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Alternative Perspectives on the Future

September 1, 2012 by Andy Hines 3 Comments

I’m pleased to be able to offer a new elective in our Futures Studies Master’s program this fall called “Alternative Perspectives on the Future.” It will bring together “different” concepts and methods for understanding, mapping, and influencing the future. We will focus some on students’ personal development as a futurist, exploring values, worldviews, styles, etc. We will explore two newer perspectives/methods in some depth – Causal Layered Analysis and Integral Futures – giving them fuller and more focused attention. We’ll also look at some visionary thinking tools, such as Future Time Travel, Appreciative Inquiry, and Presencing. Many alum might remember Oliver Markley’s Visionary Futures class — we’ll bring back some elements from that.

The course also gives us a greater opportunity to discuss the philosophical implications of studying the future. We’ll apply these tools to some “big questions” about the future. At the same time, we’ll maintain a focus on application, looking at “newer” approaches such as Action Research (not really all that new!)

You know you have a good topic when people want to help! One of grad students, Dennis Coffey, is helping me to build the course as part of his Master’s Project this summer. Dennis is already an accomplished scholar and university professor, who is doing the futures degree because it’s interesting. He has really taken an interest in Integral/CLA/creativity and has helped our program grow into these areas. And a former grad student, Terry Collins, now an Adjunct with us at UH, has emerged as an Integral Futures scholar and is going to help me teach the class this fall. Now that’s teamwork. Really excited about this! Andy Hines

Filed Under: Education, Foresight Tagged With: alternative perspectives, course, education, foresight, houston futures
About Andy Hines

Andy Hines
Lecturer/Executive-in-Residence, University of Houston Futures Studies

Andy Hines is Lecturer and Executive-in-Residence at the University of Houston’s Graduate Program in Futures Studies, bringing together the experience he earned as an organizational, consulting, and academic futurist. He co-founded and is currently on the Board of the Association of Professional Futurists, and has co-authored three books -- Thinking About the Future: Guidelines for Strategic Foresight (Social Technologies, 2007),” 2025: Science and Technology Reshapes US and Global Society (Oak Hill, 1997) and Managing Your Future as an Association (ASAE, 1994). He has also authored dozens of articles, speeches, and workshops, including the 2003 Emerald Literati Awards' Outstanding Paper accolade for best article published in Foresight for “An Audit for Organizational Futurists” and the 2008 award for “Scenarios: The State of the Art.” In the last year, he has appeared on several radio and television programs, including KRIV-26 News talking about the future of libraries and the CBS “Early Show,” to talk about an MTV-commissioned study: “The Future of the Youth Happiness.”

Trackbacks

  1. Applying alternative foresight approaches | Hinesight says:
    October 23, 2012 at 8:37 am

    [...] Building off last week’s post on foresight and intuition….and the great fun I’m having with our Alternative Perspectives on the Future class. [...]

    Reply
  2. Some thoughts on World Economic Forum’s Global Agenda Council on Values | Hinesight says:
    November 10, 2012 at 4:18 pm

    [...] shift in values.” A lofty and noble goal, which brings to mind a recent discussion we had in our Alternative Perspectives class at the Houston Futures program. We talked about how one approach is to deal with values “where [...]

    Reply
  3. Foresight and being right | Hinesight says:
    November 14, 2012 at 7:19 am

    [...] how we personally view “being right” about the future. In the “Integral Futures” module of Alternative Perspectives class, we discussed Ken Wilber’s notion of everyone being at least partially right, while still [...]

    Reply



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