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  • Koen Timmers - Education technologist
    2024/04/30

    What does it take to build a global network of millions of people taking action around a cause you care about? The story of Koen Timmers reveals some of the practical ways.


    In this case the cause is climate change, the network is teachers and students, and the innovation includes a clever app for building community and measuring impact.


    Koen tells how he gradually evolved this work from his humble beginnings in a family of teachers and a curiosity about technology, to a point where his work has been recognised in both the worlds of education (he was a top-ten finalist for the Global Teacher Prize) and climate action (supported by David Attenborough and others).


    Today with Jennifer Williams and the team at Take Action Global, Koen Timmers is continuing to build this movement towards even greater scale and impact.


    His story will encourage anyone who aspires to achieve great things and who is willing to muster the patience to invest and evolve over years or even decades.



    (00:00) Introduction to Koen Timmers

    (01:55) THE PAST - My Life and Career Journey

    (11:21) Creative artefact

    (12:35) THE PRESENT - My Work and Innovation

    (30:50) THE FUTURE - Future of Work

    (27:07) What's uniquely human?

    (33:23) Concluding advice



    USEFUL LINKS:


    Koen Timmers www.timmers.me


    Profile when elected as an Ashoka Fellow: www.ashoka.org/en-be/fellow/koen-timmers


    Book - Game Changer: https://a.co/d/egl3ilo


    Taking Action Global: www.takeactionglobal.org


    Climate Action Project (from TAG): www.climateactionproject.org


    EarthProject app for iOS and Android: www.earthproject.org

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    35 分
  • Shaun Fitzgerald - Climate engineer
    2024/03/12

    Climate scientist Shaun Fitzgerald OBE is director of the Centre for Climate Repair at the University of Cambridge (UK), and a former director of the Royal Institution.


    As an innovator, Dr Fitzgerald founded and led a company 'Breathing Buildings Ltd', pioneering new ways to ventilate buildings that can halve energy bills.


    More recently, responding to worsening climate forecasts and the fear of tipping points, his work has focused on 'climate repair' which includes trials of technologies to brighten clouds, obstruct warm sea currents and even refreeze the arctic.


    (00:00) Introduction to Shaun Fitzgerald

    (02:48) THE PAST - My life and career journey

    (14:57) 'Reduce' - The role of buildings in reducing energy use

    (21:49) What have you learned about innovation itself?

    (24:49) Creative artefact

    (26:15) THE PRESENT - Latest innovations in climate repair: 'Remove' and 'Refreeze'

    (35:56) THE FUTURE - Future of work

    (37:26) What's uniquely human?

    (38:00) Concluding advice


    Cover image credit: Katerina Pavlyuchkova on Unsplash.


    USEFUL LINKS:


    Cambridge centre for climate repair: https://www.climaterepair.cam.ac.uk/refreeze


    Refreezing the Arctic (article): https://magazine.alumni.cam.ac.uk/refreezing-the-arctic-working-with-nature-to-buy-us-more-time/


    Breathing Buildings (natural and hybrid ventilation systems): https://www.breathingbuildings.com/knowledge/natural-ventilation/


    Cambridge Zero (the University's response to the climate crisis): https://www.zero.cam.ac.uk/our-mission

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    40 分
  • Admir Masic - Materials scientist
    2024/02/21

    This episode follows the remarkable journey of Admir Masic, a refugee turned influential chemist and materials scientist at MIT.


    You'll discover how he and his colleagues are taking an unusual unique approach to sustainability that is transforming one of the construction industry's most notorious materials - concrete - into one that could revolutionise renewable energy storage around the world.


    From ancient Rome to modern laboratories, Masic's story is not just about scientific breakthroughs but also about the power of education, resilience, and innovation in facing global challenges.


    Tune in for an inspiring tale of how personal adversity doesn't have to be a barrier to talent, and how a passion for learning has contributed to groundbreaking solutions for our planet's future.



