Priorities:University of Oklahoma Student Priorities
Overview
The University of Oklahoma has momentum and a lot of potential when it comes to Innovation and Entrepreneurship on campus. Through mapping all of the resources on campus, it has been determined that there are a few key areas where Unniversity Innovation Fellows and faculty can come together to further advance entrepreneurship on our campus.
Strategy #1: I&E Spaces
Tactic #1: FabLab-L
Tactic #2: IBM Design
- Description - IBM design is a new and quickly growing 4th major division of IBM. The division currently has about 80 designers and front end developers but is hiring over 2000 new graduates over the next 5 years. The head manager of this new division is an OU alumni and has been extremely interested in a partnership. We believe a partnership with this new division could help is 3 different ways. First, IBM design could sponsor monthly speakers and/or design workshops to get not just designers focused more on design but get people from all majors integrating design thinking into their projects. Second, the big name of IBM will get more students interested in the programs. This will help spread the innovation and design thinking across campus. Finally, this would create an easy path for students from OU to be hired into a major company that is beginning to focus on design and has been known for innovation.
- Team Leaders - Ryan Phillips (Computer Science), Sridhar Radhikrishnan (Dean of CS)
- Milestones -
- First workshop - August 2014
- First OU hire by IBM Design - December 2014
Tactic #3: Design For America- L
Strategy #2: How to Train Thinkers
Tactic #1: Creativity Course
- Description - In our time spent at Stanford, many of the professors described the classes they taught as creativity courses where crazy brainstorming and rapid prototyping is a key portion of the class. At OU, we have very little of this. Almost all classes, even in the visual communications department are focused on traditional lecture classes. One of our main goals is to promote this creative thinking through working with professors to offer a creative thinking course similar to the one Tina Seelig teaches. This initially be something that is just offered to a few students and once the benefits are seen and it is shown that students enjoy using their hands to prototype with playdoh and other materials during class, we will look to expand to offer more classes.
- Team Leaders - Ryan Phillips, Daniel Pullin (Dean of Business College)
- Milestones -
- First class offered - Fall 2014
- First Creativity major offered - Fall 2014
- Other Majors required to take course in creative thinking - Fall 2016
Tactic #2: Learning by Doing Across Majors
- Description - There are few ideas that span every major at a major university, but one that is absolutely true for each is the fact that a student learns more by doing rather than listening. Universities like Stanford have begun to implement this with the d.school being open to all majors, but OU is slow in this area. If we want students to be as well prepared as possible when graduating, we need to get the students doing projects that have a real world impact and allow the students to get a hands on experience. To do this, we can partner with local business and work directly with them to develop projects that a small team of students can work on.
- Team Leaders - Ryan Phillips, Thomas Landers (Dean of Engineering), Cameron McCoy (Executive Director of Corporate Engagement Office)
- Milestones -
- First agreement with company for students to work on project - Fall 2014
- Integrate into class - Spring 2015
''''Tactic #3: Presidential Dream Creativity Course-L
''''Random: Start-Up Career Fair