June 5, 2013
What do women’s health screenings; increasing the number of science, technology and math teachers; building the infrastructure of African countries; building the client base for projects with a social benefit; and creating a shared office space for social entrepreneurs have in common?
All of them involve efforts that can be strengthened by systems thinking.
That’s what a group of more than fifty global leaders discovered in a session at the Ashoka Future Forum where I and David Castro (president of I-LEAD and an Ashoka Fellow) introduced the basics of Systems Thinking for Changemakers using four simple steps. From the intense (and playful) effort in the room and from the feedback afterwards, I was reminded once again, that, for people struggling everyday to steer and influence complex systems, the basic tools of systems thinking are a gift, an inspiration, and a way to share stories with others. The Ashoka session was a reminder of exactly why we are launching the Climate Leader - to bring the benefits of systems thinking to people on the front-lines around the world in the battle for a liveable planet. You can find out more about these upcoming free online classes and sign up here; but in the meantime here’s a quick recap of the 4 steps the Ashoka participants experimented with.
Of course, it is impossible to compress a 2 hour workshop into a few paragraphs, and even that 2 hour workshop barely scratched the surface of the large body of work that is systems thinking. There are a number of great books available to explore the field more deeply (I’d recommend Thinking in Systems by Donella Meadows), and for those particularly interested in applying systems thinking to our human response to climate change please sign-up for our new online courses at The Climate Leader.
source: http://nwsystems.wordpress.com