Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byImogene Carpenter Modified over 9 years ago
1
Above: "Generations" by George R. Anthonisen. Photograph by John Hoenstine."Generations" GENERATIONS
2
Strauss and Howe 4 repeating generational types: Idealist Reactive Civic Adaptive
3
4 repeating generational types in 4 repeating types of eras High-Awakening-Unraveling-Crisis
4
Recent types and eras Most recent examples Generation Born during Type of Era Idealist1943–1960Baby BoomersHigh Superpower America Reactive1961–198113 th Gen/ Gen XAwakening Consciousness Revolution Civic1982–2000 Millennials/ Gen Y UnravelingCulture Wars Adaptive2001–2011New Silent Gen/ Gen Z CrisisTerrorism Recession
5
The types who lead from each generation Generation Came of age during Leaders Idealist Baby Boomers Awakening Cerebral, principled, human sacrifice, wagers of righteous wars. Reactive 13 th Gen/ Gen X Unraveling Cunning, realists, warriors meet problems one-on-one. CivicMillennialsCrisis vigorous and rational institution-builders, aggressive advocates of technological progress, economic prosperity, social harmony, and public optimism. AdaptiveNew Silent Gen High advocates of fairness and the politics of inclusion, irrepressible in the wake of failure.
6
The types through the eras AKABorn during Young adult midlife Old Age IdealistProphetHighAwakeningUnravelingCrisis ReactiveNomadAwakeningUnravelingCrisisHigh CivicHeroUnravelingCrisisHighAwakening AdaptiveArtistCrisisHighAwakeningUnraveling
7
Strauss and Howe 7 key traits of Millennials Special Sheltered Confident Team-oriented Achieving Pressured Conventional
8
Wilson & Gerber 4 Pedagogical adaptations Enhanced clarity of both course structure and assignments Student participation in course design Pre-planned measures to reduce stress Rigorous attention to the ethics of learning.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.