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Learning
Activities Using This Resource Kit: General Learning Activities, Demonstrations, Games, Etc. Keeping a Complexity Journal
Details: Select a situation that you are
actively involved in at the present. Again, you might agree on this as a group, or you
might just do it by yourself. Begin capturing the story by
writing just a paragraph or two of relevant background information. Be concise. Think of
Joe Friday on Dragnet: "Just the facts ma'am." But recognize that the
"facts" in this case include the feelings and mental models of the agents in the
CAS. Reflect on the background
information using the questions provided in the Reflection write-up in the Aides section
of this Resource Kit. Capture your thoughts as they flow. Be explicit about the lens you
are using to see the events; what do you see when you search explicitly for illustrations
of things that you have learned about from the study of CAS? what do you see when you
adopt the viewpoint of the organization as machine or military unit? A bullet list is fine; don't let
the structure of grammatical writing interfere with your thinking process. You can always
clean up the language later, but you don't really need to. The point is to learn, not to
win a Pulitzer Prize. Repeat the fact-capturing and
reflection described above for the events of the present and immediate past. Where is the
story right now? What decisions are being made? What actions are being taken? Then, what
reflections do we have about it all? Now put the journal away. Let
some time pass. How much time is hard to say. It will depend on the speed with which
events are emerging in the system you are exploring. Use your common sense and intuition
as a guide. When, in your intuitive
judgment, an appropriate time period has passed, re-open the journal and complete another
cycle of fact-capturing and reflection. Begin by re-reading the story and your reflections
up to this point. It is OK to edit past entries in the light of new events, but you might
want to do this is a different color or a highlighted font. You want to remember that you
didn't see it before and you want to reflect on this as well. But, in the end, you do want
to be able to tell the story in a coherent fashion. As the story progresses, you
want to include more in-sight and foresight reflection in addition to your hindsight
reflections. Commit honestly to your thoughts about what you think you should do next. If
you write them down, then you can learn by comparison when you re-open the journal later
and record what actually happened. You should be doing this in a safe environment; no
"gotchas" nor snickers at naivete allowed. At some point, the story will
seem to you to have reached a conclusion. Of course, this is arbitrary, as every story in
a CAS leads into and becomes part of another story. But, use your common sense and declare
a stop at some practical point. Re-read the entire story and record you final reflections
and thoughts (again, refer to the questions in the Reflections write-up in the Aides
section). Go on for as long as you like. Really explore the entire story and your insights
from it. If you haven't been doing so up to this point, try summarizing insights and
lessons from multiple points of view. If you have been doing this alone so far, now might
be a good time to sit down with a few other people and share the whole story in order to
get their points of view. A Peek Behind the Activity As noted throughout this
Resource Guide, reflection is a key skill in understanding CAS. The point of keeping a
journal is to practice reflection, not simply to keep a journal. So, of course, you can
use any modern technology that helps reduce the time-consumption of this activity. You
could record you thoughts in free-form on a tape recorder. You could type up the notes, or
have someone do it for you, on a word processor. Or, you might just prefer to stop with
the tape recording. The point is that thinking is what it is all about, not writing. The
idea is to slow down to think things through, and to capture your thoughts in some way so
you can compare them to the future, unfolding reality. |
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