vision:  to aspires to be the higher learning organization of choice by creating engaging lifelong educational relationships that inspire and support all learners to increase their capacity for personal growth and positive social change.

On our mission & vision webpage, curious viewers or stakeholders can also find our Core Value Statement:

Learning is the core value of Paradise Valley Community College. PVCC encourages and supports learning at three levels — student, employee and organizational — and the integrative relationship between the three levels. Learning at Paradise Valley Community College means increasing the capacity of our students, our employees and the college itself, to achieve their goals. PVCC acknowledges organizational learning as a means to continuously improve our college.


Thank you, Mark Zuckerberg ... good reminder for all of us to revisit our missions!  And, happy to hear of Facebook committing to bringing the world closer together :) 




Need to update your mission,, vision and/or core value statements?




The previous mission statement for Facebook was to:  
give people the power to share and make the world more open and connected


Courage for Positive Social Change from Admiral McRaven




At the college where I teach, we often speak of preparing students to be agents of Positive Social Change and my involvement in interdisciplinary entrepreneurship and social entrepreneurship are definitely examples of positive change movements within higher education that involve risk ... there is always risk when there is change. 

How brave are we as we promote change initiatives aimed at increasing possibilities for transformational learning experiences?  What are we willing to risk and endure to promote positive change with, and on behalf of, our students? 

After watching Admiral McRaven's commencement speech from the University of Texas (where he is now Chancellor), I'm feeling pretty wimpy.  I realize that I sometimes get discouraged even by just a little social discomfort when we aren't agreeing or achieving results together ... next time I feel like my work is risky or uncomfortable, I'll imagine being up to my neck in ice cold mud and start singing ...  

Curious?  Here is a 19 minute video about how to change the world for the better ...

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Yes, I know, this video is old (2014), but I just heard about it and it's good!

Monday, June 19, 2017

The Founder - an update to Ray Kroc


                                 
Ray Kroc, Founder of  McDonald’s System, Inc., a predecessor of the McDonald’s Corporation

Dick and Mac McDonald - original "Founders" of McDonalds in San Bernadino, CA

Michael Keaton as Ray Kroc in the movie, Founder (2017)

President Calvin Coolidge

The movie about the McDonald brothers, Dick and Mac, and their history with Ray Kroc has been on my must see list and, thanks to Netflix, I finally did see it.   With regard to innovation, the McDonalds brothers and Kroc are all inspiring in their own ways.

However ... Kroc wasn't quite as innocent and family oriented as Ronald McDonald (originally played by Willard Scott) might lead us to believe.   In fact, my last post was about confirmation bias and a related concern would be for people with an anti-business perspective to watch this movie, experience confirmation bias and conclude, "yes, those business people, or entrepreneurs, are all unethical and only care about money."  Even if Kroc's third wife, Joan, later gave most of their fortune to charity, how they came into the fortune isn't a story of altruism.

Maybe I should have read the book (or A book!) instead of waiting for the movie to update my understanding of Ray Kroc and also let me know that the quote (below) I have always attributed to Kroc actually belonged to Calvin Coolidge.  Oops.

Love this quote ... while Kroc had a picture of it in his office, it was not his quote but a quote by Calvin Coolidge - 30th President of the United States.

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Nothing in this world can take the place of persistence.

Talent will not; nothing is more common that unsuccessful people with talent.

Genius will not; unrewarded genius is almost a proverb.

Education will not; the world is full of educated derelicts.

Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent.


Sunday, June 18, 2017

Confirmation Bias - the conversation continues



Recently, the news has repeated use of the term confirmation bias as the conversation continues about political divides following the shooting on the congressional baseball practice field.  Adding this term to the public lexicon could be really good for us as Americans while we work toward better critical thinking (and creative thinking) about wicked problems we want to address together.

Might we be able to open our minds to the values, beliefs and ideas of those who think differently from us rather than holding on tightly to our current understandings?   During the last election cycle, media representatives repeated the term "doubling down" often and you may have noticed the uptick in its use during everyday life.  Perhaps the media can offer us a societal uptick in resisting confirmation bias if they double down on the use of this term?


