Prognostication
Saturday, July 7, 2007 at 08:07AM
Doug Johnson in Head for the Edge column
Prognostication
Head for the Edge, Technology Connection, November 1997
Prognostication, the ability to predict the future, is a tricky business. Yet, I am fascinated by those who try, even when they are wonderfully wrong. As an elementary student, I was astounded when my copy of My Weekly Reader boldly predicted that we would one day eat burgers made of high protein insect parts or assured me that a personal helicopter would be one day fly from my garage. Cool!

My fascination with futurists continues to this day. Tofflers’ Creating a New Civilization, Naisbitt’s Global Paradox and Tapscott’s Digital Economy all sit on my shelves, read and reread. I ask classes to read Gate’s The Road Ahead and have given a copy of Perelman’s goofy, but strangely believable, School’s Out to my superintendent.

Compelling futurists are skilled at predicting trends from a few early events gathered through “environmental scanning.” A good environmental scanner reads widely, remembers well, sees connections, and then makes a prediction.

For those who would like to try environmental scanning (and perhaps a little personal prognostication), the Internet is a wonderful tool. Newsletters, customized news delivery services, intelligent agents, and now “push” technologies can put a huge compilation of events right on one’s computer desktop each morning. The challenge, like with the rest of the Internet, is not finding information sources, but finding the ones which best meet your needs.

Here’s a beginners list of news sources for educational leaders who might like to practice a little scanning. Subscription information can be found on the web pages included in the description.
So from all the scanning I do, can I offer any bold predictions? Sure, why not?
Think about the future as you fly home this evening to your supper of bee-burgers. And keep in mind Bill Gate’s prophetic words from 1981, “640K ought to be enough for anybody.”
Article originally appeared on Doug Johnson Website (http://www.doug-johnson.com/).
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