The Consortium for School Networking (CoSN) has released its 2024 global Driving K-12 Innovation report, which highlights hurdles, accelerators, and tech enablers impacting education innovation.

The report was developed by CoSN’s Driving K-12 Innovation Advisory Board, which is made up of more than 140 global educators and IT professionals. In preparing the report, the advisory board selected three top hurdles, accelerators, and tech enablers.

CoSN noted that this year’s top topics shifted more from 2023 to 2024 than they have in any of the past five cycles of the project. CoSN said that that shift underscores “a turning point in education and emphasizing the need for collaborative efforts.

“The best aspect of the annual Driving K-12 Innovation report is not to tell education leaders ‘the answer’ about K-12 innovation today. Rather, it is a thoughtful framework for thinking about innovation focused on Hurdles, Accelerators and Tech Enablers,” said Keith R. Krueger, CEO of CoSN. “Too often EdTech stalwarts start with the technology when advocating innovation. CoSN flips that tendency and starts with the ‘why’ (Hurdles).”

Hurdles

For the report, the advisory board defined “hurdles” as roadblocks that force schools to slow down, prepare themselves and make a leap. The top three hurdles for 2024 are:

  • Attracting and Retaining Educators and IT Professionals: Hiring and keeping school staff is a significant problem for school systems; many educators are experiencing social and emotional burnout, as well as low pay compared to other sectors, causing them to set aside their passion for teaching and leave the field.
  • Ensuring Cybersecurity and Safety Online: Teaching, learning, and conducting business in education with digital tools is now a baseline requirement for teachers, students, and administrators. Schools must be proactive in building systems to protect and empower educated users to safely learn and grow with digital technologies.
  • Scaling Innovation and Inertia of Education Systems: Schools are challenged to engage in and effectively scale innovation – adapting what is working well and scaling it out across a school, district, or state/country.

Accelerators

Accelerators were defined as real-world megatrends or catalysts that help motivate and increase the speed of innovation. According to CoSN, the top three are:

  • Changing Attitudes Toward Demonstrating Learning: There is a rising groundswell of discussion around assessing, documenting, communicating, and assigning value to student learning – as well as relating this learning to higher education, vocational training, career pathways, and living in the real-world.
  • Building the Human Capacity of Leaders: Strengthening the professional community of schools and providing opportunities for educators and all K-12 professionals to learn and master new skills can open the door to innovative practices that can enhance student experiences.
  • Learner Agency: It’s all about students as leaders in their learning; reconceptualizing their role from that of “student” to that of “learner.” When immersed in a strong learning environment, learners can transform from order-takers to innovators.

Tech Enablers

Tech enables are the tools that grease the wheels for schools to surmount Hurdles and leverage Accelerators. The top three are:

  • Generative Artificial Intelligence (Gen AI): Generative artificial intelligence has emerged as a transformative force in education, changing both how students learn and what they need to learn. As school systems worldwide explore the benefits and challenges of this technology, they are both developing and seeking expert guidance to meet the urgent need for policies and processes that ensure the safe, effective, and responsible use of Gen AI for all stakeholders.
  • Analytical & Adaptive Technologies: Analytics refers to the process of analyzing data collected about student learning and the opportunity to leverage data to inform instructional decision making. Adaptive technologies are tools that adapt to the student based on their interactions with the technology.
  • Rich Digital Ecosystem: Connecting systems or digital environments can form powerful digital ecosystems for enabling student learning and/or supporting education administration. These interconnected systems of online and virtual spaces can span formal school settings and beyond.
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Kate Polit
Kate Polit
Kate Polit is MeriTalk SLG's Assistant Copy & Production Editor, covering Cybersecurity, Education, Homeland Security, Veterans Affairs
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