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Documentation Index

Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://futureeducation.mintlify.app/llms.txt

Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

The five phases

Every programme on the platform follows five sequential phases. You can see your progress through them in the left sidebar of the Your Journey page — completed phases show a filled circle, your current phase is highlighted.
1

Onboarding

A written diagnostic you complete before the programme formally begins. You reflect on your current approach to teaching and learning, your assumptions about your practice, and what you want to investigate during the programme.FE’s role here is to help you surface assumptions you haven’t yet examined — pushing you to be specific rather than general about your professional context, and to name what you don’t yet know about yourself as a practitioner.Output: Institutional context diagnostic (5 questions)
2

Discovery

The first real phase of the programme, also called the Surface. You respond to two structured prompts about a significant professional moment — what happened and what it revealed about your practice.FE helps you look closely at what actually happened, not what you think should have happened. The goal is to name what surprised you and resist the urge to explain or justify.Output: Examining your practice — two structured reflections
3

Think

The core iterative phase of the programme, structured as four Build Cycles. In each cycle, you attempt to apply an insight from the programme to your real work, then document what happened and form a hypothesis about why.The four cycles are:
CycleFocus
1 · Getting ContextGround your hypothesis in your specific institutional situation
2 · Testing AssumptionsTrial an approach and examine what held up
3 · Scaling What WorksExtend what proved effective to broader or more complex situations
4 · Sustaining ImpactExamine what conditions are needed for the change to last
Each cycle has a submission date. FE helps you connect theory to practice — asking what the gap between intention and outcome reveals, and pushing you to make your hypotheses testable and specific.Output: 4 cycle registrations
4

Operate

You and your team work on a formal Change Proposal — identifying an institutional problem discovered through the programme and proposing a concrete intervention.The proposal has five sections:
  1. Problem — what is the issue and what evidence do you have?
  2. Change — what specific intervention do you propose?
  3. Stakeholders — who is involved and what do they need?
  4. Resources — what is required to implement this?
  5. Success indicators — how will you know it worked?
FE helps sharpen the specificity of your problem statement and pushes you to name what the institution would actually need to change — not just what you would like to see.Output: Team Change Proposal
5

Adapt

The final phase begins after your team proposal is submitted. You track early implementation — watching whether real institutional change is beginning to take hold.FE helps you notice what resistance looks like in practice, distinguish between surface compliance and genuine shift, and understand how change actually moves through your institution.Output: Implementation tracking

Your Journey page

The Your Journey page is a complete record of everything you have produced across the programme — diagnostics, Discovery reflections, cycle registrations, and your team’s Change Proposal, all in chronological order. You can access it from the left sidebar navigation at any time during the programme.

A note on FE’s stage awareness

FE is aware of which programme phase you are in and adjusts its questions accordingly. You won’t be told which phase you’re in — FE simply reads your context and deepens or shifts its approach as you move through the programme.
1

Reveal

The opening stage. FE helps you surface what you already know about your practice — habits, assumptions, and patterns you haven’t yet named. The goal is honest self-observation, not self-improvement.Typical duration: first 2–4 weeks of the programme.
2

Build

You begin examining one or two specific areas of your practice more closely. FE asks questions that push you to move from description to analysis — why does this happen, not just what happens.Typical duration: weeks 3–8.
3

Propose

You articulate a specific change or intention for your work. This might be a new approach to a recurring challenge, a commitment to try something differently, or a structured plan to apply what you’ve examined.Typical duration: weeks 6–10.
4

Operate

You report back on what you’ve actually done. FE looks for signals of consistency, transfer (applying the learning in new situations), and complexity (handling harder cases). This is where competency levels are assessed.Typical duration: ongoing — 30, 60, and 90-day check-ins.