DESIGN EMERGENCY. Creating a generation of design thinkers. A learning program by Object: Australian Design Centre

Similar documents
TAKING DESIGN THINKING TO SCHOOLS

Student Perceptions On Computer Coding Ashfield Public School Term 3, The Initiative. The survey

Primary Futures Case Study Oak Meadow Primary School

The Primary Curriculum in Schools

Design Thinking Workshop

Designing the Future of Learning

Designing Visual Arts Programs Years 7-12

KIDS LEARNING CODE: LUNCH +AFTER SCHOOL PROGRAMS

YOU THINK YOU MIGHT WANT TO STUDY:

The Val Garland School of Make-up PROSPECTUS

Excellence in teaching with UWS

Building a talent pipeline for our industry. Sponsorship proposal

English. Stage 6 Syllabus. English (Standard) English (Advanced) English as a Second Language (ESL) English (Extension) Fundamentals of English

MoneySmart Rookie Community educator guide. Financial literacy for young people

Our Young Learners: giving them the best possible start

BA (Hons) Fashion Marketing and Branding course content

INTERIOR DESIGN COURSE SYLLABUS

Black Book 10 ESSENTIAL tips for going pro

West Hill Primary, Wandsworth CHANGE MANAGEMENT & EVALUATION

Content marketing strategy in five simple steps.

FAQ about Home Schooling By Janelle McDonald Is it legal? Home Schooling is legal in every State and Territory in Australia.

ISGR PYP Newsletter MAY-JUNE EDITION 2015

SAVING FOR SPECIAL PURPOSES, Part 2

Foundation Degree in Animation and Creative Video. This programme is only offered at Barking & Dagenham College

Literacy Place for the Early Years Evidence-Based Research K 3

CSI: Exploring Forensic Science Level 2

EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT BECOMING A SNOOZE FRANCHISE PARTNER

We re looking for exceptional people to join our team based in Cambridge to help us make that happen.

Modern foreign languages

Ready to Redesign? THE ULTIMATE GUIDE TO WEB DESIGN BEST PRACTICES

LANG 557 Capstone Paper . Purpose: Format: Content: introduction view of language

Advanced Design and Building

Programme Specification and Curriculum Map for BA (Honours) 3D Animation and Games

Title Everyday Inventions Year 9 Level. Classwork (Learning Objectives, possible teaching activities, learning outcomes and points to note)

St Thomas of Canterbury School, Merrow, Guildford

Course Objectives/Goals: Students taking this course will:

digital mums THE Strategic Social Media Manager Programme COURSE BROCHURE

Cork Education and Training Board. Programme Module for. Graphic Design Skills. leading to. Level 4 FETAC. Graphic Design 4N1117

Initial Teacher Education: Selection Criteria for Teacher Education Candidates

AUSTRALIAN PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS FOR TEACHERS I L C O U N C

Private Today, Public Tomorrow

Pearson BTEC Nationals in Art and Design from 2016

How to Have a Successful School Library or Classroom Blog. By Karen Bonanno

Program aims. What s the degree about?

KIDS & TEENS SUMMER HOLIDAYS

Bachelor of Design (Interior Design)

Inside: Overview of the eight intelligences, In the Montessori School, Harmonious Development

STUDENT WORKBOOK. Welcome to the Trade Your Way: Schools Challenge SCHOOLS CHALLENGE

PLANNING A BUDGET. Income, needs vs. wants, budgets, simple interest, savings accounts, paying yourself first

eclips Design Packet Middle School and High School NASA Real World: Mathematics (Grades 6-8) NASA Launchpad (Grades 9-12) Educational Product

Career VOOC Pilot Study Report. Building engaging and interactive careers guidance

Case Study: Griswold Elementary School Library

Basic 12 for Middle School Workshop 1: Why is college a realistic goal for you?

I m Miss Smith, and I teach English and German. Today I ll show you how I use NetSupport School to plan, prepare and conduct my classes.

An Interview with Berlin School President Michael Conrad for Media Marketing Magazine

CREATIVE CURRICULUM - ACTIVE LEARNING - INCLUSION - RAISE ACHIEVEMENT - LITERACY SKILLS. Silent Film workshops

Sustainability (3 rd semester) Students should acquire insight into issues relating to sustainability and environmental impact.

The dangers in Design Thinking

Assessment Techniques and Tools for Documentation

Connecting with families. Bringing the Early Years Learning Framework to life in your community

c be th h e ange Volunteer Trip Scholarship Application Kenya, August 2012

Private Today, Public Tomorrow

ATOL: Art Therapy OnLine

Bachelor of Graphic Design with nested Associate Degree of Graphic Design

CODESPARK TEACHER S GUIDE Hour of Code

The ESL Teacher as Productive pedagogical mentor. Jackie Coleman ACTA International Conference July 2-5, 2012

How Great Schools Use Design Thinking to Improve Student Agency

The Summer Reading Challenge evaluation results

Llansanffraid Church in Wales Primary School. Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Policy

UNIVERSITY OF WOLLONGONG

I Wanna Rock Music VIdeo Workshop

4 STEPS TO TAKING THE LEAD PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT FOR TRAINERS AND ASSESSORS 2014

Tool 7: Writing a Communications Plan 7.1

Summative assessment. Taking the analysis of collected information further

What is the PYP Perspective on Assessment?

