England
Where do you live?
Making strategy with systems thinking in practice
| Start | End |
|---|---|
| 01 May 2027 | Oct 2027 |
What you will study
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situations at a local, regional or international level; and/ or -
situations concerning organisations, institutions or networks.
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education, training and professional development -
sustainability and environmental decision making -
finance and economic planning -
international and community development and social justice -
health and social care -
IT and cybersecurity -
engineering, manufacturing, logistics and procurement -
creative and performing arts
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Tradition 1 (feedback): System Dynamics and the Viable Systems Model, historically dealing with inter-relationships and interdependencies -
Tradition 2 (perspectives): Soft Systems Methodology and Strategic Options Development and Analysis with Cognitive Mapping, historically dealing with multiple viewpoints -
Tradition 3 (boundaries): Critical Systems Heuristics, historically dealing with contentious issues of ethics and politics.
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(set book) Systems Approaches to Managing Change: a practical guide (Reynolds, M. and Holwell, S., eds (2020, 2nd edition)) -
(reference book) Systems Thinkers (Ramage, M. and Shipp, K. (2020 2nd edition)).
Entry requirements
Teaching and assessment
Support from your tutor
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marking your assignments and offering detailed feedback to help you improve -
providing individual guidance, whether that’s for general study skills or specific module content -
guiding you to additional learning resources -
facilitating online discussions between your fellow students in the dedicated forums.
Assessment
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3 Tutor-marked assignments (TMAs) -
End-of-module assessment
What's included
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Systems Approaches to Managing Change: a practical guide (Reynolds, M. and Holwell, S., eds (2020, 2nd edition)) -
Systems Thinkers (Ramage, M. and Shipp, K. (2020 2nd edition)).
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practical exercises -
video demonstrations -
online discussions with fellow students -
web-based multi-media teaching.
Computing requirements
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Primary device – A desktop or laptop computer with at least 8 GB of RAM and a quad-core processor (2.4 GHz minimum speed). It’s possible to access some materials on a mobile phone, tablet or Chromebook; however, they will not be suitable as your primary device. -
Peripheral device – Headphones/earphones with a built-in microphone for online tutorials. -
Operating systems – Windows 11 or the latest supported macOS. -
Internet access – Broadband or mobile connection. -
Browser – Google Chrome and Microsoft Edge are recommended; Mozilla Firefox and Safari may be suitable. -
Our OU Study app operates on supported versions of Android and iOS. -
Software – Any additional software will be provided or is generally available for free.