Hey friends, welcome back to The Learning Project Podcast! Iâm so excited youâre here with me today because weâre diving into something that sits at the very heart of transforming student learningâthe innovation mindset.
This one hits close to home because the shift weâre going to talk about today? It changed everything for me as a teacher. And I truly believe it can change everything for you too.
Let me take you back for a secondâI remember standing in front of my class, wondering why my students werenât asking more questions. Why werenât they more curious? More invested? And the truth hit me like a ton of bricks: I hadnât created space for that curiosity or innovation to grow.
That moment flipped a switch. I stopped leading those “cookbook labs” where every student followed the same step-by-step instructions, and instead, I challenged them to design their own experiments to test different variables. That was a powerful shift toward an innovation mindsetâand the difference in student engagement was instant.
They had autonomy. They had ownership. They were solving problems, making decisions, testing ideas, and reflecting when things didnât go as planned. In other words, they were thinking like scientists and engineers. They were building an innovation mindset.
Todayâs episode is all about helping you create that same energy in your classroomâwhere inquiry thrives, students feel empowered, and learning becomes a space of creativity, resilience, and innovation. Iâm sharing simple routines, practical strategies, and a free resource to help you bring the innovation mindset to life right away.
Letâs get into it.
When we talk about the innovation mindset, weâre talking about developing habits like curiosity, creativity, critical thinking, risk-taking, perseverance, and the ability to adapt when things donât go as planned. These arenât just skills for schoolâtheyâre real-world survival tools that help students succeed in any path they take.
And hereâs whatâs amazing: research backs this up. According to the P21 Framework for 21st Century Learning, creativity and problem-solving are essential for future readiness. John Hattieâs work shows that student ownership and teacher clarity are among the most effective ways to boost achievement. And when we intentionally foster an innovation mindset, those pieces come together beautifully.
But hereâs the good newsâyou donât need a fancy lab or endless prep time. The innovation mindset lives in the small shifts: the questions you ask, the opportunities you give students to lead, and how you celebrate thinking over perfection.
Letâs start with one of my favorite tools: phenomena-based learning. When students are introduced to something they donât fully understandâlike âWhy do some objects sink while others float?â or âWhy does static electricity make your hair stand up?ââthey lean in. Theyâre curious. That moment of wondering is where the innovation mindset is born.
Another strategy? Inquiry routines like âClassify and Justifyâ (formerly my Mystery Sort). These activities build critical thinking, communication, and collaborative innovation. They encourage students to look at the same problem in different ways, defend their thinking, and embrace multiple possible answersâjust like real-world innovators do.
You can try sorting types of energy, animal adaptations, or even parts of a system. When students debate and refine their ideas, theyâre practicing the very core of the innovation mindsetâflexible thinking, collaboration, and creative problem-solving.
Another powerful habit? Thinking aloud. When I model my own curiosityâsaying things like, âHmm, I wonder what would happen if I changed this variableâŚââIâm showing students how real scientists and engineers think. Iâm also showing them that not knowing is okayâitâs part of the process. Thatâs an essential part of building an innovation mindset: normalizing uncertainty and valuing iteration.
And I canât emphasize this enoughâcelebrate the process. When students redesign, rethink, and try again, thatâs where growth happens. Iâve built reflection into every stage of STEM learning so students can track how their ideas change over time. That sense of progress is fuel for the innovation mindset.
Want to know a simple but powerful tip? Start with science, then build your other subjects around it. Thatâs how I support my teachers in creating authentic, innovation-centered learning experiences.
Take Kindergarten: we study forces, weather, and animals. From there, we choose books, writing prompts, and even art projects that tie into those themes. In doing this, students begin to see the world as interconnectedâjust like real innovators do.
Math? It becomes the tool to solve real problems, not just a worksheet. Students gather data, measure changes, and analyze results in meaningful ways. Art brings creativity to the forefrontâdesigning, modeling, building, and reflecting. All of these moments nurture an innovation mindset by showing students they can use their ideas across domains.
And when we assess with rubrics that highlight collaboration, creativity, and critical thinking? That reinforces the message that how they think is just as important as what they produce.
Now, I know youâre busy. So here are a few low-lift, high-impact ways to bring the innovation mindset into your classroom this week:
Before we wrap up, I want you to remember this: building an innovation mindset doesnât require big, flashy lessons. It starts with small momentsâwhere students feel safe to wonder, safe to try, and proud of how they grow.
So hereâs your next step:
đ Head to www.learning-project.com and grab your free STEAM Spark Plug . Itâs full of routines, questions, and planning tools to help you embed the innovation mindset into your everyday teaching.
Also check out the Wonder and Work Template Toolkit with templates that you can take and use in your classroom immediately!
Want to keep growing?
Letâs stay connected!
đ¸ Instagram: @thelearningprojectjenn
đ Facebook: The_Learning_Project
đ§ Or email me directly at jenn@learning-project.com
And heyâif youâre interested in a live session or webinar to see these ideas in action, let me know! Iâm working on something special, and Iâd love to invite you into the room.
Youâve got this, friend. Letâs help every student think like a scientist, dream like an engineer, and grow with the confidence that their ideas can change the world.
See you next timeâand remember, the innovation mindset starts with you. đ