What changes have you seen in invention education over the two-plus decades?
It’s the online component. This last year forced it to come. Now you can teach online, judge, and register, but the student videos are the most telling. It shows a student has thought about the problem, and that its a problem that they really wanted to solve.
Why should a student get involved with invention convention?
Students usually get involved because there’s an activity or an event that spurs them on. Getting kids intrigued about invention is easy to do. We did “take apart workshops” so kids could understand that every single thing in their house, someone made it, and it solved a problem. Rivets vs. screws, plastic vs. metal, wire vs. wireless, heating units, resistance — all of that comes up. Hair dryers are the best, irons are the worst to take apart. To get students to begin thinking about inventing, you just need to get that spark going. For kids it’s easy… they love new stuff and they love to get hands on.
Why should teachers bring invention education to their classroom?
In classrooms we do science, a lot of technology, and heaps of mathematics. The “E” in STEM is missing and it isn’t taught for the most part in schools. Invention is the inroad to engineering. The challenge that teachers face is the prescribed curriculum. My role now in Florida is to help teachers and school leaders find the pathway to invention as a regular teaching topic. Educators ultimately love teaching invention; we need to support them in finding the pathway to acceptability. Things are changing, but they only change if we change them.
Invention Convention
November 27, 2023
February 02, 2023
January 05, 2023
Bringing Young Innovators Together
Winning inventors and entrepreneurs are invited to compete at these prestigious, high-profile annual events.
Competitions