At the University of Kansas Social Innovation Lab and Orange Sparkle Ball, Inc., we have been partnering on research to deeply understand social ecosystems. As a result of this work, we’re excited to release the first in a series of white papers for those building ecosystems and leading systems change. We offer this paper for those who seek rigorous evidence about the effectiveness and impact of their collective work. How do you know if you’re making enduring change at scale? Building ecosystems involves aligning all elements of such an undertaking, including diverse people, organizations, perspectives, and values, in the service of large-scale equitable change. The investment of time, resources, and social capital needed to bring together a network of people and organizations in the service of something bigger is extensive. Validating that it was worth it requires outcomes and impact. After all that effort, how do you know that you are making headway? Evaluating an ecosystem can provide evidence that the effort by all parts of the network matters or where to pivot or refocus resources. Our Responsive Ecosystems for Change Evaluation Framework is a call to action to bring the best methods and tools we have available to validate and quantify impact at scale. Read more about our approach to ecosystem evaluation: https://lnkd.in/g4MA4iyp #ecosystems #ecosystembuilder #ecosystemevaluation #innovation #SNA #evaluation #systemschange #methodology #impact #effectiveness
Social Innovation Lab at The University of Kansas
高等教育
Lawrence,KS 64 位关注者
Bridging Innovation and Social Science
关于我们
The University of Kansas Social Innovation Lab is a multidisciplinary research and innovation hub that explores the dynamic connections between people, places, and things within complex social systems. At the intersection of technology, data, and research, our lab seeks to understand and drive positive change at scale. We work as a university bridge between public, non-profit, and private sectors - from public health and prevention to social services and community-based practitioners to healthcare and corporate innovators. We translate across network divides, incubate and nurture new ideas for the greater good, and bring the will to make them happen. The lab is led by Dr. Teri Garstka, a social psychologist, researcher, inventor and expert with over 20 years experience in complex social systems, data governance, and public sector technology development. She has a wide network of researchers, practitioners, community organizations, data and technology developers, and innovation partners who collaborate and inform her lab’s work. Check out examples from innovation portfolio: DAISEY: www.daiseysolutions.org IRIS: www.connectwithiris.org Kansas Early Childhood Data Trust: https://kschildrenscabinet.org/data-trust/ Tech-Enabled Community Resilience: https://www.tecresilience.com/
- 网站
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https://www.ku-socialinnovationlab.com/
Social Innovation Lab at The University of Kansas的外部链接
- 所属行业
- 高等教育
- 规模
- 1,001-5,000 人
- 总部
- Lawrence,KS
- 类型
- 教育机构
- 创立
- 2023
地点
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主要
US,KS,Lawrence,66045
Social Innovation Lab at The University of Kansas员工
动态
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We're interested in the power of complex adaptive systems to influence outcomes at scale. Check out our latest research presentation on the population-level benefits of cohesive social care networks to enhance resilience - an example of our model Tech-Enabled Community Resilience model with Orange Sparkle Ball, Inc. and how to evaluate dynamic ecosystems. The future of impact is non-linear! #ecosystems #networkanalysis #complexity #innovation #resilience
Want the latest research on community resilience? I recently presented with colleagues from Orange Sparkle Ball, Inc. and Center for Public Partnerships & Research on social care network cohesion and population health factors at the Sunbelt 2024: Networks and Resilience conference. Check in out ?? https://lnkd.in/grehd7di #community #resilience #socialcarenetworks #populationhealth #research #ecosystems #sunbelt2024
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Our friends at Orange Sparkle Ball, Inc. have been creative and thought-provoking innovation colleagues with us for some of the most challenging social problems we're interested in tackling. Chasing good ideas, expanding our networks, testing out what's possible, and then making it happen are hallmarks of our partnership. We love being a university partner in their many efforts to design and drive innovative change. Interested in working with us on your next big idea or your most vexing problem? We're ready to run! #academic #innovation #partnerships #dynamic #change #research
"We believe that the intersection between community, technology, and resilience is where the future of people-centered innovation lies. We have been partnering with the Social Innovation Lab at The University of Kansas to explore what that means and all the ways that we can make community resilience actionable. Our inaugural Tech-Enabled Community Resilience Summit this year was only the first of many steps we’re taking together." — Michaela Bonnett We have continued our active participation with schools, colleges and universities. These engagements have led to long term friendships, partnerships and collaborations over the years. As a company, we feel strongly about giving back and these partnerships continue to be key to that ethos. In 2023, we worked with 13 schools and universities, resulting in many lasting friendships and new colleagues and projects. For more information about our work, visit our 2023 Results page at https://lnkd.in/gAGnENEj #2023results?#communityinnovation #innovation #socialdynamics #designforchange #techenabledcommunityresilience
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? The future is now!
