"Appreciative Inquiry is the cooperative search for the best in people,
their organisations, and the world around them. Read More..
| 5 Principles of Appreciative Inquiry |
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The Appreciative Eye
A very brief outline and discussion of the 5 Principles: 1. Constructionist Principle
HOPE - Hearing other people’s experience. The enlivening and liberating quality we call 'hope' (a real possibility) is liberated by sharing the "good stuff" such as our success stories. Appreciation involves some blend of thankfulness, admiration, approval, and gratitude.It can also mean recognition of viewpoint or value to another. 2. Principle of Simultaneity The moment we begin to inquire into something change begins to happen. There are no neutral questions or comments. Inquiry and change – for all intents and purposes – are simultaneous events. What was the best thing that has happened to you in the last week (or at work/school)? In my experience this question (even, or especially, with children) leads to a genuinely interesting and 'productive' discussion. 3. The Poetic Principle Just as a poem expresses a variety and different meanings so can people and events. Looked at appreciatively any situation can 'reveal' useful foundations on which the desired future can be built. What we focus on grows. "At my best" stories bring out qualities that had previously not been realised. In choosing the topic for an (AI) inquiry or investigation (interpretation) we are, in effect, helping to write the next chapter in the life of that organisation. 4. The Anticipatory Principle Expectations impact the direction of action and attitudes. A simple reflection on our personal lives can validate this proposition. If I expect the function to be boring - often, it is so! Our vision of the future has a very deep and profound influence on the way we act in the present. In fact it is thought that we sort of grow into the images we create.Hence if we are out to achieve deep or profound change we need to spend some time crafting or creating appropriate visions of the future. The anticipation (or vision) being referred to in this context is born out of hope based on some actual realisations or experiences. It is not a flight of fantasy. It is brought into being with the exercise of our imagination, our most (in the view of Einstein) powerful ability. In the organisational context we engage the 'whole system' to check for beliefs, hopes and aspirations that are or may be relevant to the group or organisational anticipation. 5. The Positive Principle
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