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February 26th, 2009

Who's to blame for America's loss of innovation?

Posted by Harry Fuller @ 10:01 am

Categories: Blogroll, environmental health, federal government, law & politics, research

Tags: Innovation, U.S., Education, Teacher, John Muir, Leadership, Government, Games, Strategy, Management

I blogged about one study of forty nations that showed the U.S. falling in competition and innovation. Down to 6th from its former leadership slot. Can we stop the slide?

The talkbacks posit various interesting theories and placing of blame. Several indicate the deteriorating state of American education. I suspect that is part of the problem. The easy grading of today vs. decades earlier makes it impossible to find out if a “good student” really knows anything. And many of our schools seem to be simply teaching craft not research or logical thinking.

American innovation

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It took five minutes for this talkback to appear, read all of it below. “America’s future youth is sitting around eating junk food playing XBox Live and PS3. Mean while other countries are making the xboxes and ps3. America will continue to slip farther… down the list unless the country as a whole changes … attitude. America is a wonderful place but we are becoming fat and stupid.” I wish I could disagree. I have two well-educated sons who’re successful, one in business, one a scientist with a PhD. Neither lives in the U.S. and it’s unlikely they would return. Better jobs, students and working conditions elsewhere.

One talkback says “Oh, Mr. Fuller, I think the primary cause of our “brain-dead” society is not a lack of government funding, but rather the “brain-dead” students turned out by a public school system that cares more about teacher benefits than student achievement. For how many decades have we read about how the average student overseas scores higher on standardized tests than our best and brightest? Thank the enormously-powerful teacher’s unions for that.”

I understand that unions are cursed among much of the American body politic. I once had a union job for awhile and found the union leaders to be Neanderthal and out of touch. That said, the average student now spends about 30 hours per week in school for about thirty-five weeks per year. The rest of the time he or she is far away from those evil union members. Video games. Two working parents. Endless TV trash. Facebook and email. Cell phones and texting. Earbuds and vacant stares. Don’t think the teachers alone are the problem here.

Another talkback: “Our kids spend their time shooting each other on game consoles, and our college students spend their time partying. You didn’t really think that this was going to be the kind of preparation that was going to maintain world leadership in anything?”

Hey, a party animal from a rich family can become a two-term President of the U.S. with a C-grade average. What’s so bad about partying? Besides the rising tide of American anti-intellectualism from 1980 through 2008 doesn’t encourage the kid who is smart and really does want to learn. Our government spent years denying global warming. We’re forever fighting over evolution and stem-cell research. That doesn’t bode well for science and technology.

One talkback urges, “Don’t be political.” I’d say, don’t be naive. Everything we do, everything we buy or sell, everything we eat or don’t eat–all political decisions. Putting paper into a printer has political effects. For too long we’ve pretended that business, investment, sports, drug regulations, dietary choices, transportation, education can be somehow politically neutral. And it’s gotten us where we are today: a corrupted monetary system and an endangered planet.
John Muir’s Law: everything is connected to everything else. Every decision we make personally or within any group is political. As some guy in Washington keeps saying, time we took a little personal reposnsibility. You could lay-off every union teacher tomorrow and our youngsters wouldn’t suddenly go home and study while parent(s) are out hustling work or hanging onto a job.

But innovation needs more than education. It needs drawing the smartest, risk-energized folks from other nations as well as encouraging homegrown brains like Edison and Steve Jobs. It’s having the confidence and the capital to support ideas that might not work. That’s where Singapore is now more attractive than the U.S. it seems. From Audubon to Intel’s founding, the U.S. was where you came to have the freedom and encouragement to create. Now there are other places, perhaps with less crime, more formal encouragement, more openness to immigrants with ideas.

My favorite culprit in the private sector: new style CEOs. As one friend said, when your company’s being run by a lawyer or somebody from accounting, your company is doomed. CEOs who don’t know the business but only know the numbers cannot encourage creativity or innovation because a new idea might fail and cost money, lowering profits. When I was committing TV back in 1995 the network types refused to even talk about the Internet. Duh.

