Peter Ellyard - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 36
About This Presentation
Title:

Peter Ellyard

Description:

Humanity against nature Humanity part of nature ... Intercultural and inter religious understanding/harmony, intercultural comfort /customisation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:24
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 37
Provided by: petere3
Category:
Tags: ellyard | peter

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Peter Ellyard


1
Bendigo Senior Secondary College
  • Peter Ellyard
  • Preferred Futures Institute

2
Preparing our Young for 21st Century
SuccessIdeas Warehouse
3
Capabilities for 21st Century Success 1
  • 1. Embracing a personal value system which is
    compatible with emerging 21st century paradigms
    and realities, To carry a value system of
    yesteryear will invite becoming a misfit.
  • 2. Being a leader, first of self and then of
    others, shaping ones own life/career path rather
    than being shaped by the future.
  • 3. Becoming a future and path maker rather than a
    future and path taker.This involves utilizing
    insight , foresight and hindsight
  • 4. Being a lifelong, learning-driven and
    just-in-time learner to update skills and adapt
    easily to changing circumstances. Assuming
    responsibility for ones own learning.
  • 5. Being an enterprising innovative person,
    constantly seeking to do old things better and
    new things first.

4
Capabilities for 21st Century Success 2
  • 6. Becoming a successful 21st century adult. This
    includes being able to initiate and conduct
    successful interdependent relationships and
    contributing to the wellbeing of 21st century
    communities and organizations..
  • 7. Being respectful and tolerant of, and
    comfortable with, cultural and religious
    diversity..
  • 8. Being successful in a 21st century knowledge
    based industrial system based on the core forms
    of human creativity the arts and humanities,
    the social and natural sciences, and the
    technologies.
  • 9. Comprehending that 21st century success
    requires that individual rights are balanced with
    responsibilities to others, to the community, the
    environment, the planet, and future generations.
  • 9. Being a contributor to the sustainable future
    rather than to the unsustainable present.

5
Managers and Leaders
6
The Five Ps of the Future
  • 1. Plausible futureWhat could conceivably be our
    future prospects ? What or who could threaten us
    ?
  • 2. Probable futureWhat will be our future if we
    continue on with business-as-usual and if we
    stay on our current pathway ?
  • 3. Prospective futureWhat will happen now that
    circumstance have changed , what is our prognosis
    now that fate has intervened on our journey to
    a probable future ?
  • 4. Preferred futureWhat should happen,What do I
    aspire for ? What is our dream?
  • 5. Possible future What can we make happen ,
    given we have limitations to resources and
    knowledge .What is the art-of-the-possible ?

7
The 8 Cs of the Heart
  • 1. confident having self belief but without
    hubris.
  • 2. courageous going where others dare not,
    overcoming self interested opposition.
  • 3. committed doing what must be done, being
    assertive not aggressive.
  • 4. considerate listening and responding to the
    opinions and views of others.
  • 5. courteous showing respect in conversation.
  • 6. compassionate responding with empathy to
    victims and the disadvantaged.
  • Two additional Cs
  • 7. Compromise building and nurturing
    interdependence and relationships.
  • 8. Communicate articulating with both head and
    heart, ensuring both non verbal and verbal forms
    of expression convey the same message.

8
The 6 Vs
  • Vision. What will/should be our destination, our
    probable / preferred future
  • Values. What values/ethics guide our behaviour
  • Virtues. What values/ethics should guide our
    current behaviour
  • Venturers. Who are, and how do we engage our
    champions and allies building partnerships
  • Voyages. What are the obstacles, improvements
    ,initiatives and heritages
  • Vehicles. What do we need to do to increase our
    capacities and capabilities, and what ways and
    wares do we need to use/innovate