    (00:00) Introduction to Admir Masic

    (03:20) THE PAST - My Life and Career Journey

    (17:54) MIT React - programme for talented refugees

    (21:12) Creative artefact

    (22:23) THE PRESENT - My Work and Innovation

    (32:02) THE FUTURE - Future of Work

    (34:19) Concluding advice and what's special about humans in a world of AI



    MIT Refugee Action Hub (ReACT) and the Emerging Talent Programme: ⁠https://react.mit.edu/⁠


    DMAT company innovations including self-healing concrete: https://dmat.co/it/self-healing/


    News - Storing electricity in concrete: https://news.mit.edu/2023/mit-engineers-create-supercapacitor-ancient-materials-0731


    The Masic Lab at MIT - bio-inspired design: https://www.masicgroup.mit.edu/


    Concrete Sustainability Hub (CS-Hub) at MIT: https://cshub.mit.edu/


    MIT Dept of Civil and Environmental Engineering: https://cee.mit.edu/

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    37 分
  • Maureen Dunne - Neurodiversity expert
    2023/12/15

    Cognitive scientist Maureen Dunne explains how the emergence of the term 'neurodiversity' has led to a postitive, strengths based approach that can give organisations a competitive edge. She describes how a move away from a purely medical model of conditions like autism and ADHD widens the focus beyond disability, and how the idea of 'universal design' enables everyone to thrive in schools and workplaces.


    Oxford Rhodes scholar Maureen Dunne tells her personal story, from early challenges and tragedies to the world's top academic institutions, and how this led her to the cause of neurodiversity. She describes her work supporting start-ups and established companies to innovate at scale, including her work with the Lego Foundation. The podcast concludes with a discussion of AI and the future of work, in which Dunne claims that neurodivergent people have strengths that are unlikely to be replicated by machines any time soon. The implication is that forward-thinking organisations should move faster to recruit and integrate people with diverse minds.


    (00:00) Introduction to Maureen Dunne

    (01:51) THE PAST - My Life and Career Journey

    (10:34) What is neurodiversity?

    (16:53) Creative artefact

    (18:34) THE PRESENT - My Work and Innovation

    (26:02) THE FUTURE - Future of Work

    (27:07) What's uniquely human?

    (30:12) Concluding advice


    Book: The Neurodiversity Edge https://www.theneurodiversityedge.org


    Example companies supported by the Lego Foundation:

    socialciphergame.com

    kahoot.com


    About universal design: https://universaldesign.ie/what-is-universal-design/


    About the Rhodes scholarship to Oxford: https://www.rhodeshouse.ox.ac.uk/scholarships/the-rhodes-scholarship/

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    32 分
  • Abiel Ma - Environmental entrepreneur
    2023/11/29

    Abiel Ma is CEO of Vuala, a start-up pioneering decentralised food waste reprocessing.

    He and his company may be relatively young, but like all good innovations they stand on the shoulders of others.

    What makes this innovation story unusual is that the shoulders in question are those of his father who carried out decades of research and development in environmental science and mechanical engineering.

    This father-and-son team now bring their combined skills to bear on a problem that has global significance. Worldwide more than 30% of food is wasted and - aside from the obvious injustice - it is a huge source of greenhouse gas emissions. Capturing and reprocessing food waste is therefore a vital part of the solution to the climate crisis.

    This episode covers Abiel's personal and professional journey from the towers of Hong Kong to an ambitious Cambridge start-up.

    We discuss the tensions of working with family across generations, the story of the company and its innovation, and Abiel Ma's personal predictions for the future of work.


    (00:00) Introduction to Abiel Ma

    (01:44) THE PAST - My Life and Career Journey

    (08:57) My father - Anthony Ma

    (14:22) Creative artefact

    (15:39) THE PRESENT - My Work and Innovation

    (25:34) THE FUTURE - Future of Work

    (27:51) What's special about humans?

    (29:06) Concluding advice


    Links and credits

    Company website - www.vuala.co.uk

    AI tools he mentioned included

    • Chat GPT: https://chat.openai.com
    • Octoparse: https://www.octoparse.com


    Recent awards and recognition:

    • UNICEF Innovation30: Young Innovators Shaping the Future, 2023 - https://www.unicef.org/innovation/climate/innovation-30/vuala
    • Innovate UK Young Innovator's Awards 2023 - https://iuk.ktn-uk.org/projects/programme-young-innovators/abiel-ma/
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    31 分
  • Anup Surendranath - Law professor
    2023/09/07

    Anup Surendranath is professor of law at National Law University in Delhi. 

