Abstract

We offer a reflection on our own praxis as designers and developers of a learning system for mature-age students through the Open University (OU) UK’s internationally recognised supported-open learning approach. The learning system (or course or module), which required an investment in the range of £0.25–0.5 million to develop, thus reflects our own history (traditions of understanding), the history of the context and the history of cyber-systemic thought and praxis including our own engagement with particular cyber-systemic lineages. This module, “Managing systemic change: inquiry, action and interaction” was first studied by around 100 students in 2010 as part of a new OU Masters Program on Systems Thinking in Practice (STiP) and is now in its fourth presentation to around 100 students. Understanding and skills in systemic inquiry, action and interaction are intended learning outcomes. Through their engagement with the module and each other’s perspectives, students develop critical appreciation of systems practice and social learning systems, drawing on their own experiences of change. Students are practitioners from a wide range of domains. Through activities such as online discussions and blogging, they ground the ideas introduced in the module in their own circumstances and develop their own community by pursuing two related systemic inquiries. In this process, they challenge themselves, each other and the authors as learning system designers. We reflect on what was learnt by whom and how and for what purposes.

Highlights

  • Learning Systems for Managing Systemic Change in a Climate Change World

  • Systems education began at the Open University (OU) in 1971 when John Beishon was appointed as the first Professor of Systems in the new Faculty of Technology

  • This is because it is known [20,21,22] that personal change in epistemic assumptions is absolutely essential to any major breakthroughs in decision making based on understanding and application of emerging theories to practical problems

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Summary

Managing Systemic Change

Contemporary news media often refer to systemic failure as a description of a context where seemingly little can be done or as synonymous with “no one person is at fault”. This paper reports on the authors’ praxis as designers of a learning system that aims to address this deficiency. It tells the story of a learning system design within the Systems Thinking in Practice (STiP) post-graduate program at the Open University, UK (OU) developed to build praxis capability in relation to the systemic issues mature students confront in their professional and personal lives. The STiP program has two main foci: managing systemic change and thinking and acting strategically which are manifest as two core compulsory courses or modules. This paper primarily considers managing systemic change (OU module code TU812) but keeps in mind the strategic context. Though we explore the history of our situation and the cybersystemic understandings upon which we build

Building on Cyber-Systemic Understandings
Exploring the Research Base
Learning System Design and Facilitation of Learning—Some General Principles
Central Learning System Design Elements
Landscapes of Practices and Systems Praxis
Design for learning
Sector-Wide Positioning
OU Monitoring and Evaluation
External Examiner Comments
Qualitative Sources
Challenges for Reflexive Learning System Design
Findings
36. TU812 Managing Systemic Change
Full Text
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