The Future of (Social Innovation) Labs Primer Report! I. Social Innovation Principles 1. Aiming to solve or navigate complex social challenges 2. Getting to and tackling root causes rather than symptoms 3. Using experimental processes 4. A recognition of the systemic nature of the problems being addressed II. Social Innovation Labs Social Innovation Labs hold space for diverse change-makers to sense-make, generate, develop and test a portfolio of promising solutions to address complex societal challenges in a way that is collaborative, experimental, iterative, and systemic. III. Principles 1. Focused on complex societal challenges 2. Learns from diverse perspectives from across a system, including those with lived experience 3. Explores collaborative ways of working on a shared complex challenge Systemic in thinking and action 4. Experimental in iteratively developing and testing possible solutions, ideally in real life and at a minimum in realistic settings 5. Aim at exploring root causes of complex challenges and then generating possible solutions and pathways from leverage points IV. Types of Labs 1. Technical Challenge Labs: Focus on solving a complex socio-technical challenge 2. Service Design Labs: Involve re-imagining the services of governments, business, or non-profits 3. Policy Labs: Focus on innovating the policy development process 4. Systems Change Labs: Address a complex and systemic challenge at the roots 5. Place-Based Labs: Address local systemic challenges that matter to people who share physical and/or virtual places 6. Labs as a Service: Steward a portfolio of Social Innovation Labs as a knowledgeable, neutral mediator V. Practices 1. Collaboration 2. Systems thinking 3. User-centred design 4. Experimentation and prototyping 5. Openness and transparency 6. Flexibility and adaptability 7. Inclusivity and equity 8. Sustainability 9. Empowerment and capacity building 10. Partnership and network building Vl. Outcomes 1. Building Citizen Agency Increasing Lab participants' confidence, skills, and commitment to participating in civic life and the change process 2. Increasing Community Connections Strengthening the connections and relationships between diverse stakeholders encourages people to see issues through a variety of different lenses, enhances a sense of collective agency, and can build a constituency for making change 3. Systemic Innovations Expanding the set of quality solutions to a complex challenge in a way that is informed by diverse perspectives, systems thinking and based on a systematic process of surfacing, developing and testing possible solutions 4. Impact The tangible progress made on complex challenges and changing the deeper systems that hold them in place Make sure to check out the report by Action Lab and Social Innovation Canada here: https://lnkd.in/djbUG4Xe #innovation #socialinnovation #labs #systemsthinking #sustainability #design #societalimpact #future
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Hello from Arizona! We're at the States For The Future data to policy network convening representing 13 states and many national groups to talk about how data informs state-level policies across a number of domains - from democracy, trust, uncertainty to water & energy, education & workforce, heathcare access & affordability, and housing. We're speaking on a panel with new friends at Data Quality Campaign and Center for the Future of Arizona talking about data and its role in #education and #workforce #policy. Specifically, how can states leverage good data and infrastructure to inform better education and workforce policies. And of course, we are especially interested in the large-scale systems alignment and change levers needed to transform policy into #benevolent #action and practices that ultimately improve outcomes for children, families, and communities. #Complex #Dynamic #Ecosystems Built For A #Better #Future. Please.
