Adobe Executive Vice President Matt Thompson was in the Adobe Sydney office this week for the big Adobe Symposium event and he met up with a group of students Davidson High School who were taking part in an Adobe Day.
Adobe Campus Leader and Davidson High teacher Jessica Peade, organized this excursion for her Year 9 media students and managed to get a photo with Matt.
This Adobe Day was focused on video production. The students began by creating a short video about their passions with Adobe Spark Video via their iPhones.
It is always a pleasure to see how creative students can be when they get access to Adobe’s professional applications.
The NSW Department of Education have had a long-term agreement with Adobe that supplies all of their primary & secondary students and teachers with access to Adobe’s creativity & productivity tools. NSW DoE teachers & students can also access the Adobe Creative Cloud software on their personal devices. Click here to find out more information.
Shantanu Narayen has been the Chairman & CEO of Adobe since 2007. He joined Adobe in 1998 as a senior vice-president of worldwide product research.
Most of the St Mary’s students were experienced users of a range of Adobe tools so it was a pleasure to help extend their knowledge of video editing with Premiere Pro and image manipulation with Photoshop.
The boys were all new the the Adobe Spark tools and were impressed with their simplicity and practical use in a range of school & social settings.
Special thank you to their teacher Mr Fady Ibrahim for organising this excursion.
Along with recently celebrating 1/2 a million members, the Adobe Education Exchangehas launched a new look and feel.
Highlights include:
New Discover experience which leverages a machine learning algorithm that recommends content that leads to increased engagement and user satisfaction.
A new, more intuitive search experience to help novices and pros alike quickly find what they are looking for.
Powerful new ways tofind community and connect with other members.
A new design that highlights the creative potential of using Adobe products in the classroom.
The Adobe Education Exchange courses are more popular than ever. We currently have 3,500 enrollees in our Adobe XD course and 4,500 enrollees in two Spark courses.
Click here to find out more about the Adobe EdEx Collaborative Courses.
I was very humbled and privileged to be one of the three keynote presenters along with Will Richardson from the USA and Dr Jordan Nguyen from Sydney.
Will is a former teacher and Edu Tech administrator. He is the author of six books and is regularly asked to do keynote presentations around the world. Will is a co-founder (along with Australia’s own Brice Dixon) of Modern Learners, an online community aimed at helping educators put the focus back on learning in their classrooms.
My favourite part of Will’s presentation was his references to Professor Seymour Papert. It’s so closely aligned with a number of the points in my keynote.
Dr Jordan Nguyen is a TV Presenter and biomedical engineer and, according to his website, his mission is to improve the lives of as many people as possible and to be a driving force behind positive human and technological evolution into the future.
Dr Zguyen shared about some of the amazing people he has met and lessons he has learned while producing a range of scientific documentaries. His stories about building a wheelchair and a car that can be controlled with just the mind were amazing. And seeing a boy who could only move his eyes drive the car was an inspiration for everyone and made us all wonder what may be possible in the future. Check out his keynote show reel …
My keynote session was titled The importance of sparking creativity in the classroom. Being the second keynote, I felt like I was an insignificant filling between two amazing pieces of bread.
In between the keynotes were a range of excellent workshop options for the teachers to enjoy. It was great to see Adobe Education Leaders Brett Kent (from NSW) & Joel Aarons (from Victoria) in action.
I had the pleasure of running a workshop on Adobe Spark and one on Digital Portfolios with Adobe tools.
Special thanks to the staff of Kingswood Primary for again putting on such an amazing event.
All the resources I shared during the keynote and the workshop sessions can be found on the Adobe Education Exchange via – http://bit.ly/adobe-iii18
On Thursday 9th August, I had the pleasure to introduce Peggy Grande to all the Year 11 students at Pymble Ladies College in Sydney.
Peggy was the executive assistant to US President Ronald Reagan after he left office. She has had an amazing experience regularly engaging with world leaders and these days she spends much of her time speaking at conferences and seminars to a wide range of audiences.
I had the great fortune to meet Peggy on a recent flight from the US to Melbourne and was delighted to hear her story. She very generously offered some of her valuable time to engage with some of the teachers and students I work with in Victoria & NSW.
