When Systems Thinking Is Not a Natural Act

Competence in systems thinking is implicitly assumed among the population of engineers and managers – in fact, most technical people will self-identify as systems thinkers. But systems thinking competencies are not as prevalent as these assertions might lead one to assume. Controlled experiment...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Valerdi, Ricardo, Rouse, William B.
Format: Technical Report
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/84042
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author Valerdi, Ricardo
Rouse, William B.
author_facet Valerdi, Ricardo
Rouse, William B.
author_sort Valerdi, Ricardo
collection MIT
description Competence in systems thinking is implicitly assumed among the population of engineers and managers – in fact, most technical people will self-identify as systems thinkers. But systems thinking competencies are not as prevalent as these assertions might lead one to assume. Controlled experiments show that systems thinking performance, even among highly educated people, is poor. This paper provides a set of systems thinking competencies and demonstrates how these are not as common as advertised. We also discuss how these competencies can be measured. Our main thesis is that systems thinking is not a natural act because evolution has favored mechanisms tuned to dealing with immediate surface features of problems. We discuss the implications of this philosophy and provide recommendations for closing
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spelling mit-1721.1/840422019-04-10T22:54:07Z When Systems Thinking Is Not a Natural Act Valerdi, Ricardo Rouse, William B. systems thinking systems engineering competencies Competence in systems thinking is implicitly assumed among the population of engineers and managers – in fact, most technical people will self-identify as systems thinkers. But systems thinking competencies are not as prevalent as these assertions might lead one to assume. Controlled experiments show that systems thinking performance, even among highly educated people, is poor. This paper provides a set of systems thinking competencies and demonstrates how these are not as common as advertised. We also discuss how these competencies can be measured. Our main thesis is that systems thinking is not a natural act because evolution has favored mechanisms tuned to dealing with immediate surface features of problems. We discuss the implications of this philosophy and provide recommendations for closing 2014-01-16T21:28:51Z 2014-01-16T21:28:51Z 2010-04-05 Technical Report Other http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/84042 Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 United States http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/us/ application/pdf
spellingShingle systems thinking
systems engineering competencies
Valerdi, Ricardo
Rouse, William B.
When Systems Thinking Is Not a Natural Act
title When Systems Thinking Is Not a Natural Act
title_full When Systems Thinking Is Not a Natural Act
title_fullStr When Systems Thinking Is Not a Natural Act
title_full_unstemmed When Systems Thinking Is Not a Natural Act
title_short When Systems Thinking Is Not a Natural Act
title_sort when systems thinking is not a natural act
topic systems thinking
systems engineering competencies
url http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/84042
work_keys_str_mv AT valerdiricardo whensystemsthinkingisnotanaturalact
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