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When it comes to social fabric, we can look to multiple competing forces in play in complex systems to understand the push/pull on that fabric. Consider the conditions that move us towards or away from each other at every scale. This simple framework helps guide our own thinking about dynamic systems and how to create conditions that help build and repair social fabric. Ponder with us. #socialfabric #community #complexity #democracy #cohesion #entropy
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Data collaboratives and interactive dashboards help complex systems understand and visualize basic information about those systems. It's also a way to spur innovation - showing what "is" while also prompting what could and should be. Simple and accessible tech products with just enough information starts the conversation. 'What if we...' often follows. Being ready to say 'Here's how we could..' is where innovation happens. Sweet spot to be!
Proud to have contributed to the creation of Kansas' Distinct Count of Children Served Dashboard. It took years of hard work, collaboration across our four state agencies and other partners, and strong data governance to make it a reality. Early childhood in Kansas keep innovating for our youngest kids and families. Love to see it! #ECIDS #PDG #Kansas #EarlyChildhood #Data #DistinctCount
Distinct Count of Children
https://kschildrenscabinet.org
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Big fan of this way of conceptualizing dynamic systems and the underlying visible and invisible mechanics. When we think about #ecosystems as complex organisms evolving and reaching towards or away from different states, metaphors from nature help capture our imagination. We also love a good fractal! This reminds us that when we try to understand or create the conditions (interventions) that drive change, we need to tune our attention towards signals (data) that tell us we are moving in the right direction. A little bit of movement (evidence) this way or that may hide a larger effect than we can see (measure). This tell us to keep looking deeper and with curiosity until the patterns become visible. Check out our new favorite thinkers! ??
Every system has qualities that are ‘fractal’ in nature – so the system is reflected not only in the whole, but in each ‘part’ within the whole. This graphic is from the series ‘Everyday Patterns for Shifting Systems’ a collaboration with Auckland Co-Design Lab and The Southern Initiative Instead of representing systems change as static, we sought to present it as dynamic and organic, implying communication, and made up of very tiny interactions. Interactions within the system that can reflect the values embedded in it.?? The metaphors we had in mind were of a tree, an ant’s nest or mycelium (even if the image is one dimensional on this page!) We know even these are not perfect representations of human systems, but they can help us engage with the complexity and hopefully to help us all see ourselves as having agency within the system.? You can observe that what we see, hear and are told about a system in a visible way is a fraction compared to those that are invisible including:? ?? Structures: how a response is organised and what structures are put into place to ‘hold’ the organising – policies, processes, relationships, power & authority structures & organisations?? ? ?? Practices: how responses are put into practice – the application of methodologies, tools, frameworks that together reflect how ideas, policies, & structures are enacted. Practices can become routines & habits embedded in systems? ? ?? Spaces + Interactions: how responses are embedded in physical spaces & interactions within a system – can be observed in the layout of spaces, the ways in which people are received or greeted, the locations in which the system interacts with people & communities? ? ?? Behaviours: How individuals, teams, groups within a system behave both in responding to people within & those engaging with the system.? This includes micro-behaviours (eg. tone of voice, eye contact, facial expressions) or the accepted behaviours within a group (eg. acceptance of aggression)? ? ?? Mindsets: How mental maps reflect & guide the behaviour of people, at both an individual level & a systems level.? Includes people’s attitudes to change, orientations towards others, assumptions, interpretations, openness to new ideas, & willingness to learn & adapt? ? ?? Values: The values, beliefs, cultural assumptions that underpin how the system is conceptualised, organised & ultimately experienced. Human systems are never ‘neutral’ - they are constructed from particular cultural, political, economic, ecological & social values? ? To read more visit our blog ???? https://lnkd.in/ggVR5Pxa? If you’d like to work with us to examine and shift patterns in your organisation email ???? [email protected] [graphic created by Prof Ingrid Burkett during conversations with ACL and TSI] #patterns #systemsinnovation #systemschange #visualisingchange #griffithuniversity Ingrid Burkett Joanne McNeill Penny Hagen