The Principal of Pymble, Mrs Vicki Waters, and members of her executive staff put on a lovely lunch for Peggy and myself before we met with the Year 11s.
Kim Maksimovic, the IT Integrator at Pymble was my main contact at the school. I was so pleased when she was able to organise our visit at such short notice.
Kim took the opportunity to record a podcast interview with Peggy as part of series she is doing on women in leadership.
Some of the key messages shared by Peggy to the Year 11s included the following …
There is no limit to what can you can achieve as long as you don’t mind who gets the credit
Don’t give into the drama of challenging situations
Prioritise people – people are the most important things
Leadership is a mindset, not a title
A good leader is always looking forward with optimism & inspiration
We always have a choice to either be toxic to our environment or optimistically contagious
You can be strong a successful and also be a good person at the same time
Click here to see my article on a dinner I organised in Victoria with Peggy and some key educators.
Click here to see a video interview I recorded with Peggy when she was in Melbourne.
Inspired by the need to take learning from the classroom into the real world, the Game Changer Challenge involved connecting primary & secondary schools from across NSW with leading education technology and design thinking professionals to solve the big question – how can tomorrow’s schools help create the future?
100 schools entered the challenge and the 16 finalist were selected to take part in three days of activities and creativity at the brand-new NSW DoE Headquarters in Parramatta.
Check out the recruitment video …
Day 1
For the first day of the Challenge, teachers went through a bootcamp where they learned about, and gain confidence in using the Design Thinking process as a teaching methodology. This was run by Tricky Jigsaw an Innovation Design Consultancy.
The students had a separate program where they listened to panels of industry experts (which were broadcast live on the NSW DoE Facebook site) and enjoyed a set of workshop activities aimed at equipped them with the skills required carry out the Challenge the following day.
I had the pleasure of being on the second panel along with Janne Ryan founder of TEDx Sydney, Rebecca Smallchua from Thankyou & Ben Cooper Managing Director of Tricky Jigsaw.
The workshop sessions I ran along with Jane Chen & Jerry Wong from Adobe were based on Adobe Spark Video. Brett Kent (Adobe Education Leader) is now working full time with the NSW DoE STEMshare program was also a great help.
Day 2
The second day was focused on applying the Design Thinking process to a real world problem and help the students to answer the main Challenge question – How can tomorrow’s school help create the future?
The students also has the wonderful opportunity to do a physical workout on the rooftop with Ninja Warrior Jack Wilson.
Most of the afternoon, and even up to 8PM, was spent working in teams to plan a pitch about the school of the future to a panel of education and industry experts. Representatives from the NSW DoE STEM team, Microsoft, Amazon, Lego and of course Adobe were all on hand to help the teams build their pitch ideas.
Day 3
The third day was pitch day. The teams added their final touches to their presentation before presenting them to a panel of education and industry experts who were judging them including the department’s Secretary Mr Mark Scott.
It was great to see a number of Adobe applications being used to help the teams pitch their ideas such as Spark Video, Spark Post, Photoshop, Premiere Pro and Character Animator.
The winners
Every team was a winner just by being involved in the event, but the primary school who was judged with the best pitch idea was …
A special congratulations to the the NSW Department of Education, Tricky Jigsaw, Microsoft, TEDx, Amazon, Lego, Adobe and the following schools for such an amazing three days of learning, creativity and fun …
PRIMARY SCHOOLS
Lidcombe Public School
Ingleburn Public School
Oakhill Drive Public School
Cherrybrook Public School
Cudgegong Valley Public School Menindee Central School
Alstonville Public School
Thirroul Public School
HIGH SCHOOLS
Chatswood High School
Lurnea High School
Beverly Hills Girls High School
Armidale High School
Campbelltown Performing Arts High School Gloucester High School
Carenne School
Hurlstone Agricultural High School
Adobe’s Creative Cloud and associated software is now available for many Catholics school teachers and students throughout Victoria. Marymede Catholic College in South Morang, Melbourne and St John’s Regional Collegein Dandenong hosted the first of several planned professional learning events for catholic school teachers.
The aim of these events is to help Victorian Catholic School teachers understand how and why Adobe tools enhance digital literacy and creativity in the teaching & learning process.
Click here if you are interested in finding out more and possibly taking part in future similar events for Victorian catholic school teachers.
