Emergence of Futurology: A Discipline and Its Role in Education Planning
The term futurology also known as futures studies discusses what will be happening in the future and decision making accordingly. Futurology is defined as the study of formulating educated presumptions that will probably and preferably prove to be true in the future. According to Bhaskaran (2006), the roots of futurology can be found back in the age of the Torah and the Bible having their own prophesies. Then in the 16th century, prophecies of Nostradamus about many things got the attention of the people and some of them are still awaited to be unveiled. 
Jules Verne talked about a journey to the moon of a spacecraft in 1865 where he predicted the speed, take-off, and landing venues as Florida and Pacific respectively which came to be true exactly after one century and three years in 1968. Another thrust to futurology in the 19th century was the publication of HG Wells about the expectancies towards the development of science and technology and its effects on human lives.

In the twentieth century, futurology emerged as a discipline with a new pattern of thinking of futurists particularly Alvin Toffler and John Naisbitt who tried to make predictions on the basis of understanding nature systematically and scientifically. World War II also contributed futurology to emerge as a discipline when American forces felt the need of knowing things that never existed and were not known up to then such as new technologies, nuclear exchanges, and their effects on human lives and the environment across the world (Bhaskaran, 2006).

 In futurology as a discipline, the futurists carry out future studies in three paradigms namely descriptive paradigm, scenario paradigm, and evolutionary research study paradigm. Kuosa (2011) elaborated that in the descriptive paradigm, futurists make probable predictions on the basis of developments that took place in the past. Static and optimistic thinking produces a predictive future to be foreseen by futurists. Research studies comprised well-phrased and clear objectives with quantitative research in a short period of time.  In the scenario paradigm, the researchers put forward things while explaining the way things will happen in the future.  

The scenario they present is not on the basis of its suitability to predict but on its suitability to value addition to the process of existing decision making visualizing possibility and introducing explorations of the foreseen development. On the other hand, the evolutionary futures research paradigm allows futurists to endeavor to describe and understand what will be happening in the days ahead in an uncertain world with higher accuracy on the basis of evolutionary laws.

There are three phases futurology as a discipline has passed through; the first phase consists of twenty years comprising 1940s and 1950s. This era of futurology is considered a golden time of planning, quantitative methods, positivism, global trade, and financing. It was a time to emerge potentials towards scientific and technological development and economic growth through urbanization, industrialization, and globalization. Such a triggering situation demanded organized long-term planning, exploring trends and technological future insights, and needs assessment. 

The second phase of future studies includes the 1960s and 1970s called the age of international future research movement because the future research practice spread beyond American military futurists due to increased awareness of the trends for future studies (Kuosa, 2011). Ossip Flechtheim wrote a book on futurology and suggested solving human problems related to averting wars and peace, stopping famine and poverty, avoiding oppression and offensive actions, supporting democratic practices, preservation of natural resources, and so on (Poli, 2011). The third phase starts from the 1980s and continues up to the present age. In this phase, new methods for future studies are observed to be ceased relating it to the second paradigm of future studies.  

A small number of methods in future research methodology have been developed which is too less than what was expected during the second phase. In this phase, the field of future studies got stabled as many institutions offered courses related to future studies, and many dissertations related to the field were produced. The field got identity in discussions as a regular topic in journals related to futurology.
An analysis of the emergence of futurology as a discipline reveals that prophecies of the past, current directions, and future forecasting are considered as a unitary move forward it serves three major areas of research objectives in future studies (Kuosa, 2011). The three major areas provide a base for implications of futurology for educational planning. 

The first area is about developing vision and setting aims, goals, and objectives which are at the heart of educational planning. If vision building and setting aims and objectives are based on systematic future studies then the achievement of vision aims and objectives are almost be ensured. For example, looking at the needs and demands of the society where the individuals want to be in the future, educational institutions will develop their vision, aims, and objectives with the help of future studies. The second major area of the research objectives in future studies is the contributions towards planning and decision making. 

Thus, futurology plays a vital role in educational planning and decision making during devising policies for education and curriculum development. For example, looking at the mobility of masses towards or away and their projections which will be explored by futurists, educational planners will decide to open or close educational facilities in certain areas. The third area of future research is solving the global problems of humankind. That means in research and development activities, futurology plays the role of helping hand. On the basis of forecasting by futurology, many educational problems are attempted to be addressed by educationists. 

Without authentic sources, it is difficult to make decisions for the future regarding education thus futurology attempts to address the requirement. Education is supposed to develop abilities among the young generation to enable those to be adjusted with the times in the future so educational leaders, managers, policymakers need to be aware of essential trends to achieve desired objectives. 
Inayatullah (2008) proposed six pillars of future thinking for transformation namely mapping, anticipating, timing, deepening, creating alternatives, and transforming. All these shared pillars are the agenda of education that mapping means here an assessment of the current situation and setting goals to be achieved in the future. 

Anticipating refers to identifying opportunities and threats regarding the set goals and proactively planning strategies to address those opportunities and threats. Timing the future implies an identification of strategies and every possible creative model of change within the society. The next pillar which is deepening the future is about harnessing the solutions to anticipated problems so that proactively mistakes related to the transformation process could be tackled. The fifth pillar discusses creating alternatives in structural roles. For example in an educational organization, the roles of administrators, teachers, and students may be challenged and suggested alternative roles to existing roles. 

The important thing is to develop an organizational functions chart followed by searching for new structures to employ in those functions. The last pillar to future thinking is transforming the future which is through narrowing down to a preferred future by analyzing scenarios, questioning, and creative visualization. There are insights and implications in these pillars for education planning to transform society. Educational planning involves vision building, setting aims, goals, and objectives, selecting and organizing strategies to achieve the vision, devising evaluative procedures to supervise the process, resource allocation, and so on are much related to the six pillars of future thinking.

In short, futurology and education are two sides of the same coin. In futurology, probable and preferred predictions are made on the basis of analysis of past events and current trends. The analysis and study of current trends are supported by education through suggesting tools and techniques. On the other hand, there are insights and implications for educational planning in futurology which ensures the planning to be relevant and meaningful because, in futurology, facta and Futura (Poli, 2011) means current trends, practices, traditions, and their effects on the future respectively both are carefully postulated. It can be said that futurology and education are supplementary to each other.

References
Bhaskaran, P. B. (2006). Futurology: In perspective. ICFAI Journal of management research.
Retrieved August 03, 2018, from http://balabhaskaran.tripod.com/perspective.pdf

Inayatullah, S. (2008). Six pillars: future thinking for transformation. Foresight. 10(1).
Kuosa, T. (2011). Evolution of future studies. Futures: The journal of policy, planning and
future studies. 43(3). Retrieved July 30, 2018, from

Poli, R. (2011). The step towards an explicit ontology of the future. Journal of future studies.

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