Difference between revisions of "Appreciative Inquiry (AI)"
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{{Term|APPRECIATIVE INQUIRY (AI)|An [[Organizational Development (OD)|organizational development]] process or philosophy that engages individuals within an organizational system in its renewal, change and focused performance. Its assumption is simple: every organization has something that works right – things that give it life when it is most alive, effective, successful, and connected in healthy ways to its [[Stakeholder|stakeholders]] and communities. The basic idea is to build organizations around what works, rather than trying to fix what doesn't. | {{Term|APPRECIATIVE INQUIRY (AI)|An [[Organizational Development (OD)|organizational development]] process or philosophy that engages individuals within an organizational system in its renewal, change and focused performance. Its assumption is simple: every organization has something that works right – things that give it life when it is most alive, effective, successful, and connected in healthy ways to its [[Stakeholder|stakeholders]] and communities. The basic idea is to build organizations around what works, rather than trying to fix what doesn't. | ||
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The AI methodology was developed by Dr. David Cooperrider from a study in Organizational Behaviour at Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, in the middle of the 1980s. Primarily used to help corporation and institutions to improve their competitive advantage or organizational effectiveness, the AI is been recently applied in strategic planning for public policies, including a number of sustainable development projects. | The AI methodology was developed by Dr. David Cooperrider from a study in Organizational Behaviour at Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, in the middle of the 1980s. Primarily used to help corporation and institutions to improve their competitive advantage or organizational effectiveness, the AI is been recently applied in strategic planning for public policies, including a number of sustainable development projects. |
Revision as of 09:54, 20 February 2009
APPRECIATIVE INQUIRY (AI) |
An organizational development process or philosophy that engages individuals within an organizational system in its renewal, change and focused performance. Its assumption is simple: every organization has something that works right – things that give it life when it is most alive, effective, successful, and connected in healthy ways to its stakeholders and communities. The basic idea is to build organizations around what works, rather than trying to fix what doesn't.
The AI methodology was developed by Dr. David Cooperrider from a study in Organizational Behaviour at Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, in the middle of the 1980s. Primarily used to help corporation and institutions to improve their competitive advantage or organizational effectiveness, the AI is been recently applied in strategic planning for public policies, including a number of sustainable development projects.
Problem solving versus Appreciative Inquiry |
Problem solving | Appreciative Inquiry and the 4-stage process |
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Identify Problem | Appreciate "What is" (what gives life?), identify "What works well?": DISCOVER |
Conduct Root Cause Analysis | Imagine "What might be?", Envision results: DREAM |
Brainstorm Solutions & Analyse | Determine "What should be -- the ideal?", Co-construct :DESIGN |
Develop Actions Plans | Determine "What will be?" "How to empower, learn, and adjust/improvise?", Sustain: DESTINY |
Understanding the AI Precess |
Positive InquiryAI’s primary tool is positive questioning. It asks questions that strengthen the capacity to apprehend, anticipate, and heighten positive potential. It seeks to demonstrate a constructive perspective of what people talk about as past and present capacities: achievements, assets, unexplored potentials, innovations, strengths, elevated thoughts, opportunities, benchmarks, values, traditions and strategic competencies.
Protocol of interviewThe interview protocol entails asking positive questions, seeking what works, what empowers, seeking the best, seeking successes and identifying their causes. It is used as a major tool to stimulate story-telling among the participants. The protocol employs a common language for promoting rich and structured discussions.
The AI 4-D Model: Discovery, Dream, Design and DeliveryAppreciative Inquiry uses a planning and management cycle of Discovery, Dream, Design and Delivery that builds upon the root causes of success and motivation among participant as individuals and groups. The AI 4-D Model can smoothly guide a group of stakeholders to construct a shared vision of a desired future, design feasible and realistic action plans and create commitment for its implementation.
Through interviews and story-telling stakeholders are asked to share their stories of accomplishments, and then to look at the factors, resources and competencies that led to the successes. These could be: successful leadership, relationships, technologies, values, learning processes, external relationships, planning methods, etc.
The achievements identified in the discovery phase are used to visualize a desired future. This is a particular feature of the appreciative inquiry methodology. When “the best of what is” has been identified and valued, the mind naturally begins to search beyond; it begins to envision new possibilities.
In the next step a realistic design and planning on how to reach the future vision are made. Future visioning requires the development of processes that will bring the group from its current state to its desired state. The key is the description of what the intended outcome should look like and how it might function. Stakeholders create provocative propositions of the ideal framework – a design which they feel they are capable of realizing.
The destiny is the construction of the future through innovation an action. The first three steps are designed to establish a momentum of excitement. Since the group have been involved in a valuing, envisioning, and dialoguing process, they are committed and have a clear sense of where they are headed. In the destiny phase participants take full responsibility for their own innovation and they show commitment with the implementation of the actions.
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Web Resources |
Below you have a list of selected websites where you can find some set of tools, practical methodologies, and actual stories from the field: |
Link | Content |
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www.unitar.org | An example in application: The government of Cape Verde has called upon UNITAR to design a national capacity development strategy for its public administration in order to meet the challenges of Cape Verde’s insertion in the global economy. |
www.iisd.org | Using appreciative inquiry to design and deliver environmental, gender equity and private sector development projects in Southern India. |
www.appreciativeinquiry.case.edu | A series of case studies where AI was used. |
www.appreciativeinquiry.case.edu | The best pick of AI tools such as articles, workshop slides, books. |
www.appreciativeinquiry.case.edu | Practice Tools: Positive Questions and Interview Guides. |
www.appreciativeinquiry.case.edu | AI in the Non-profit and NGO Sector: cases study, tools, books and websites. |
References
- ↑ www.new-paradigm.co.uk (26 January 2009)
- ↑ www.appreciativeinquiry.case.edu (26 January 2009)