Special thank you to Tanya Moran from Winthrop for helping to put these events together.
On my recent flight from LA to Melbourne I had the pleasure of sitting next to the amazing Peggy Grande who was traveling to Australia to keynote a series of conference events for Executive Assistance. I naturally asked her about her experience as an EA and she started to tell me about her life as the personal assistant to USA President Ronald Reagan during his time as past President from 1989 to 1999.
Peggy has written a book about her time with President Reagan titled The President Will See You Nowand she is regularly asked to speak at conferences, seminars and a range of media networks across the globe about her experiences and reflections of the Reagan years.
She was delighted to hear about the Adobe Education Leaders network and was keen to meet some of the members so I organised a very last minute event with the support of YGAP at the Fest of Merit restaurant in Richmond.
This was a wonderful opportunity for these educators and leaders to meet with Peggy and discuss US politics, world politics and the education system in the US and Australia and how we are preparing young people for the future.
Peggy was gracious enough to do a video interview with me prior to the dinner about the importance of encouraging creativity.
I enjoyed working with a group of talented educators at Marymede Catholic College this week, sharing with them some of the recent developments in the world of Adobe in Education.
Most of these teachers were experienced Adobe users so we were able to achieve a lot in a short space of time. I was impressed with their Photoshop & Spark skills and was delighted to introduce them to Character Animator.
This was the first of a series of events I am running this year for Victorian Catholic school with the help of Winthrop Australia.
Day 2 of the 2018 Nth American AEL Summit began with a number of participants successfully completing ACA (Adobe Certified Associate) exam qualifications that were offered by Certiport.
Then, after a welcome from Clara Galan, Tricia Lawrence (Adobe’s Senior Community Manager, Customer Care) shared information about the ACP (Adobe Community Professionals) Program and the Tech Wednesday sessions that she manages.
We then heard from PR firm Edelman as well as the team from Adobe Social Media. Edelman help manage Adobe’s annual creativity research projects. The Social Media team encouraged us to keep sharing the value of Adobe to our wider social networks.
Ben Slutter shared the strategy around the Adobe Creative Jams program and how it is being implemented in a number of universities.
We then had the opportunity for a sneak peak into some new initiatives that may end up as Adobe apps in the future. Some we can’t communicate yet but one that we can is Project Lincoln which featured at Adobe Max 2017. It is a cool way of making info-graphics and visualising data.
The wonderful Kelly Komode from Michigan finished off the Creative Catalyst Talks with her presentation titled Less Can Be More: Student-Driven Creative Problem Solving.
TeachMeet – Creative Catalyst Ignite Talks
A series of short Creative Catalyst Ignite Talks was a clear highlight of this year’s summit. These were led in a TeachMeet style event by Clara Galan and Greg Hodgson.
Chana Messer from the University Of Southern California was first up with a great presentation titled Telling Your Story with Adobe Spark.
Phil Badham presented some very interesting insights from the UK with the topic Building Creative Problem Solving in an Educational Age of Assessment and Anxiety.
Rebecca Hare, Art/Design teacher from Missouri is a new AEL this year and she presented a very engaging Creative Catalyst Ignite Talk titled Re-Thinking Student Work: Creation and Presentation.
Meredith Blanche, Multimedia & Technology teacher from Seattle, Washington presented the topic Letting Students Learn from Exploration.
Dan Armstrong, teacher at Ridgevue High School, Nampa, Idaho presented the topic Shaping CTE Pathway with Creative Cloud.
The amazing Joseph Labrecque from the University Of Denver presented the topic Rethinking Creative Collaborations
Andrew McAllister from Ocad University in Toronto, Canada presented the topic Revelations Big and Small: Astro and Macro Photography.
The rest of the day involved a range of focus group, allowing AELs to chat in more depth with Adobe about a range of topics. Then we all split into groups to visit the following neighbouring companies …
Pinterest
Uber
Pereira O’Dell
SocioFabrica
Google San Francisco
Airbnb
Remind
Clever, &
XYZ
The Goldern Gate Tap Room near downtown San Francisco was the venue for our closing dinner.
Special thank you to Clara Galan (right) and Tacy Trowbridge (left) for leading this amazing international education community and putting together a great AEL Summit.