UHC Lab 222
Social Innovations to reduce Teenage Pregnancy
Sep 10, 2015 - November 5, 2015
This is a dual co-requisite course that combines MIT's ULab Course with Civika's Social Innovation course that provides curated cases and tools on Philippine governance innovations. It is composed of UHC Lab 222.A and UHC Lab 222.B.
Click here to enroll in UHC Lab 222.A - MIT ULab: Transforming Business, Society, and Self with U.Lab
Course Description:
About this course
We live in a time of disruptive change, one that requires a new collective leadership capacity. In this groundbreaking course, we invite you on a journey to see the world in new ways and practice a method that allows leaders, entire organizations, and larger social systems to connect with and actualize their highest future possibility.
In January 2015, 30,000 people from 190 countries enrolled in U.Lab. In an exit survey, 52% said it was “eye-opening”, while another 36% called it “life-changing”. U.Lab has inspired the first-known use of a MOOC by a government as a platform for citizens to shape the issues that matter to them, it has been used in management teams of the world’s leading NGOs, and it is now being used in 42 Impact Hubs worldwide – by locally-rooted, globally connected communities of change makers to catalyze systemic change.
In the U.Lab you will learn Theory U, an approach to leading profound change that has been developed by action researchers at MIT, and practiced by leaders around the world, for over 20 years.
You will apply this method to a challenge, issue, or system that matters to you.
And you will have the opportunity to form self-organized Hubs and peer coaching circles with other U.Lab participants; in order to co-sense and co-shape the future that you feel is wanting to emerge in your work, and life, right now.
You will be joining a community that includes national government leaders from Scotland, founders and members of 42 Impact Hubs around the world, business leaders in the U.S, Brazil, and China, and many other inspired change makers from over 190 countries worldwide who are interested in creating more aware, inclusive, sustainable societies.
Click here to enroll in UHC Lab 222.B - Governance Innovations for Youth Development
Course Description:
To enroll, open an account at www.schoology.com and enter access code FGBGP-KJFHJ.
The Course for Philippine Governance Innovations is a seven-week curriculum that provides an overview of governance innovations in the Philippines drawing from the Galing Pook video case library. UHC Lab 221.B will provide you with basic frameworks on institutional arrangements such as game theory and social network theory in order to help you design institutional innovations to improve maternal health.
Design Thinking for Universal Maternal Health in the Philippines
Sep 3, 2015 - October 23, 2015
This is a dual co-requisite course that combines Ideo's Human-Centered Design Course with Civika's Social Innovation course that provides curated cases and tools on Philippine governance innovations. It is composed of UHC Lab 221.A and UHC Lab 221.B.
Course Description:
Design Kit: The Course for Human-Centered Design is a seven-week curriculum that will introduce you to the concepts of human-centered design and how this approach can be used to create innovative, effective, and sustainable solutions for social change. This course has been created to reach those who are brand new to human-centered design, so no prior experience required (though we of course welcome previous students to continue honing your human-centered design skills!)
Click here to enroll in UHC Lab 221.B - Governance Innovations for Universal Maternal Health in the Philippines
Course Description:
To enroll, open an account at www.schoology.com and enter access code 84RGC-SGZH7.
The Course for Philippine Governance Innovations is a seven-week curriculum that provides an overview of governance innovations in the Philippines drawing from the Galing Pook video case library. UHC Lab 221.B will provide you with basic frameworks on institutional arrangements such as game theory and social network theory in order to help you design institutional innovations to improve maternal health.