02.01.19
PatentDive Educator, a creativity engineering company and portfolio company of Innovation Catalyst – the funding and investment arm of Research Park Corporation – said schools preparing students for the workforce of the future have a new tool: The first curriculum to combine STEM, business, creativity, and patent education.
PatentDive Educator debuted Jan. 29, 2019, at the Future of Education Technology Conference.
PatentDive Educator aims to make learning joyful, engage students with different learning styles, and help them succeed in STEM industries. The curriculum includes lectures, assessment tools, software licenses, and more. Educator is also available as a workbook.
PatentDive has also donated the use of the software for patent professionals for the past three years to file patent applications for participants at girls’ STEM days and Louisiana FIRST LEGO League.
PatentDive Educator aims to make learning joyful, engage students with different learning styles, and help them succeed in STEM industries. The curriculum includes lectures, assessment tools, software licenses, and more. Educator is also available as a workbook.
PatentDive has also donated the use of the software for patent professionals for the past three years to file patent applications for participants at girls’ STEM days and Louisiana FIRST LEGO League.
Full details, including metrics and quotes, are available for a charity-driven implementation of the PatentDive Educator prosthetics project at Brother Martin High School in New Orleans, Lousiana.
“Meaningful innovation education is so important. Above all, a patent protects an innovation so that people have the motivation to continue to build things," PatentDive CEO Eric Leininger said. "Our curriculum empowers students to do this through group projects. Educator reinforces patent concepts by allowing each student to come up with a practice invention through a fun educational game.”
“Meaningful innovation education is so important. Above all, a patent protects an innovation so that people have the motivation to continue to build things," PatentDive CEO Eric Leininger said. "Our curriculum empowers students to do this through group projects. Educator reinforces patent concepts by allowing each student to come up with a practice invention through a fun educational game.”