And the current freaked-out economy is not good for innovation because it’s reduced VC money, long a great support for real business innovation in the U.S.

Harry FullerA newsman since 1969, Harry Fuller has worked for CBS, ABC, CNBC Europe, CNET and was founding news director at TechTV. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 112 Talkback(s)
Not allowed to fix
The problem is, the teachers and administrators
at the schools do not want to even think that
some of what and how they have been teaching is
part of the problem. We were told by these ... (Read the rest)
Posted by: tbuccelli Posted on: 03/13/09 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Mr Fuller.  MLHACK | 02/26/09
You failed to mention lazy  nucrash | 02/27/09
And when people do excel, is it always rewarded?  HypnoToad | 03/01/09
Eugenics limits Evolution  nucrash | 03/02/09
Exactly correct  Comnenus | 02/27/09
Schooling America went South on purpose  gkrwc | 02/27/09
More subjective conjecture. Is that truly proof?  HypnoToad | 02/27/09
"You're a dork if you don't own one!!"  HypnoToad | 02/27/09
simply teaching craft not research or logical thinking  popcorn224 | 02/26/09
Sheer weight of obstacles can deter.  fcorless@... | 02/27/09
One astonishingly simple solution  Dorkyman | 02/26/09
Sure and privatize social security too  Chad_z | 03/02/09
Not allowed to fix  tbuccelli | 03/13/09
RE: Who's to blame for America's loss of innovation?  mrlinux | 02/26/09
RE: Who's to blame for America's loss of innovation?  bowssen | 02/26/09
LOL. Ditto from the people who chime in and say Americans are stupid...  HypnoToad | 02/26/09
Sigh again.  Economister | 02/26/09
Try and... depends on the context  nucrash | 02/27/09
Spelling...  SimonUK | 02/28/09
I try  nucrash | 03/02/09
Greetings bowssen  elderlybloke | 02/27/09
Language rules and communication.  fcorless@... | 02/28/09
entrepreneurism overcomes  Richard B | 02/28/09
exactly!  albeit | 02/28/09
One possibility...  John L. Ries | 02/26/09
Question for you  frgough | 02/26/09
So what do we do?  John L. Ries | 02/26/09
Politics is not the problem  nucrash | 02/27/09
Its Yin and Yang  snberk341 | 02/27/09
Yep. More distractions  Custard_over_2x_Pie | 02/26/09
Well, we still have Apple...  gregory.dworak@... | 02/26/09
Yup. Take PC hardware, take open source, and sell it for 2~3x the price of  HypnoToad | 02/26/09
Oh dear...  SimonUK | 02/28/09
RE: Who's to blame for America's loss of innovation?  mr1972 | 02/26/09
Dear mr1972  elderlybloke | 02/27/09
Are your family...  SimonUK | 02/28/09
factories what's that?  Michael Fournier | 03/11/09
simple answer  Linux Geek | 02/26/09
umm  shis-ka-bob | 02/26/09
I took it as sarcasm (NT)  John L. Ries | 02/26/09
The American people are to blame  Richard Flude | 02/26/09
Corporations keep saying "no research for its own sake".  HypnoToad | 03/01/09
When push comes to shove...  dominigan | 03/02/09
US Citizens are already REQUIRED to...  SysAn63 | 03/10/09
Obviously this is M$'s fault  Kid Icarus-21097050858087920245213802267493 | 02/26/09
Amen!  David Blomstrom | 02/26/09
Microsoft's Fault?  Kevinul | 02/27/09
Harry are you an American?  BALTHOR | 02/26/09
Corporate Corruption!  David Blomstrom | 02/26/09
RE: Who's to blame for America's loss of innovation?  snews@... | 02/26/09
You based this bombastic piece on 1 study  ThePrairiePrankster | 02/26/09
1 study  hairyR | 02/27/09
Bogus, one experience or one study means little except to demagogues  ThePrairiePrankster | 02/27/09
typical of the author  coffeeshark | 02/27/09
Einstein was never in the private sector.  snberk341 | 02/28/09
Einstein was never in the private sector...  John L. Ries | 02/28/09
