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Showing posts with label Systems thinking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Systems thinking. Show all posts

Sunday, March 22, 2015

Improve your creativity - begin with why

The obvious solutions to most problems have already been found. However, they are often based on assumptions that do not hold. 

The question 'Why?' is an effective means to questioning those assumptions.

Two main types of assumptions are: 

  • Assumptions about values, objectives, goals - the reasons behind doing things.
  • Assumptions about how the world works. Whenever you ask “why should we assume that?” or “why is that so?” and do not get a satisfactory response, there might be something wrong with those assumptions.

It’s not hard to create something but it can be very hard to be creative. In the sense, that you would develop something novel, feasible and useful. I believe that using the question 'Why?' more would help us at achieving this creativity.

Illustration:
Question:  “Why should the lecturer use powerpoint slides?”
Response: “Because that is how lectures are given, to give visual learning aid for students, to provide easily accessible course material, to have a structure for what he is going to present” etc.

Q: “Why lectures have to be given that way?”
R: “Ehm…?”
Creativity point: Lecture do not have to be given that way. What is more, giving lectures is actually not an objective at all. It is just one possible way to try and achieve learning.

Q: “Why is it important to give visual learning aid?”
R: “Because it makes learning cognitively easier”
Creativity point: OK. What other means there would be to deliver even better visual learning aid for the students? Could the lecturer use more informative pictures?

People tend to make quick assumptions intuitively and to accept the narrow framing they are given. This might have been necessary in our evolution so that we could survive. However, stepping out of this 'System 1 thinking' might enable you to be more creative.

My advice is to start using the question 'why' more often. Use it until you understand what you are dealing with. After this, you should be equipped to come up with creative solutions.


Me discussing creativity with value-focused thinking at
Systems Thinking Applied meeting in Ruoholahti.

Monday, January 19, 2015

How are Systems thinking and Value-focused decision making related?

The idea behind systems thinking is to view problems as systemic phenomena. System is a whole consisting of parts and their interrelations.  To effectively solve a problem one must understand the system around it. The better one understands the system, the more capable she is at developing an effective intervention.

The basic idea in value-focused decision making is that decision making should begin by identifying our values instead of our options. We choose between our options to best achieve what we value. Therefore, we should not narrow our thinking to the options given to us, but think creatively about what would be the best ways to achieve the things that we value.