“Tell me and I will forget, teach me and I will remember, involve me and I will learn.”–Benjamin Franklin
“Those who can’t do, teach. Those who can’t teach, teach gym.”–Woody Allen
My apologies to all you educators out there. I just had to get that Woody Allen line in. It makes sense, though, that teaching something as fluid, changing and uncertain as the future requires creative tools to involve the student and develop the appropriate mindset. In episode #5 I talk with two individuals who are taking different approaches to the task.

Peter Bishop
The first interview is with career futurist educator, Peter Bishop, founder of Teach the Future.™ His aim is nothing less than to make future-think modules a standard in education. I then talk with game developer Robert Mattox about his old school approach to involvement–a board game. Appropriate links to all the subjects in this program can be found below the audio and YouTube files that follow. A reminder that Seeking Delphi is available on iTunes, and has a channel on YouTube. You can also follow us on Facebook.

Robert Mattox
Podcast #5: Teaching And Learning The Future, 26:50

Hope City
Smart robots will outnumber people by 2050
McDonald’s to kill the drive-through with mobile ordering and curbside delivery.
SpaceX plans lunar tourism next year.
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The Ol’ Perfessor knew what he was talking about. Well, maybe he didn’t, but the advice is sage nonetheless. It is notoriously difficult to predict anything in the future with consistent accuracy. So why in the world would anyone want to become a futurist? Why bother? Well, to be blunt, that is exactly why! Ignoring the opportunities and dangers of the future is what I like to call The Ostrich Syndrome. Go ahead, hide your head in the sand. The future is not going to go away; it will get here. And if we can’t predict it, there are certainly ways to prepare for it. To prevent bad outcomes, or at least make them less likely. To create good outcomes, or at least make them more likely. And to be better prepared to deal with whatever does come.