System Thinking

Systems thinking is an all-surrounded method of examining a system that highlites the connections and inter dependencies among its various components, as well as how the system operates over time and within larger systems. This approach stands in combination of traditional analysis, which involves breaking a system down into its individual parts for study. In system thinking the iceburg model is used. The iceburg model it reprecents that a small part of the problem is visible to outside. The iceberg model is often used in management, psychology, and communication studies to help explain the underlying causes of behavior and problems. The visible part of the iceberg represents the symptoms or surface-level manifestations of a problem, such as behaviors or outcomes that can be observed directly. The hidden part of the iceberg represents the...