9
The 5 Dialogues
  • 1 Destiny dialogue. Insight The secret to a
    successful life is to understand what is ones
    destiny to do and do it (Henry Ford) . Destiny
    aptitude passion..
  • 2. Destination dialogue. Foresight, Describe the
    preferred future/possible future destination .
    Vision
  • 3. Derivation dialogue. Hindsight What can we
    learn from our own and others histories? What
    baggage from the past is still with us that we
    must change , modify or keep what values should
    we nominate as virtues ? Values and Virtues
  • 4. Directors dialogue what strategies do we
    need to achieve our destination and fulfil our
    destiny . Venturers champions and allies the
    who , what ,where, when ,why , how of achieving
    the destination
  • 5. Directions dialogue. What are the key
    strategic actions? Voyages Obstacles overcome.
    Improvements made. Initiatives taken . Heritages
    nurtured Vehicles Capacities and Capabilities ,
    Ways and Ways

10
Vehicles (Innovations) required to achieve sought
outcomes
  • Capacities additional and new resources we
    need. eg finance and technologies
  • Capabilities additional and new knowledge and
    skills we need
  • Ways what we do and how we do it (eg new
    strategies, cultures, principles, ethics,
    behaviors, agreements, relationships)
  • Wares what we use( eg new designs, products
    ,services , technologies )

11
How Values shape markets
  • Values determine what people value and find
    valuable
  • What people value and find valuable they will
    want more of
  • What they want more of will determine what they
    seek in markets
  • What is sought in markets will determining
    emerging innovations, products, services and
    technologies

12
The Cowboy Culture/ Modernism (1960) / Priority
to Nation
The Spaceship Culture/ Planetism (2020)
/ Priority to Planet
Individualism
Communitarianism
Independence
Interdependence
Autocracy Democracy
Humanity against nature Humanity
part of nature
Production,consumption,lifestyles
Production,consumption,lifestyles Unsustainable
Sustainable
Patriarchy Gender Equality
Intercultural inter-religious
Intercultural inter-religious Intolerance,
Hostility Tolerance, Harmony
Conflict resolution through Conflict
resolution through Confrontation /Combat
Cooperation/Negotiation
Safekeeping through Defence
Safekeeping through Security
13
Planetist Values
  • Planetist values are the values we need to
    create sustainable prosperity and a sustainable
    society on Spaceship Earth
  • Planetist values are the values shaping global
    public opinion , markets and ethics in the 21st
    century
  • Planetist values will determine what is
    planetary correct and ethical behaviour by
    individuals , companies ,nations and
    international organisations in the 21st century

14
Cowboys and Cosmonauts
  • Most men who have 5 years of education or less
    remain cowboys
  • Most tertiary educated and upper secondary
    educated men become cosmonauts
  • Most women are cosmonauts
  • Most middle class people become cosmonauts

15
21st Century ways to punish planetary
incorrect behaviour
  • The trade ban
  • The customer boycott often driven by the internet
  • The freezing of bank accounts
  • The strike on capital

16
Learning Culture 1
  • Lifelong learning Continuously utilising up to
    10 of ones time to prepare for future
    individual and collective success
  • Learner-driven learning Learning driven by the
    learner not the teacher/mentor, through
    learner-driven learning innovations
    technologies.
  • Just-in-time learning Providing the opportunity
    to learn when curiosity and the need for
    knowledge, and gratification from learning is
    greatest, including in work environments.
  • Customised learning Being able to learn more
    effectively because all learning opportunities
    and processes are customised to suit different
    learning and thinking styles.

17
Learning Culture 2
  • Transformative learning Designing learning
    for, and assessing the success by the
    transformation of students, for this and not
    acquiring knowledge is the purpose of
    education.
  • Collaborative learning Designing learning
    environments/processes to ensure learning is as
    effective in groups as for individuals.
  • Contextual learning Improving learning by
    locating learning in real life and virtual real
    life environments
  • Learning to learn Continuously improving the
    capability to learn and think.

