The Education Borg – Update
The Education Borg
But this is not a pity party. We’ve come too far already for that. I know that we have a sustainable and scalable business model for educational empowerment in place. In fact, now that we have this model in place, we also know that there are other potential partners better suited for what we have to offer.
I went to the mat for our current major funding source and came up short. But now, with the proper infrastructure in place and taking students through the E4 Youth sequence of Engagement, Education, Employment & Entrepreneurship, our students will measure up by whatever standards we impose on them – standardized testing or otherwise.
Steve Stoute: The Tanning of America
Over the last several years I’ve been very impressed with Steve Stoute and his forays into advertising. He’s been able to take his vast network of connections in the hip hop world and combine it with a great acumen for trendsetting to build an advertising agency. I love what he is doing in that he is flying the face of what “traditional” ad agencies have done for years. His agency having been bought by a larger general market firm, he has decided to buy back majority ownership and not settle for being marginalized as only an “African-American” or “multi-cultural” shop. He believes that he can have a great impact on the general market and I believe that is more true than ever.
Based on demographic changes in America, the general market, by definition, is multi-cultural. It’s only going to get more diverse in the coming years and Mr. Stoute understands that hip hop culture has a disproportionate mindshare in America and indeed across the world. So, while general market agencies continue to become less diverse, they do so at their own peril. It’s going to get more and more difficult for them to say to their clients that they can be effective at communicating with their customers when so few of them actually look like the audiences they need to reach.
I hope that Mr. Stoute’s move into the general market waters is followed by many more. After all, this a huge opportunity for those willing to make that leap.
Facebook Investor Says Social Is Over
VC guy and musician Roger McNamee lays out 10 very intriguing hypotheses about the future of social media, advertising, and content creation. Some interesting points from the original article at :
http://www.businessinsider.com/roger-mcnamee-video-2011-7#ixzz1T5rACmsH
Microsoft’s share of internet-connected devices has gone from 95% to under 50% in 3 years;
“Apple will sell a hundred million internet-connected devices this year. That’s two thirds of the PC market.” If you add the other non-PC internet devices, that’s more valuable than the PC market.
E4 Youth Initiative
We are building Vertical Teams made up of entrepreneurs, professionals, UT graduate and undergraduate mentors along with our youth who collaborate on special projects centered around the four broad fields of Media Communications, STEM (Science, Tech, Engineering & Math), Entrepreneurship and the Arts.
The FREE morning break out sessions of the summit will provide info for entrepreneurs and professionals on how they can serve as mentors, host tours and employ local youth as well as teachers and organizations who serve youth.
During the 2011 – 2012 school year, the Media Communications Council is offering up to $1000 stipends, training and technical support to teachers willing take students through the E4 sequence!
The afternoon sessions will feature a Non-Profit Roundtable and interactive discussions with professionals from music, entertainment, media, advertising and film about what it takes to build careers in the creative fields.
Check the Agenda for details http://e4youth.com/agenda/.
Sign up for Morning Breakout Sessions and tickets are atwww.e4youth.com.
Podcast: Leveraging Video & Social Media for Your Small Business
Got Video? Live Webcast
Broadcasting Live with Ustream
So, I’m broadcasting my talk on Leveraging Video for Your Small Business or Non-Profit live Wednesday, July 13th 12pm Central for about 1 hour. I hope you’ll enjoy!
In the mean time, here’s an excerpt from a previous talk about Branding Your Creativity Through Social Media.
the US – Marcus Graham Project
So, I met Lincoln Stevens, founder of the Marcus Graham Project, about 3 years ago when I was starting the Media Communications Council. He works with young African American men aspiring to enter the advertising industry and every summer hosts a boot camp in which young come from all over the country to work together for real clients being guided by advertising leaders. I’m very pleased to see that the project is maturing and making an impact on diversity in the ad industry. It was heartening to meet Lincoln and understand what his dream was as I was pursuing a similar dream with the MCC. We too have a come a long way and I look forward to working with Lincoln and his amazing program some time in the near future!
Austin Lifestyles Radio Interview
So, here’s a copy of the radio interview that aired Sunday June 12th on the radio show Austin Lifestyles hosted by Bo Chase. I go in depth about the E4 Youth Summit and our latest wrinkle. We’re establishing Vertical Teams of business leaders, Grad and PreGrad students and the youth we serve around the four broad disciplines of Media Communications, STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering & Mathematics), Entrepreneurship & the Arts. Exciting stuff. Enjoy!
Calls for University “Entrepreneurship” at UT — Higher Education | The Texas Tribune
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Enlarge photo by: Callie RichmondDirector of Intellectual Entrepreneurship, Richard Cherwitz, in his home Mar. 23, 2011.Before his controversial hiring as a special adviser to the University of Texas System, Rick O’Donnell was a largely unknown quantity in the Austin higher education community. What could be determined through his available public writings, which questioned traditional models of academic research and accreditation, sparked an uproar that, in the words of House Higher Education Chairman Dan Branch, “shook the foundations of UT.”
O’Donnell’s ties to the Texas Public Policy Foundation, which supports a set of reforms that have been criticized by the Association of American Universities — the nation’s elite group of research universities — set many on edge. But the foundation’s work is nowhere to be found in reading lists O’Donnell prepared for University of Texas System task forces investigating ways to lower costs and improve academic excellence. Something that was included was a speech from Gordon Gee, who, in an interview with The Texas Tribune, described himself as “perhaps the greatest advocate and fan of the American university that exists.”
