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Overview

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Title: Overview


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  • Overview
  • What is the Beyond Current Horizons Programme?
  • What approach is it taking?
  • What activities does it involve?
  • How might this group engage with the programme?

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  • What is the Beyond Current Horizons Programme?
  • Long term futures programme intended to
  • Enhance the futures thinking capacity of UK
    educators
  • Inform current decision making and planning
  • Futurelab running the programme in partnership
    with DCSF

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  • The aim of the programme
  • The BCH programme is aiming to build a set of
    challenging and long term visions for education
    in the context of socio-technological change
    2025 and beyond
  • ....
  • In order to inform and evaluate current strategic
    planning

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Our approach
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  • Not predictions ...

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Multiple methods
  • Mapping existing trends
  • Commissioned science reviews of existing evidence
    and potential future trajectories
  • Identification of key levers that might push
    trends in different directions
  • Understanding aspirations and expectations
  • what people believe will happen, what people are
    working to make happen, what people want to
    happen
  • Exploring emergent ideas
  • Interviews and events bringing together leaders
    in education, industry, research, arts, politics,
    social action....
  • In order to....

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Build multiple scenarios to test strategy today
...
  • What possible diverse futures for education do
    these existing trends, emergent possibilities and
    values give us?
  • How robust are our plans in the context of these
    different futures?
  • To help make decisions now and in the future

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Year 1 (2007-2008)
  • Reviews of Previous Futures
  • Identifying previous efforts to engage in
    futures research in education
  • Examination of existing futures methods
    analysis of how appropriate to education
  • Identification of leading researchers and
    specialists
  • Definition of the objectives of the programme
  • Identifying the key issues and possibilities
    through
  • Initial stakeholder and public consultation
  • Workshops and events with parents toddlers,
    baby boomers, teachers and teenagers
  • Interviews and meetings with education
    technology industry, NDPB partners, futures
    researchers and consultants, DCSF BECTA policy
    teams
  • Online consultation website
  • Consultation with leading researchers
  • Commissioning outline challenge papers
  • Establishment of an expert advisory group

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Year 2 (2008-2009)
  • Building The Evidence the 5 challenges
  • Challenge leads (leading academics)
  • Commissioning of 50 scientific papers on
    existing trends, divergent futures
  • Workshops to generate emergent ideas not yet in
    the literature
  • Cross challenge events bringing together
    leading thinkers and doers outside academia and
    education
  • Expert Advisory Group meets 3 times
  • Public and Stakeholder Engagement
  • Citizens Jury
  • Million Futures and Beyond Current Horizons Power
    League
  • (with your permission) interviews and engagement
    in events with key policy partners

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3 key outcomes
  • The BCH Scenarios
  • 6 scenarios mapping potential divergent futures
    for education, based upon the evidence and ideas
    generated in the programme
  • Guidance on how to use these in strategy and
    planning activities for head teachers, Local
    Authorities and others...(particularly BSF)
  • The BCH Scenario Toolkit
  • A suite of online tools that leads head teachers,
    Local Authorities and others through the process
    of future scenario development and use,
    including
  • Defining questions, identifying key issues to
    consider, identifying key variables, building
    scenarios, testing policy options through
    scenarios, using scenarios with stakeholders
  • The BCH Resource Bank
  • All evidence from the programme collated in an
    easily accessible and searchable format,
    including
  • Synopsis of evidence
  • Scientific reviews
  • Events and ideas generated
  • Consultation tools
  • Links to further resources

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The BCH scenarios will explore ...
  • Educational goals
  • Educational personnel
  • Educational institutions
  • Educational methods
  • Educational tools
  • Educational outcomes
  • Beliefs about education

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The 5 Challenge Areas
  • Generations and Life-course
  • Identities, Citizenship, Communities
  • Knowledge, Creativity and Communication
  • Working and Employment
  • State/Market/Third Sector

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1. Generations and Life-course
  • Professor Sarah Harper, Director of the Institute
    for the Future of Aging, Oxford University
  • What changes in families, inter-generational
    relationships and aging processes might emerge in
    interaction with developments in new
    technologies?
  • How might education respond?

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2. Identities, Citizenship and Communities
  • Professor Helen Haste, University of Bath
  • How might cultural identity, citizenship and
    community develop at the intersection between
    globalisation/localisation forces and network
    technologies?
  • How might education respond?

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3. Knowledge, Creativity and Communication
  • Dr Carey Jewitt, Deputy Director, London
    Knowledge Lab
  • How might developments in science and technology
    interact with social processes to create forms of
    knowledge creation, circulation and
    communication?
  • How might education respond?

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4. Working and Employment
  • Professor Rob Wilson, University of Warwick
  • How might technological and economic trends
    inter-relate to develop new working and
    employment practices ?
  • How might education respond?

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5. State/Market/Third Sector
  • Professor Lydia Plowman, University of Stirling
  • How might institutional and technological trends
    inter-relate to offer new forms of educational
    provision?

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Selected Cross Challenge Activities
  • Science and Technology Subgroup led by Prof Dave
    Cliff, Bristol University (review
    cross-challenge oversight)
  • Demographics (review)
  • Popular images of educational futures and how
    to explore and unsettle these (event)
  • Dealing with uncertainty and risk (review and
    event)
  • Others....?

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Getting involved keeping up to date ...?
  • Identify opportunities for engaging with your
    networks (events other communications tools)
  • Identify opportunities where you can share your
    own thinking about educational futures
  • Share Consultation tools with your networks
  • http//www.beyondcurrenthorizons.org.uk/powerleagu
    e/
  • http//www.millionfutures.org.uk/
  • Website (www.beyondcurrenthorizons.org.uk)
  • E-newsletter (sign up on the website)
  • Dan Sutch (Futurelab)
  • Dominic Flitcroft (DCSF)

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  • What links....?
  • A line of electrocuted monks?
  • A myth of sympathetic needles ?
  • A new language?
  • A conversation on a transatlantic voyage ?
  • A chemistry professor?
  • The desire to get some news of family?
  • ... the telegraph

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  • The telegraph then becomes part of ...
  • Love

What an enemy science is to romance and love! On
the telegraph being extended to Gretna and
allowing disapproving parents to inform the
authorities
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  • The telegraph then becomes part of ...
  • Love
  • New business practices

Steam is one means of commerce the telegraph
another, and a man may as well attempt to carry
on successful trade by means of the old flatboat
and keel against a steamboat, as to transact
business by the use of the mails against the
telegraph St Louis, 1847
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  • The telegraph then becomes part of ...
  • Love
  • New business practices
  • Global relations

What can be more likely to effect peace than a
constant and complete intercourse between all
nations and individuals in the world? The
telegraph wire, the nerve of international life,
transmitting knowledge of events, removing causes
of misunderstanding, and promoting peace and
harmony throughout the world
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  • The telegraph then becomes part of ...
  • Love
  • New business practices
  • Global relations
  • Warfare

Exposed to swift dictation from Paris, the French
had to learn what it was to carry on a war with
Louis Napoleon planted at one of the ends of the
wire, and at the other, a commander like
Canrobert, who did not dare to meet Palace
strategy with respectful evasions
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  • The telegraph then becomes part of ...
  • Love
  • New business practices
  • Global relations and wars
  • New family relationships and work-life balance

The merchant goes home after a day of hard work
and excitement to a late dinner, trying amid the
family circle to forget business, when he is
interrupted by a telegram from London...the
businessman of the present day must be
continually on the jump... W.E.Dodge, 1868
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Social/technological futures shaped by ...
  • Existing social contexts

Developments in science and technology
Desires for the future
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