18
Successful Adulthood involves
  • Becoming a cosmonaut in a cosmonaut 21st century
  • Learning about how to become a successful
    cosmonaut adult in the years of puberty , the
    middle years of secondary school, the time used
    by traditional cultures for initiation into
    adulthood

19
Successful Adulthood 1
  • 1. becoming lifelong, learner-driven learners
  • 2. creating career paths which bring economic
    and social security
  • 3. understanding that individual rights should
    be balanced by reciprocal responsibilities and
    service to others and the community
  • 4. respecting and knowing how to nurture the
    environment and other species
  • 5. respecting and tolerating other cultures and
    religions, particularly indigenous cultures.

20
Successful Adulthood 2
  • 6. nurturing ones own self esteem
  • 7. respecting others, including parents and
    elders
  • 8. initiating , nurturing and maintaining
    successful relationships
  • 9. developing healthy and sustainable
    lifestyles
  • 10. becoming enterprising self-actualising
    individuals
  • 11. becoming leaders-of-self and then of
    others

21
An Enterprising Individual
  • has a positive, flexible and adaptable
    disposition towards change, seeing it as normal,
    and as an opportunity rather than a problem.
  • has a security born of self-confidence, and is at
    ease when dealing with insecurity, risks,
    difficulty and the unknown.
  • has the capacity to initiate creative ideas.
    develop them, and see them through into action in
    a determined manner.
  • is able, even anxious, to take responsibility and
    is an effective communicator, negotiator,
    influencer, planner and organizer.
  • is active, confident, and purposeful, not
    passive, uncertain and dependent .

22
Enterprise Skills 1
  • 1. assessing strengths and weaknesses
  • 2. making decisions
  • 3. working cooperatively in teams and groups
  • 4. planning time and energy
  • 5. carrying out agreed responsibilities
  • 6. negotiating
  • 7. dealing with power and authority
  • 8. solving problems

23
Enterprise Skills 2
  • 9. resolving conflict
  • 10. planning and managing projects
  • 11. coping with stress and tension
  • 12. creating ones own health and wellbeing
  • 13. evaluating performance
  • 14. communicating both verbally and non-verbally
  • 15. developing strategic visions/action plans for
    self and others
  • 16. intervening strategically and systematically
    to shape the future.

24
Innovation
  • Innovation Doing old things better doing new
    things first
  • Innovation Creativity Enterprise

25
Creativity
  • Creativity
  • Imagination
  • Synthesis of the different realms of knowledge
    in the Arts and Humanities,the Natural and Social
    sciences and the Technologies

26
Planetist Ways and Wares
  • Planetist markets will want ways and wares
  • Ways What we do (eg actions , building
    realtionships, behaviours, professional
    practices/ethics
  • Wares What we use designs , products, services
    , technologies
  • In areas such as increased
  • Interdependence, eg for long term loyal
    interdependent relationships/supply chains ,
  • Democracy, eg for better consultation and
    collective decision making
  • Equity, eg for better access , participation and
    opportunities for the disadvantaged in a
    globalising world
  • Conflict resolution, eg through negotiation /
    mediation , peace making/peacekeeping
  • Security, eg improved awareness/warning of
    /protection from threats
  • Intercultural and inter religious
    understanding/harmony, intercultural comfort
    /customisation
  • Ecological prosperity, eg green ways and green
    wares

27
Sustainable Prosperity is a combination of four
kinds of Prosperity
  • 1. Economic prosperity involves generating
    wealth from 21st century industries
    ,enterprises, products and services. Seventy
    percent of the industries, products and services
    of the year 2025 have yet to be invented .
  • 2. Ecological prosperity involves the
    development of innovations and practices to
    live within perpetual solar income, turn waste
    into food, avoid and repair collateral damage to
    the environment, and protect and nurture
    biodiversity and natural resources.
  • 3.Social prosperity involves the enhancement of
    social cohesion and conviviality , and universal
    access to economic security and learning,
    healing and wellbeing.
  • 4. Cultural prosperityinvolves the nurturing and
    celebration of cultural heritage and diversity,
    and increased intercultural tolerance, respect
    and harmony.
  • It does not involve the increasing prosperity in
    one form while increasing poverty in another

