3. The rules of the game
1. Your task is to come up with the best possible idea to SI in the marketplace –
young people back into jobs
2. You will need to look at the present and ahead to the future.
3. You will need to work in your teams
4. You will need to consider future challenges - global and local
5. You will need to debate and evaluate your best ideas
6. Your ideas will be judged against a set of criteria
7. No idea is a bad idea so have fun!
4. The ideas criteria
1. Don’t forget we are looking for the best possible SI idea in getting
the young people back into jobs
2. Your idea can be anything - a policy, service, product or behaviour
3. Ideas are judged against below criteria :
1. Fun - exciting and creative
2. Innovative and futuristic - will produce something new or different
3. Meets local challenges
4. Meets global challenges
5. Relevant to community - people are supportive
6. Sustainable - has a positive and lasting impact
7. Feasible and achievable - the right resources can be found to make it happen
5. Your game kit
The paper to record your thoughts and ideas
Team area
Games Master support
Your knowledge and expertise
Team members
Internet
9. Step 1:
Global Challenges
Step 2:
Local Challenges
Step 3:
Perspectives
of the SI
Step 4:
Ideas
Step 5:
Prioritising ideas
Step 6:
Presenting future
ideas
Step 7:
Preparing for
testing
Step 8:
Real world testing
Step 9:
Preparation and
presenting final
ideas
Step 10:
Voting
11. Step 1: Global Challenges
1. What global challenges will job market face in the future?
2. Are those challenges economic, social, cultural or environmental?
3. Do any of your challenges cut across all the above four perspectives?
4. Record your global challenges and place them around the symbols for
economic, social, environmental and cultural perspectives on the game board
15. Step 1: Global Challenges
Economic: Growing inequality
There are pockets of very rich places within cities and pockets of very poor
places. The gap between the rich and poor is widening
Social: Shifting populations
30% of the world’s population lived in urban areas in 1950, now …. 50% of the
world’s population live in urban areas
Cultural: Increased diversity
The number of migrants more than doubled between 1960 and 2000
Education: Old patterns in the new world
Industries and sectors are becoming more and more diversified. In many
countries educational programmes are just not able to catch up with it.
16. Step 1: Global Challenges
What are the global challenges facing employment among
young people ?
In what ways will
economy keep
growing? How do job
markets relate to
that?
How does the
increasing mobility
impact the job
market outlook?
How far can our
cities grow ? What
will they need in the
future?
What type of jobs
will my children
have? What about
their education?
17. Step 2: Local Challenges
1. You have thought global. Now think local
2. What do you think the most important local challenges facing will be in the
future?
3. Are they economic, social, cultural and educational or something in between?
4. What are the links between global and local challenges?
5. Record the local challenges you identify on paper and place them around the
symbols for economic, social, cultural and educational perspectives
18.
19. Reflect deeply on your work as it relates to the specific theme in order to
get to the real insights.
The four main themes are as follows:
1.How do you create and shape new job markets suitable for a
21st century workforce?
2. How to mobilise outsiders to catalyse, change and move young people
towards employment and business?
3. What are education institutions doing to help young people prepare
for new economies?
4. How do you create better collaboration across sectors that result
in new jobs for younger people?
21. ECONOMIC
‘the wealth of the city’
• Jobs and employment
• Business
• Investment
• Skills
ENVIRONMENTAL
‘the nature of the city’
• Public space
• Waste
• Energy
• Topography and landscape
SOCIAL
‘the wellbeing of the city’
• Welfare
• Housing
• Crime and justice
• Health
• Education
• Happiness
CULTURAL
‘the life of the city’
• Diversity
• Faith
• Arts and events
• Leisure and play
The structure
of your city:
four perspectives
22. How do you create and shape
new job markets suitable
for 21 Century workforce?
• Jobs and employment
• Business
• Investment
• Skills
Mobilising outsiders to
catalyse, change and move
young people towards
employment and business
• Creative solutions
• Unusual suspects
What are education institutions
doing to help young people to
prepare for new economies
How do you create better
collaboration across sectors
that result in new jobs
for younger people
Four themes
23. Step 4: Ideas
1. Come up with ten ideas that will help you achieve your vision for your
social innovation
2. Each idea corresponds to an economic, social, cultural or educational
perspective
3. Your ideas must address the global and local challenges you identified
earlier
4. Think of one advantage and one disadvantage of each idea you have for
your vision
5. Remember to consider the idea criteria
24. Step 4: The ideas criteria
1. Fun - exciting and creative
2. Innovative and futuristic - will produce something new or different
3. Meets local challenges
4. Meets global challenges
5. Relevant to community - people are supportive
6. Sustainable - has a positive and lasting impact
7. Feasible and achievable - the right resources can be found to make it happen
25. Step 5: Prioritising ideas
1. Narrow down to one or two top ideas
2. Rate each of your ideas against the ideas criteria
3. Write your thoughts about each idea on the matrix to help you choose
4. Vote for the strongest ideas as a team or individually if you prefer
5. You can only take two ideas forward for the rest of the game so you must
reach a decision that everyone is happy with
26. Step 6: Presenting future ideas
1. Prepare a presentation about your strongest idea(s)
2. You will be presenting to all the teams
3. You can present in any way you like
4. The other teams will give you helpful hints after your presentation
5. Think carefully about what to tell other groups as they may steal your idea!
27. Step 7: Preparing for testing
1. Think about how you are going to test your ideas
2. Use the ideas criteria to decide what you would need to test
3. Decide how you would like to present your ideas to others
4. Decide who you need to speak to and how you are going to involve them
5. Decide what information you need to gather and check
6. Decide what materials and tools you will need and can use
7. Decide who is going to do what in your team
8. This is your test plan
28. Step 9: Preparation and presenting final
ideas
1. Prepare and deliver a vote winning presentation
2. It is the quality of your idea that really matters
3. Don’t forget you’ll be judged against the ideas criteria
4. Use all the materials you have collected so far
5. You can present in whichever way you choose
29. Step 10: Voting
1. Put your voting box in the middle of your game board
2. Take a voting token. You are going to vote for the best idea
3. Make sure you judge each idea against the ideas criteria
4. You must vote on your own
5. You cannot vote for your own idea
6. Don’t count your team’s votes until everyone has finished voting!