Intrigued to Innovate
In this masterclass episode, host Dr Jovan Tan sits down with Prof. Jennifer Rudolph — a political historian at Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI) — to explore a question that challenges our assumptions about innovation education: what role do the humanities play in building great innovators? The answer, it turns out, is everything. WPI is no ordinary university. For over 50 years, it has pioneered project-based learning (PBL) — a radical curriculum in which students tackle real-world, open-ended problems with no single correct answer, and in which every undergraduate must complete three major projects before graduating. It is precisely this culture of ambiguity, hands-on inquiry, and interdisciplinary collaboration that makes WPI the ideal home for Jennifer's unconventional mission. When WPI sent its first pilot group of engineering students to Beijing, they returned dissatisfied and disoriented — not for lack of technical skills, but because they lacked the cultural understanding needed to navigate the real world. That moment became the catalyst for Jennifer to reimagine innovation education, embedding Asian history, culture, and humanistic thinking into the PBL curriculum through unexpected entry points: China's mega-infrastructure projects, K-pop, and Asian pop culture. Her driving conviction? That the "wicked problems" of our time — complex, ambiguous, with no single right answer — demand far more than technical expertise. And that the secret sauce most innovators overlook has been hiding in the humanities all along. In this Master Class episode, you'll discover: · Why project-based learning is far more than a pedagogy — and why sitting with ambiguity is the foundational skill every young innovator must develop · Why "wicked problems" have no single correct solutions — and why that very ambiguity is the most powerful wellspring of creative thinking and innovation · How humanistic inquiry trains the very same perspective-taking and empathy skills that every great innovator depends on · Why WPI's radical 7-week sprint terms forced a historian to abandon chronological teaching — and how that constraint became her most liberating teaching breakthrough · How a failed Beijing pilot project exposed the cultural blind spots among technically skilled students — and what Jennifer did to fix them · Why weaving history, culture, and the liberal arts into innovation education isn't a "soft" addition — it's the secret sauce that separates good innovators from truly great ones Whether you're a young innovator just starting out, an educator reimagining your curriculum, or simply someone curious about what it truly takes to solve the world's most complex challenges, this is your invitation to look beyond the formula and discover the human thinking that makes real innovation possible. Guest: Professor Jennifer Rudolph, Professor of Asian History and International and Global Studies, Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI) Hosted by: Dr Jovan Tan Produced by: Low Tse Han & Dr Jovan Tan Presented by: NUS Innovation & Design Programme (iDP) at the NUS Engineering Design and Innovation Centre (EDIC)
12 episodios
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