Confirmation Bias
"Confirmation bias, as the term is typically used in the psychological literature, connotes the seeking or interpreting of evidence in ways that are partial to existing beliefs, expectations, or a hypothesis in hand." (http://psy2.ucsd.edu/~mckenzie/nickersonConfirmationBias.pdf)


Critical Thinking
"Critical thinking examines assumptions, discerns hidden values, evaluates evidence, and assesses conclusions." (http://isites.harvard.edu/fs/docs/icb.topic265890.files/Critical_Thinking_File/06_CT_Extended_Definition.pdf)

Wicked Problems
"A wicked problem is a social or cultural problem that is difficult or impossible to solve for as many as four reasons: incomplete or contradictory knowledge, the number of people and opinions involved, the large economic burden, and the interconnected nature of these problems with other problems."  (https://ssir.org/articles/entry/wicked_problems_problems_worth_solving#)





Saturday, June 17, 2017

Bipartisanship is Scary, too (A Call for 21st Century Work Skills)






As the conversations continue about increasing civility after the shooting at the congressional practice field, we are hearing the term bipartisanship as something to strive for in politics.  But, bipartisanship still keeps us in the realm of dichotomies such as us-them, in-group versus out-group, Republican-Democrat, wrong and right, good and bad.

For a moment, Bernie Sanders had us considering that there are more than two perspectives vying for the leadership of our country but many are back to pretending that there is a box, or side, representing Democrats and a contrasting box, or side, that represents Republicans somehow adding up to the whole of our population.  When I hear signs of this thinking (or lack of) in higher education, I find it especially concerning that our critical thinking and diversity and inclusion touting environment can be part of promoting this type of (scary) simplicity.  If we think and behave as such simpletons, how can we prepare students for sophisticated citizenship?

At the Innovation League Learning Summit that concluded on Wednesday at the Omni in Paradise Valley, the "Ten Skills for the Future Workforce" (University of Phoenix Research Institute) handout was one of my favorite tools offered to us.  Could these skills help all of us improve our multi-disciplinary, interdisciplinary, trans-perspective inspired thinking & behavior, as well as outcomes, for our micro and macro communities?  I think so! 

Thank you Innovation League and University of Phoenix Research Institute ~

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Another perspective, perhaps consistent with Chomsky, would be that two perspective, two party thinking isn't even real ... that there is only one establishment and we falsely believe that we are considering more than one way of thinking through the two party dichotomy ... hmmmmm ... so many opportunities for critical thinking ~

Thursday, June 15, 2017

Tweeting new prestige ~ what will we say and how will we say it?

   



Prestige Bias - human tendency to mimic the behaviors of those with status

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Yesterday was President Trump's 71st birthday and the day I was finally brave enough to create a Twitter account.  Sadly, it was also the day that Majority Whip Steve Scalise and others were shot or injured during practice for the annual Congressional Baseball Game - a community tradition that locals have enjoyed each summer since 1909.  It seems that us-them, political party type anger was at least part of the motivation for the attack.

Even if most of us haven't been tweeting, we all put messages out into the world daily.  TV news coverage today is discussing what we should and should not say and who is to blame for the public tone of rhetoric and its relationship to violence.  Many are pointing fingers at others and, thankfully, some are challenging themselves and all of us to do better.

We're Americans so, I'm hoping, we will protect our freedom of speech and hold ourselves accountable to higher levels of discourse.  If we elevate our behavior and create positive prestige, it is likely others will follow. 

Happy to hear that the baseball game tonight is raising over 1 million dollars for youth programs in Washginton DC ... something to be impressed by !  Something prestigious to emulate !

Game is about to start ...............
What will each of us "tweet" after this "just symbolic" or  "could be transformational" moment" ?

Wednesday, June 14, 2017

Innovation League - Learning Summit is over but innovation continues!




The Innovation League's 2017 Learning Summit concluded today at the Omni Montelucia in Paradise Valley, Arizona ... many highlights of the conference! 

For example, during one of the sessions, a team of us used Public Agenda's (publicagenda.org) Creative Risk Analysis process and easily walked through coming up with great solutions for an important campus initiative.  Also ... several session presenters used polling to engage the large groups - they did so in new, fun and meaningful ways (e.g., menti.com).  All of the focus on technology finally inspired me to set up a Twitter account ...

Thank you League of Innovation!

Looking forward to the spring 2018 conference in Washington DC ... see you there?

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~ Highly Recommend the Montelucia ... there was a little snafu with my room but they handled it swiftly and made me like the resort even more ... beautiful property and outstanding service !




Thursday, June 8, 2017

Which stations do you watch?



  

This morning I watched James Comey, former FBI director, testify and tonight I'm watching the news coverage. 

Are you watching?! 
Which station are you watching? 
It matters.

With North Korea being in the news more lately, I have heard many scoffing comments about the naivete of North Korean people believing the propaganda they're immersed in ... but how different are we in the United States, really?   Researchers representing multiple psychological perspectives would assert that we are vulnerable to the same/similar forces and cognitive errors.

Based on the coverage differences on CNN and Fox tonight, I hope we're all challenging ourselves to go beyond our favorite flavor of "information" ...  our country & the world need wise citizens ~