Shared Vision is like when a group of friends all agree on how to build a blanket fort, they each bring something special, but they work together so everyone gets what they want.
Shared Vision means people or groups come together with the same goal. It’s like when you and your friend both want to make the biggest, coziest blanket fort ever, and you plan it out together before you start throwing blankets around.
How it works
Imagine you and your friends each have different colored blankets, but you all agree that the best fort is the one with a roof made of blue blankets. That’s Shared Vision, you're working toward the same idea, even if you bring different things to the table.
Why it matters
When people have a Shared Vision, they can make bigger and better things together. It's like when your whole class agrees on a theme for a school project, everyone works harder because they’re all in it together.
Examples
- A group of friends who explain complicated things in simple terms.
- A classroom where students learn together through clear examples.
- A teacher who breaks down big ideas into small parts.
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See also
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- How authoritarian regimes use education as a political tool?
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- How Does Democracy | Educational Videos for Kids Work?