Maybe not Einstein....  snberk341 | 02/28/09
Where is the necessity to drive the inventions/innovation?  Custard_over_2x_Pie | 02/26/09
Where to begin...  LiquidLearner | 02/26/09
It's the Columbians are to blame.  DotNetPgmr | 02/26/09
A List  BanjoPaterson | 02/26/09
Parents.  Colfax_Mac | 02/26/09
Only part of the problem  nucrash | 02/27/09
Too much common sense.  Churlish | 02/27/09
Simplifying the problem  fcorless@... | 02/28/09
The school I grew up in has bars, metal detectors, and won't let  HypnoToad | 02/27/09
+1  p4ca64 | 02/28/09
Cultural Cannibalism  terry flores | 02/26/09
Well said! And a tangential thought on socialism:  HypnoToad | 02/27/09
Partial agreement...  Churlish | 02/27/09
why innovate when you can borrow?  albeit | 02/27/09
RE: Who's to blame for America's loss of innovation?  X41 | 02/27/09
RE: Who's to blame for America's loss of innovation?  deadbolt67@... | 02/27/09
RE: Who's to blame for America's loss of innovation?  datasdream@... | 02/27/09
RE: Who's to blame for America's loss of innovation?  bmonster | 02/27/09
RE: Who's to blame for America's loss of innovation?  dixon757@... | 02/27/09
RE: Who's to blame for the Western Society loss of innovation?  testing1,2,3 | 02/27/09
I assume you're a Canuck...  snberk341 | 02/27/09
Yes, American History is real trash.  HypnoToad | 02/27/09
Games and Parties  dragosani | 02/27/09
RE: Who's to blame for America's loss of innovation?  dougbeer | 02/27/09
RE: Who's to blame for America's loss of innovation?  dougbeer | 02/27/09
RE:America's loss of innovation is America's fault!  Enorton42@... | 02/27/09
How?  Comnenus | 02/27/09
RE: Who's to blame? Emphasis on short-term profits  Jim Johnson | 02/27/09
D - All of the above  j.m.galvin | 02/27/09
We have a winner  John L. Ries | 02/27/09
People were saying this in the 1970's too  ThePrairiePrankster | 02/27/09
RE: Who's to blame for America's loss of innovation?  wirecutter | 02/27/09
RE: Who's to blame for America's loss of innovation?  saintisadore | 02/27/09
If THEY jail those who FOUND replacement for oil, then isn't it obvious...  Just True | 02/27/09
innovation has been stifled by  walkerjian@... | 02/27/09
RE: Who's to blame for America's loss of innovation?  cab02149@... | 02/27/09
RE: Who's to blame for America's loss of innovation? - LEGAL System  sys_engineer | 02/27/09
RE: Who's to blame for America's loss of innovation?  SimonUK | 02/28/09
Its Innovation **NOT** education  Aussie_Troll | 02/28/09
A quibble - but Americans didn't invent the electric light...  snberk341 | 02/28/09
Edison invented the incandesent filiment  Aussie_Troll | 02/28/09
Nope, not Edison  snberk341 | 02/28/09
Did the authorities suss out who hacked into the LHC server farm?  HypnoToad | 03/01/09
RE: Innovation **NOT education  Update victim | 03/02/09
RE: Who's to blame for America's loss of innovation?  theriginalgeekmom | 02/28/09
RE: Who's to blame for America's loss of innovation?  Richard B | 02/28/09
To respond to your points:  HypnoToad | 03/01/09
RE: Who's to blame for America's loss of innovation?  The Rifleman | 02/28/09
About "today's 20-somethings"  HypnoToad | 03/01/09
RE: Who's to blame for America's loss of innovation?  dcbatchelor | 03/01/09
RE: Who's to blame for America's loss of innovation?  tester_guy | 03/02/09
RE: Who's to blame for America's loss of innovation?  Update victim | 03/02/09
RE: Who's to blame for America's loss of innovation?  Update victim | 03/02/09
Patents and excessive litigation  bahamude | 03/03/09
RE: Who's to blame for America's loss of innovation?  Michael Fournier | 03/11/09

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