28
Economic Prosperity
  • 1. Maximize the capacity to get to the future
    first , including by ensuring that domestic
    markets demand Planetist ways and wares ahead of
    global markets
  • 2. Improve the effectiveness and efficiency of
    existing industries and enterprises.
  • 3.Increase the capacity to exit from industries
    and enterprises in long-term decline.
  • 4. Envision and establish new 21st century
    Planetist industries and enterprises.
  • 5. Nurture and develop the core intellectual
    capital and property of new emerging 21st century
    in industrial clusters comprising commercial
    enterprises , research and development institutes
    and tertiary education institutions

29
Social Prosperity 1
  • 1. Provide universal access to services of
    learning, health, wellbeing and recreation.
  • 2. Promote community cohesion.
  • 3. Implement programs to ensure suitable housing
    for people.
  • 4. Encourage life long, learner driven learning
    for all
  • 5. Achieve an equitable balance between rights
    derived from community and responsibilities to
    community.
  • 6.Provide universal access to information,
    knowledge and wisdom via universally accessible
    technologies.
  • 7. Incorporate recreation and wellbeing programs
    as critical components in all community
    activities, enterprises and industries, including
    tourism.

30
Social Prosperity 2
  • 8.Assist collaborative action by the community to
    maximize community bargaining power in a global
    society.
  • 9. Secure the successful transformation of child
    to adult through appropriate initiation/learning
    programs.
  • 10. Achieve successful aging through effective
    community elders participation programs.
  • 11. Integrate early childhood programs into
    education programs.
  • 12. Encourage an industrial base that
    incorporates enterprises that promote social
    prosperity.
  • 13. Maximise the attraction and development of
    entrepreneurs, enterprises and capita, by
    increasing social, cultural and ecological
    prosperity

31
Ecological Prosperity
  • 1. Live within perpetual solar income
  • 2. Turn waste into food, achieve zero waste
  • 3. Avoid or minimise collateral damage
  • 4. Protect and nurture biodiversity
  • 5. Apply the Precautionary Principle
  • 6. Avoid excess with Just-enough-in-place-and-time
  • 7. Envision , assess, realise and audit
    ecological prosperity

32
Cultural prosperity
  • 1. Recognize the central importance of cultural
    prosperity to economic and social prosperity
  • 2. Grow capabilities in mediation and conflict
    resolution
  • 3. Advance inter-racial, inter-cultural and
    inter-religious tolerance ,respect and harmony
  • 4. Promote reconciliation between indigenous and
    immigrant peoples.
  • 5. Integrate cultural rituals, ceremonies and
    events into community and business activities.
  • 6. Secure and protect community and enterprise
    cultural heritage.
  • 7. Promote business development based on cultural
    prosperity and foreign languages in education
    programs.
  • 8. Promote inter-cultural comfort and
    understanding, and the customisation of
    products and services

33
Successful Ageing
  • Indian Summer Adulthood working and staying at
    home longer
  • Changed and expanded social/ community roles such
    as Elderhood and Mentoring
  • ReEmpowering vitality and increasing fulfillment
    through Changed Self Perception and new Visions
    for the future

34
Indian Summer Adulthood
  • Ways and Wares for
  • Aged and disabled worker support
  • Working from home
  • Aged mobility
  • Remote aged healing and wellbeing
  • Shopping from home
  • Home services for fulfilled living
  • Nursing home at home

35
Innovation
  • Innovation Doing old things better doing new
    things first
  • Innovation Creativity Enterprise

36
Creativity
  • Creativity
  • Imagination
  • Synthesis of the different realms of knowledge
    in the Arts and Humanities,the Natural and Social
    sciences and the Technologies
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com