Abstract

Purpose How do you teach the future when it has not happened yet? The purpose of this paper is to delve into the teaching and learning philosophies of Futurist Dr Ian Yeoman of Victoria University of Wellington who emphasises authenticity, problem-based learning, visuals as creative tools and students’ negotiating problems. Design/methodology/approach This paper is a reflective account of the Author Dr Ian Yeoman as a human instrument. Findings The paper overviews three papers taught by the Author Dr Ian Yeoman – TOUR104 is a first-year introductory course addressing how the drivers and trends in the macro environment influence tourism from a political, economic, social, technology and environment perspective. TOUR301 is a third-year course as part of the bachelor of tourism management degree. The course aims to help students develop the skills and knowledge necessary to understand and critically analyse tourism public policy, planning and processes within New Zealand and a wider context. TOUR413 is a scenario planning paper, applied in a tourism context and taught to students in postgraduate programs. Originality/value The paper examines different learning tools and strategies in order to deliver the philosophy with scaffolding and incremental learning featuring predominantly in this approach.

Highlights

  • It was Flechtheim (1945) who told us that Cassandra foretold the fall of Troy and Jeremiah prophesized the doom of Jerusalem

  • Ian Seymour Yeoman is Futurist at the School of Management, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand; and is at the European Tourism Futures Institute, Stenden University NHL Stenden of Applied Sciences, The Netherlands

  • Dr Ian Yeoman is an Associate Professor of Tourism Futures at the Victoria University of Wellington; this is his story of teaching and learning based upon the following principles:

Read more

Summary

Paper type Viewpoint

Ian Seymour Yeoman is Futurist at the School of Management, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand; and is at the European Tourism Futures Institute, Stenden University NHL Stenden of Applied Sciences, The Netherlands.

Introduction
Teaching the future
Key challenges from a student perspective
Conclusions
Further reading
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call