| Return to the Front
Page
Systems Thinking Puzzler:
Lord of the Rings
by Chris Soderquist
This month's puzzler column is dedicated to my favorite book, which has
recently been turned into a movie: J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings.
For those of you who have read the book or seen the movie (I'd say that's
likely most of you), your task is to model one dynamic (i.e. storyline) in the
book/movie. I'm interested in seeing your models! So feel free to email them to
me at chris.soderquist@pontifexconsulting.com.
In the next issue of The Connector
I'll publish a model of a central storyline.
Note:
You must use iThink/STELLA 8 to view
the November - December Puzzler Solution:
Download November - December Puzzler Solution - Windows
Macintosh
|
|
| About this
Feature
A distinguishing characteristic of
highly-skilled systems thinkers is their ability to quickly get to the heart of
an issue, problem, or process. Perhaps you've seen it in action, or perhaps
you've experienced it yourself. Skilled users of the thinking skills, language
and toolset typically are very good at focusing problems, at posing good
questions, at untangling complexities, and at generating high-leverage
insights.
Just as you can get stronger by exercising, you can improve your ability to do
systems thinking by practicing. This feature is a practice field for developing
that capability. Each month, we'll present you with a puzzle-a real-world case
that can benefit from the application of systems thinking. We'll ask you to
spend a couple of hours (maximum) to work through the case, capturing the
essence of the issue. In the next month's issue, we'll provide you with one
approach to the solution of the puzzle. So each puzzle gives you two chances to
learn-first, as you work the puzzle, and again as you compare your approach to
ours.
|
|
|
|