<p><b>How do we co-create the future of work on a global scale?</b> The NYU Workplace Learning Innovation Lab spearheaded a landmark collaboration that brought academic research, student innovation, and global organizational transformation into a shared, impactful space. This 2024-2025 collaboration, emerging from the inaugural <b>NYU SPS and United Nations "Innovation Day"</b> event which marked a powerful milestone in experiential learning, intercultural communication, organizational impact, and co-innovation.</p>
<p>At the heart of this initiative was the development of prototypes for a United Nations Innovation Communications Toolkit for <b>Organizational Culture Change</b>, a dynamic suite of tools co-created by an interdisciplinary team of students, scholars, and faculty experts from the NYU School of Professional Studies. Designed to support the UN’s <b>"Future of Work"</b> and "UN 2.0" vision, the Toolkit introduces research-based, tech-enabled, and human-centered communication practices that empower intercultural collaboration and transformation across global teams.</p>
<p><i><b>"Experience a set of technological demos for ‘innovation in action’…this next generation of changemakers is not only designing tools but shaping culture,"</b></i> stated <a href="https://events.teams.microsoft.com/event/cb830490-00de-4fc1-a71d-84a6474e6a3a@0f9e35db-544f-4f60-bdcc-5ea416e6dc70">the event invitation</a> from the UN NewWork team, announcing the student showcase of their prototypes in an in-person visit to the United Nations Headquarters, reflecting the spirit of forward-thinking and co-creative learning embedded in this collaboration.</p>
<p>Through immersive design, original prototyping, and an applied lens, NYU SPS Student Scholars developed high-fidelity digital artifacts and communication tools across core practice areas, including human-centered storytelling, empathetic communications, and multilingualism and Language Preservation.</p>
<p><b>SPS Student Scholar Changemakers:</b> Our deepest congratulations to the SPS graduate and undergraduate student researchers and scholars who led this initiative with creativity and intercultural intelligence: <b>Pietro Bonfante, Logan Burt, Ashley Chenery, Shannon Ganeshram, Namzey Gentso, Hollis Long, Ishmael Mondragon, Kathryn Scarberry-Rudzitis, and Gayoung Seo, Wayne Singh, and Ximan Xu</b>.</p>