Unlike O’Donnell, Gee — the former president of Brown University, former chancellor of Vanderbilt University and current president of Ohio State University — has decades of experience inside the Association of American Universities. Gee’s view on the current state of America’s public universities? “We really do need to reinvent ourselves,” he said.
“The American university is not broken, but it is certainly not reaching its potential in the 21st century,” Gee said. “We are organized very vertically, and we need to be organized horizontally around programs, working groups, centers, institutes and around ideas.”
That’s exactly what communication studies professor Richard Cherwitz has been trying to do at UT since 1997, when he established an initiative known as Intellectual Entrepreneurship, or IE for short. Cherwitz and other faculty involved seek to apply the concept of entrepreneurship to all disciplines, encouraging students and professors to think proactively about their role in society and its relationship to their academic endeavors.
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“There are thousands and thousands of students who, five years down the road, wonder why they majored in what they did and have missed an opportunity,” Cherwitz said. “Education needs to think in entrepreneurial ways where students are thinking about what their brand is, what their value is, and universities should be doing the same thing.”
Cherwitz is careful to point out that IE is neither a program nor a discipline. It is, rather, a philosophy — one that calls for a dismantling of the walls built up over time between academic disciplines, between graduates and undergraduates, and between the university and the surrounding community. For example, students from various disciplines form teams to address solutions to actual local problems like overcrowded emergency rooms. Mentors in the graduate school and the professional world mentor and provide hands-on research experience to undergraduates.
In papers, Cherwitz has argued for graduate-level courses in all disciplines that encourage real-world applications of research. He also advocates reconsidering the current system of university tenure and promotion, suggesting that research, teaching and service may not be discrete categories, and that perhaps an “engagement” element should be added to the process.
Though it was not conceived of as a diversity driver when Cherwitz founded UT’s IE initiative, it has proved to be a good one. More than half of the participants are first-generation or minority students, and more than 70 percent are women. In Austin, the IE initiative is tucked into the university’s Division of Diversity and Community Engagement. At other universities — many of them institutions championed by reformers like O’Donnell — the principles are being adopted on a grander scale.
“Whether you call it IE or something else, this is where education has to go if we want to be competitive and deal with all of the problems this country faces,” Cherwitz said.
According to Cherwitz, the university whose philosophy best illustrates the IE philosophy is Arizona State University.
Since Michael Crow, previously a provost at Columbia University, took over as president in 2002, ASU has made strides to become the self-described “New American University.” Writings on Crow’s efforts were also featured prominently in O’Donnell’s reading lists.
“You can’t operate the great public university on the New England liberal arts college model,” said Crow, who has pushed ASU to not only improve its quality, but expand its enrollment in the process. “You can’t make a university great while being exclusive. You have to make the university great by achieving tremendous things while being inclusive.”
But ASU does not have an elite AAU membership worry about. AAU president Robert Berdahl’s chief concern in his letter to the Texas A&M University System after it began implementing reforms focused on a perceived path that seemed to undervalue academic research. Crow said that would not happen in his model.
In fact, he said, in the last nine years, the university has tripled its research activity while adding 23,000 students to the university with only minimal faculty expansion. “Every university should have scholarship,” he said.
Since Crow’s arrival, the ASU faculty has rapidly increased its number of members in groups like the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the National Academy of Sciences. It now boasts three Nobel laureates. Included in Crow’s eight pillars of the new American university is “conduct use-inspired research.” It’s fourth on the list — right below “value entrepreneurship.”
Holden Thorp, the chancellor of University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill — an AAU school — and author of the recently released Engines of Innovation: The Entrepreneurial University in the Twenty-First Century, admitted that he was initially skeptical of pushes to boost entrepreneurship on his campus.
“I didn’t think it was worth my time because I didn’t think the campus would embrace it,” he said. Now, the school’s minor in entrepreneurship, which is open to students in any discipline, is so popular that it’s overbooked. Classes are taught by professors and entrepreneurs, and, Thorp said, “getting that chemistry right is critical.”
He said innovating without upsetting the old guard is “the secret to creating change in a university.”
At UT, one struggle, Cherwitz said, has been convincing academics that these “entrepreneurship” activities do not distract from their primary research mission. “It drives me crazy, because they are not antithetical notions,” he said. “Why do these things have to be separated? Why can’t you simultaneously be using engagement to promote research and research to promote engagement?”
Of course, a roadblock to change is nothing new at a university. In 2004, UT’s Commission of 125, a group of citizens assembled to construct a vision of the future of the University of Texas at Austin, completed its final report. At the time it observed, “All large organizations resist change, and the recommendations of this report will undoubtedly encounter resistance.” Now, UT President Bill Powers says that many of its recommendations are being implemented.
Gee said he always laughs when people say universities are liberal. “When it comes to change,” he said, “they are the most conservative institutions.”
Video: Steve Golab, CEO – FG SQUARED Interactive Marketing Joins MCC Advisory Board
I would personally like to thank Steve Golab for joining the MCC Advisory Board. I had the pleasure of meeting Steve at Rise 2010 and over the past year we’ve become good friends. Last week, Steve invited me to his office to talk about our mission. I had no intention of selling Steve anything – just informing him about what we do. I was pleased that he graciously offered to support our mission on a monthly basis and I look forward to his guidance and support on the MCC Advisory Board.
Steve Golab, CEO – FG SQUARED Interactive Marketing joins the Media Communications Council Advisory Board and has pledged to support 1 parent a month enrolling their children in It Could Be U: Intensive Mentoring & College Readiness Program.


