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Stig O. Johannessen, PhD Complexity and Management Centre (CMC)

Kompleksitetsforskningen og dens muligheter innen arbeid med sosiale innovasjonsprosesser, læring og utviklingspørsmål. Stig O. Johannessen, PhD Complexity and Management Centre (CMC) . Hva er kompleksitetsforskning? .

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Stig O. Johannessen, PhD Complexity and Management Centre (CMC)

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  1. Kompleksitetsforskningen og dens muligheter innen arbeid med sosiale innovasjonsprosesser, læring og utviklingspørsmål Stig O. Johannessen, PhD Complexity and Management Centre (CMC)

  2. Hva er kompleksitetsforskning? * En prosess-orientert metodologi som tar på alvor funn fra tverrvitenskapelig kompleksitetsforskning * En forskning som forsøker å forstå fenomener som har blitt oversett av tradisjonell vitenskap, slik som fraktalitet, ikke-linearitet, emergence (framvoksing), selvorganiserende prosesser, spontane skift av mønster, ”det nye”, radikal uforutsigbarhet. * Hva vil det si å forstå organisasjoner/samfunn som komplekse sosiale prosesser?

  3. Systemisk tenkning: Den dominante tenkningen om organisasjoner/samfunn Dominant ide: Holistisk instrumentalisme. Samfunnet (utdanning etc) er dynamiske systemer som må sees helhetlig, og som kan styres kybernetisk.

  4. Myter og erfaringer om forutsigbarhet og kontroll Sist gang jeg snakket for denne forsamlingen var 12. september i fjor. Styringsrenten var på forsommeren kommet opp til 5,75 prosent – et ganske normalt nivå. I august fortalte industribedriftene i vårt regionale nettverk at veksten ville holde seg oppe. Utviklingen tok en annen retning. I november beskrev de omslaget som «et infarkt». Lehman Brothers’ konkurs den 15. september utløste en krise med svikt i tillit til banker, motparter og kontraktspartnere og svikt i tro på fremtiden. Verdensøkonomien gikk inn i en kraftig nedgangskonjunktur.Vi ble påvirket av utviklingen ute både ved sviktende tilgang på lån til bankene, svakere etterspørsel etter våre eksportvarer og stor usikkerhet om den økonomiske utviklingen*. • Svein Gjedrem (2009) Foredrag i regi av Centre for Monetary Economics (CME) ved Handelshøyskolen BI, 30.9.2009.

  5. Eksempel på tradisjonell systemisk tenkning • Oppvekstkommisjonens dokument: • Forslag til en vedtatt visjon • Helhetlig opplæringsløp • ”Det gode” – god opplæring, god ledelse, gode rutiner, god kommunikasjon, god informasjonsflyt, gode lærere, gode systemer... • Planlagt læring og kreativitet • Annerledes enn det bestående (!)

  6. Krav om tydelighet: • Tydelig ledelse, tydelige forventninger, tydelige lærere, tydelige planer, tydelige foreldre, tydelige kjøreregler, tydelige krav.... • Helhetlig organisering. (Foreldreopplæring?) • ”Best practice”

  7. Sette i system: ledelse, organisering, pedagogikk, kreativitet, helhetlig kvalitetssystem, belønningssystemer, varslingssystemer • Rapportering, rutiner, prosedyrer, kontroll. • Felles forpliktelser, felles mål, felles visjon, felles bevissthet..... • Feedback, mål, måling, resultater.... • Endringprosesser, fleksibilitet, kompetanse....

  8. Målrettede tiltak • Skape likhet • Slutte å behandle alle likt • Lage skjema. Rapportere, få informasjon, forpliktende plan..... • Lage gode overganger....gode rutiner, prosedyrer, samordning... • Lojalitet til nasjonal modell. • ”Ta grep”

  9. Bli sett! • Innfør generelle ordninger • Instruks til rektorer om å kvalitetssikre, motivere og forbedre • Arrangere vekkelsesmøter • Forbedre humankapital • Økt informasjon • Snakke mer - dialog • Slutt å snakke, og begynn å handle • Gi påfyll • Ta i bruk enda flere og større systemer (EU).

  10. Implications of taking a complexity view • Social phenomena as emerging, non-linear, unpredictable, paradoxical and self-organising

  11. Possible examples of social innovations as emerging self-organising shifts of patterns of communication, power and identity

  12. Transforming and sustaining: industrial and social innovation * Innovation in established industry and in education are perhaps the main enablers of longterm society well-fare and sustainability. However, this constitutes a classic paradox: * How do we improve and sustaine current contexts and at the same time develop new sustainable contexts?

  13. Transforming contexts

  14. NTNU NTNU

  15. Norwegian salmon

  16. Milk Island

  17. How does transformations happen? • Systems thinking: according to desicions by powerful people or groups. Someone (actors) or something (structures/systems) are in control • Complexity thinking: according to spontanous and sustained self-organising emergence of patterns of communication, power and identity. No actor or structure are in control. There are only actors trying to persuade, negotiate and influence each other without knowing the consequences

  18. Myter om forutsigbarhet og kontroll • Empires do not in fact appear, rise, reign, decline, and fall according to some recurrent and predictable life cycle. It is historians who retrospectively portray the process of imperial dissolution as slow-acting, with multiple overdetermining causes. Rather, empires […] function in apparent equilibrium for some unknowable period. And then, quite abruptly, they collapse. * Ferguson, N. (2010). Complexity and Collapse. Empires on the Edge of Chaos. Foreign Affairs, March/April 2010, side 18–32.