    He is also Executive Director of Project 39a, an initiative whose sustained representation of prisoners sentenced to death in the Supreme Court of India has led to significant changes and improvements in the law.

    What motivates someone to take up the cause of death row prisoners? His story gives us some insight into his motivation and his journey, propelled by his hard-working mother and by the generosity of others, from hardship in the suburbs of Bangalore to the spires of Oxford.

    Professor Anup Surendranath talks about his decision to return to India to a life driven by the desire to close the ‘justice gap’ that he describes vividly in this episode of The Innovator’s Journey. Technology may have a role to play in the future, he explains, but today the story is rooted in the people, professions and institutions that have caught the vision for working together. In doing so, they are showing a way to increase access to justice for the people of India and for all of us.


    (00:00) Introduction to Anup Surendranath

    (02:13) THE PAST - My Life and Career Journey

    (21:41) Creative artefact

    (24:52) THE PRESENT - My Work and Innovation

    (30:42) THE FUTURE - Future of Work

    (31:59) What's the role of technology?

    (33:35) Concluding advice


    The podcast (mentioned) with Californian law professor Bryan Stevenson is here: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/bryan-stevenson-the-power-of-mercy-and-forgiveness/id1264843400?i=1000413114819 (34:48: “I believe we’re more than the worst thing we’ve ever done. I believe that grace is power. I believe that love is justice. And I believe we have to judge how we’re doing by how we treat the poor, the incarcerated and the condemned.”)

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    36 分
  • Ross Smith - Engineering manager
    2023/08/01

    As a software engineer with seven patents, Ross Smith is a proven innovator. He is well equipped to help Microsoft apply AI creatively and responsibly today, which is the primary focus of the innovation featured in this episode.

    However, it is as a manager of software teams that I find Ross's innovative spirit most intriguing. Where did he get his ideas on management? What leads him to continually innovate? His career story reveals some unexpected influences, and his position today enables him to give us all some practical tips for the collaboration between man and machine in the future world of work.


    (00:00) Introduction to Ross Smith

    (01:53) THE PAST - My Life and Career Journey

    (19:50) Creative artefact

    (21:43) THE PRESENT - My Work and Innovation

    (27:25) THE FUTURE - Future of Work

    (30:04) What's special about humans?

    (33:21) Concluding advice


    The innovation (more technical): https://www.microsoft.com/insidetrack/blog/unlock-our-six-tips-for-managing-your-support-content-with-ai-and-chatgpt/

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    36 分
  • Lyssa Adkins - Agility and leadership coach
    2023/07/05

    Do you ever get frustrated at work because everything keeps changing? Your boss is being demanding. Your client changes their mind (again). Interest rates go up. There's a war on the other side of the planet. Someone sneezed and you caught it. Stuff happens.

    Lyssa Adkins got frustrated being a project manager in a big organisation with ever more complicated projects. So frustrated she threw in the towel. It was a crisis moment. And then, almost accidentally, she discovered a new way to get things done.

    The podcast charts her course from stressed-out manager to happy and successful author and an 'agility and leadership coach'. Today Lyssa works with leaders and teams that are making their own journey to agile ways of working. It's an approach that she believes can also help us tackle some of the world's most intractable problems.


    (00:00) Introduction to Lyssa Adkins

    (03:23) THE PAST - My Life and Career Journey

    (10:54) Discovering agile

    (18:24) Creative artefact

    (21:32) THE PRESENT - My Work and Innovation

    (30:10) THE FUTURE - Future of Work

    (32:36) What's the future role of technology?

    (33:48) What's special about humans?

    (35:32) Concluding advice


    Links and credits

    Cover image: based on the timeline graphic in Lyssa's book Coaching Agile Teams, published by Pearson.

    Agile fundamentals: https://lyssaadkins.com/blog-1/category/videos/agile-fundamentals/

    Book: Coaching Agile Teams https://lyssaadkins.com/product/coaching-agile-teams-paperback/

    What is agile coaching? https://www.icagile.com/what-is-agile-coaching



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    37 分