Category Archives: Three horizons

The Three Horizons part 2

*This text is taken from the Education Scotland’s Promoting Innovative Practice and Transformative Change Document

First Horizon OR ‘how good are we now?’

The first horizon is the dominant system, as it currently exists. This horizon is:

  • ‘business as usual’
  • contains the case for change and the story of decline; and
  • may be delivering successfully but it is gradually losing its ‘fitness for purpose’.

As a result, the system becomes out of date and less successful. People begin to lose faith in what they are doing and wonder whether there is a better way. This is often the trigger for a conversation about the future.

Second Horizon OR ‘how do we get to where we want to be?’

This is the transformational system. In the second horizon, innovation has started in the light of the apparent shortcomings of the existing system. This horizon is:

  • the ‘future space’ where tensions are played out between vision and existing reality and between possibilities and barriers;
  • where the distinction between innovations that merely improve the status quo and those that transform what you do become clearer
  • where options are tried out and where you experiment;
  • where dilemmas and paradoxes are explored;
  • a point of potential disruption in the process of navigating to the third horizon;
  • this is the pace where improving schools and services spend increasing amounts of their time. However, it is also where innovations may be introduced which just ‘prop up’ the existing, declining system, delaying the inevitable.

Third Horizon OR ’how good can we be?’

This is the future system. This horizon is about ideas and proposals for a future system that will require the transformative change of the second horizon. The first stirrings of a third horizon are those innovations already happening but that today look way off beam. This horizon is:

  • the long term successor to business as usual;
  • the product of radical innovation that introduces new ways of doing things;
  • the desirable future; and
  • a new approach that offers a fresh, visionary possibility.

The ideas or proposals of the third horizon have the potential to become increasingly relevant and appropriate in the future because they represent a more effective and informed response to the changes that are already occurring in the external environment. All three horizons are always present.

Read The Three Horizons part 1

Acknowledgememts

Education Scotland has licensed the Transition Leadership tools and the Three Horizons toolkit for the specific and sole purpose of improving Scottish Education and the partner services that support it. We are delighted to have partnered the following people and organisations in this venture: Executive Arts Inc.; James R. Ewing, ForthRoad Ltd.; International Futures Forum and Graham Leicester.

Balfron HS

Balfron High is used 3 Horizons and Implemento to empower young people to lead and inspire each other and staff.  Young people openly describe the very positive impact and skills for life this have developed. Watch the young people demonstrate clearly how the tools can be used and the difference it can make.

Our Journey To Excellence site has a numbetr of videos where you can see and hear for yourself just how the tools have been used at Balfron HS and the impact that they have had.

North Ayrshire CLD

North Ayrshire Community Learning and Development used 3-Horizons and Implemento to involve young people and the community more effectively in making a difference.  Views and opinions were gathered and a strategic plan created to take forward improvments.  Watch this video to see the approach in action.  Listen to young people talk about the difference these tools made to their involvement in the process.  Clip : Making Shift Happen

The Three Horizons, part 1

*This text is taken from the Education Scotland’s Promoting Innovative Practice and Transformative Change Document

The three horizons approach, in the form of a strategic thinking board game kit, aims to provide you with a helpful approach to exploring the creativity and imagination that change demands. Learners can be part of this process and their insights harnessed too. This kit sets up three perspectives called the three horizons. These perspectives relate to the present and the future. They will help you to re-organise your knowledge, ideas and aspirations so that you may look at them again with a fresh eye.

Using the kit can help you to:

  • see both the present situation and the emerging future differently
  • formulate aspirations about the future you desire
  • create a shared vison of what you can achieve: and
  • relate a shared vision of possibilities to how you plan for improvement

Change is a double-edged sword. Its relentless pace these days runs us off our feet. Yet when things are unsettled, we can find new ways to move ahead and to create breakthroughs not possible in stagnant societies.

Leading in a Culture of Change

We live in a rapidly changing world. Our shared aspirations are for education itself to drive that change and, in an ideal world, get ahead of it. But deciding how best to prepare learners for their future, and
to do better in the present, is a demanding task requiring determination, especially when the future is uncertain. We can gain inspiration from a variety of sources, and we can bring intelligence, expertise, experience and knowledge to bear in a focused way. This may sound daunting, but thinking about future possibilities is energising too. And we do it all the time.

The kit has been designed to be used in three stages:

  • A strategic conversation that envisions the future: this phase enables you to engage in a conversation about the way things are today, things that are happening in the external world and in the worlds of policy and emerging practice that might impact on the way you do things at present, as well as the things you really aspire to in the future.
  • Improvement planning: takes the results of that mapping of the landscape and explores the implications for improvement planning that focus on the things you need to change in order to move towards the future you desire.
  • Tracking progress: uses an overview to review the activities you planned and undertook to become a reflection on where you are the next year and so on. It helps you to keep track of how near you are getting to your planned transformation and your longer-term vision.

Read The Three Horizons part 2

Acknowledgememts

Education Scotland has licensed the Transition Leadership tools and the Three Horizons toolkit for the specific and sole purpose of improving Scottish Education and the partner services that support it. We are delighted to have partnered the following people and organisations in this venture: Executive Arts Inc.; James R. Ewing, ForthRoad Ltd.; International Futures Forum and Graham Leicester.