In response to the growing complexity of the 21st-century landscape, this paper reconceptualizes iEnvironmental Scanning/i as a developmental competency essential for youth agency, strategic foresight, and ethical decision-making. Traditionally confined to institutional strategy, environmental scanning is reframed within the ZAT Competency Framework as a dynamic, teachable process encompassing perception, interpretation, and response. Grounded in cognitive constructivism, anticipatory self-regulation, and socio-ethical orientation, the study defines scanning as a multidimensional capacity that supports identity formation, vocational planning, and civic engagement. This conceptual paper constructs a theoretical model that maps environmental scanning onto four developmental domains: knowledge, skills, attitudes, and habits (KSAH). It offers a structured articulation of learning outcomes and positions the competency within ZAT’s Brain Dimension, where it complements related capacities such as critical thinking and reflective learning. The methodology adopts a design-based, non-empirical approach, establishing the foundation for future validation using AI-augmented diagnostic tools embedded within the ZAT platform. Findings highlight the potential of environmental scanning to become a lived and assessable practice, enabling youth to navigate uncertainty with strategic clarity and moral purpose. The paper concludes by outlining limitations and proposing future research directions focused on empirical validation, cultural adaptation, and longitudinal development.
Mohiman et al. (Fri,) studied this question.