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In Science for All
Americans, the American Association for the Advancement of Science
defines a "system" simply as "any collection of things
that have some influence on each other....The things can be almost anything,
including objects, organisms, machines, processes, ideas, numbers, or
organizations. Thinking of a collection of things as a system draws our
attention to what needs to be included among the parts to make sense of
it, to how its parts interact with one another, and to how the system
as a whole relates to other systems."
Individual "things" (plants, people, schools, watersheds) are
themselves systems, and are not sustainable separate from the larger systems
in which they exist. The Center for Ecoliteracy recognizes that learning
to think systemically is critical to education for sustainability. One
of the ways that teachers and schools teach systemic thinking is to model
it themselves.
Shifts in Perception
According to Fritjof Capra, systems thinking requires thinking in terms of relationships, connectedness,
and context. Thinking systemically also requires several shifts in perception,
which lead in turn to different ways to teach, and different
ways to organize society:
From parts to the whole
Systems are integrated wholes whose properties cannot be reduced to those
of smaller parts. Their "systemic" properties are properties of
the whole which are possessed by none of the parts. The nature and quality of what students
learn is strongly affected by the culture of the whole school, not just
the individual classroom. This shift in perception can also lead to moving
from curricula based on single subject matters to integrated curricula.
From objects to relationships
An ecosystem is not just a collection of species, but is a community.
Communities, whether ecosystems or human systems, are made up of sets, or
networks, of relationships. In the systems view, the "objects"
of study are networks of relationships. Organizations, including schools,
that adopt this perspective are more likely to emphasize relationship-based
processes such as cooperation and decision-making by consensus.
From objective knowledge to contextual knowledge
Shifting focus from the parts to the whole implies shifting from analytical
thinking to contextual thinking. Since explaining things in terms of their
contexts means explaining them in terms of their environments, all systems
thinking is environmental thinking. This shift sometimes results in schools'
focusing on project-based learning instead of prescriptive curricula. It
also encourages teachers to serve as facilitators and fellow learners alongside
students, rather than as experts dispensing knowledge.
From quantity to quality
Through much of the history of Western science, many of its practitioners
have maintained that only things that can be measured and quantified
can be expressed in scientific models. It has sometimes been implied
that phenomena that can be measured and quantified are more important—and
perhaps even that what cannot be measured and quantified doesn't exist
at all. Relationships and context, however, cannot be put on a scale
or measured with a ruler. In practice, this shift can lead to seeking
more comprehensive forms of assessment besides standardized testing.
From structure to process
Living systems develop and evolve. Therefore, understanding them requires
understanding renewal, change, and transformation. In practice, this
shift can result in shifting emphasis to how a student solves a problem
rather than on whether or not he or she gets the "right" answer. In
communities, it can mean that the process for making decisions is
often as important as the decisions themselves.
From contents to patterns
When we draw maps of relationships, we discover that certain configurations
of relationships appear again and again. We call these configurations
patterns. Instead of focusing on what a living system is made of, we study
its patterns. This shift leads to discovering that understanding how a
pattern works in one natural or social system helps us to understand other
systems that manifest the same pattern.
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