  19. Transforming contexts in Norway • How does themes of communication change? Experiences of identity? Power configurations? • How does the ”meaning of life” for a 16-19 year old change?

  20. Emerging theme 1:Transforming industry and societyOil, gas and beyond

  21. Innovations in technology: creating tomorrow's solutions

  22. Pioneeringcarbondioxidemanagement Aim to be the best performing manager of CO2 value chains An early mover in the field Operating some of the world’s largest projects 25

  23. The BP-blowout in Gulf of Mexico

  24. 27 Extending subsea technology to ultra-deep waters • Extend our leading position • Increase recovery and open sub-ice and deepwater areas • Compact, environmentally-friendly solutions

  25. Buildinggreenrenewablegrowthplatforms Floating offshore wind 2nd generation (sustainable) biofuels based on cellulose

  26. Naturalsciencesinschool - howtosustainrecruitment National Knowledge Centres; e.g. VILVITE / Bergen, and Science Centre / Trondheim Newton Energy Room First Lego League National forum for science subjects Natural Science Centre – Geo oriented program and tools

  27. Emerging theme 2: Shift away from panoptic logic in architecture, education and organisation

  28. The Panopticon Foucault says in “Discipline and punish”, • “He is seen, but he does not see. He is an object of information, but never a subject of communication”. • ”The Panopticon is a machinery which provides asymmetry, difference. It is of no matter who enforces power “... In this way the panoptic effect is obtained: the inmate should always be and know that he is visible – because then power is functioning automatically“. • The observer is totally distanced, a non-person.

  29. The Panoptic logic of the school institution • The exercise of power--in the case of school--takes place in buildings specially designed to assure effectiveness. • By going to school, the children are assigned the role of pupils (as the prisoners in Benthams Panopticon), they must follow the rules of the school, are integrated into a group, forced to subordinate themselves to a teacher and to follow her/his leadership. Source: Dr. Liana Müller

  30. The Panoptic logic of the school institution • The pupils can see the teacher, but not his/her agenda for control. The teacher can change her/his behavior adapting to the needs of the pupils, but only while following certain predetermined methods, sticking to already decided subjects and books, and serving the purpose to achieve a certain outcome. Source: Dr. Liana Müller

  31. The Panoptic logic of the school institution • The discipline imposed assures the efficiency of the school despite limited resources: A single teacher can control a relatively large group of pupils and, at the same time, make sure that all of them understand the presented topics and follow the instructions. • To assure proper learning, the teacher has to elaborate a plan, to fix the subjects, to choose the methods and the books to be used, to have a purpose and an efficient evaluation plan.

  32. Panoptic architecture • Closed and isolated classrooms. The classroom with strictly defined roles for both the teacher in front of the class and for the pupils sitting on banks aligned in rows, such that the supervision is as perfect as possible. Symbolicly “forget what you know, subordinate yourself, behave yourself, we know better” “The Panopticon is a very good place to do experiments on humans” [Foucault].

  33. Panoptic logic: Discipline and punish In the PISA study, Norway was assessed to have the second worst disciplinary climate in its schools in the OECD (only Greece was worse). There appears to be little debate in Norway as to whether  the informality in the classroom, mixed-ability teaching in all subjects, lack of sanctions on poorly behaved children and allowing children almost complete freedom to do what they want has any impact in causing poor discipline *. * SCHOOL REFORM: A SURVEY OF RECENT INTERNATIONAL EXPERIENCE, Dep of Education and Skills, UK, June 2006

  34. Does the tests reflect the type of competence needed in future society? The tests are designed in a ”panoptic logic”: Individual isolation, strict control, no discussion, no aid from technology etc. The complex challenges of the future are not solved by isolated individuals, but as advanced collaborative efforts. If the argument for the tests are international competitiveness, does these tests make pupils less or more competitive internationally?

  35. Departing from the Panopticon Companies that are competing internationally, such as Statoil, sponsor and encourage non-panoptic learning ideologies used f.ex in First Lego League, in educating potential future employees.

  36. Discipline, collaboration and creativity in practice (First Lego League project for all 12-16 yrs: Building and progamming robots, making group presentations and ”stands” to ”market” their product/solution)

  37. The school as a society and society as a school • * The social patterns of ”learning” and ”education” are not given, they are patterns of action involving structure/physical environment • * The school building is not a given entity either. • First, it is one of many arenas for learning and education. • Second, reorganising is a characteristic of our time, hence the school as building and organisation should have the possibility to reorganise as part of everyday life. • *The school building of the future is in itself an evolving process of development and learning.

  38. The future: from school buildings to learning societies? * Internet and communication technologies dissolves controlled (panoptic) learning and urges a redefining of what a school is, physically and mentally.   * Children bring more complex experiences than ever before into the groups at school and it is important to take their experience/knowledge seriously.  * Local development work, distributed and global project work, collaborations and experimentation

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