Elementary & Secondary School Programmes 2015/2016. Brought to you by the people behind the Toronto International Film Festival

School Authority: Society For Treatment of Autism (Calgary Region)

What does student success mean to you?

What s Up With The Stock Market? EPISODE # 404

by Learning Area Achievement Objectives The New Zealand Curriculum Set of 8 charts

Your nbn connect kit. It s time to connect your landline phone and internet to the nbn network.

Intro to Human Centered Service Design Thinking

Dell Connected Learning for Schools. Transforming Education for the Digital Age

Joey Adventures: Year 1 students blog to Learn

PRESERVICE. PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS FOR QUEENSLAND TEACHERS (graduate level): A guide for use with preservice teachers QUEENSLAND COLLEGE OF TEACHERS

Choosing an LMS FOR EMPLOYEE TRAINING

Emerging Use of ICT for Teaching and Learning in Schools of Pakistan

How To Complete A Graphic Design Course

THREE-YEAR COURSES VISUAL & MULTIMEDIA DESIGN

Transcription:

DESIGN EMERGENCY Creating a generation of design thinkers A learning program by Object: Australian Design Centre

Learning is the key to a better future Object believes in the power of design to effect positive change. Through our school learning programs we aim to equip children with design thinking skills and show them how design can improve their everyday lives. Design thinking is a methodology that uses creativity to identify issues and create positive solutions to them. Learning design thinking skills also creates opportunities to achieve outcomes in literacy and numeracy.

Interpret Imagine Create WHAT IS DESIGN EMERGENCY? Discover Design Emergency is an outreach learning program that introduces design and the methods of design thinking to primary and secondary schools. Design Emergency uses real-life learning to develop higher-order thinking skills. It fosters a deep engagement with students worlds by helping them to identify relevant issues. The program uses an optimistic human centred approach that engages students in empathetic research and it encourages them to grasp opportunities and take risks. Be Optimistic Professional designers work with students and teachers in the classroom to use design methodology to devise creative solutions to challenges they identify in their own lives. The aim is to engage students with creative thinking skills and apply those skills to issues relevant to them. Designers bring with them a deep understanding of design methodology developed through their own work. They also provide an opportunity for students to explore career paths and imagine the life of a designer. Design Emergency gives students an understanding of what design is; how it relates to the lives of individuals, their community and the larger world. Learning design-thinking skills creates opportunities to achieve outcomes in literacy and numeracy. Experiment Realise Opportunities Design Emergency video Risk-take

The kids loved it because they had control of it, it was their problem and they found a solution. They could see they were making a difference in the school. Peter Johnson, Principal DESIGN EMERGENCY AND THE SCHOOL CURRICULUM Design Emergency is a program that relates to the entire school curriculum, assisting with learning outcomes in literacy, numeracy, science, technology, environment, society and culture, and arts. The program develops key aspects of the Quality Teaching Framework and covers a broad range of syllabus outcomes. In the Design Emergency program students develop higher-order thinking by synthesising their discoveries, arriving at interpretations and creating new understandings or insights. They construct meaning from information and pose questions that can have multiple outcomes. The Design Emergency program incorporates a variety of ways for students to communicate including oral, written, non-verbal and symbolic. The authentic experience provided by Design Emergency provides students with opportunities to explore meaning and significance beyond the classroom, whereby challenges might include broader social issues with possible solutions being delivered to an external audience. Story telling is an important element so that research, discovery and prototyping may be presented in a narrative form.

Meet the DESIGNERS Zoe Barber Michael Alvisse Liane Rossler Connecting Students with Designers To ensure the Design Emergency program is authentic, interesting and motivating it is important that students connect to the world of design and designers. This can be achieved through studio visits and students working with designers at school or via digital means. This would be supported by content that would include stories around design. Zoë has been with Canvas Group for six years, contributing to an extensive branding, print and interactive portfolio. Some highlights include the MCA s Bardayal Lofty Nadjamerrek AO microsite (recently voted People s Champ in the 2011 Pixel Awards), award-winning book designs for Oxford University Press and working with Object on their very first ipad magazine. If you look at Object s magazine number 60 you will see how Zoe has integrated voice-overs with images and stories. canvasgroup.com.au Michael trained as an architect and later became a furniture and industrial designer establishing a design firm with Marc Schamburg. Schamburg and Alvisse championed the cause for environmentally responsible design. Michael and Marc created an amazing piece of furniture that is like a giant puzzle. It takes three people to put it together and represents the need for collaboration in everyday life. Michael is committed to education and has been involved in a number of school programs with Object including Design Emergency in the classroom. safurniture.com.au Liane was co founder, designer and director of Dinosaur Designs 1985-2010. She is currently involved in numerous collaborations, exhibitions and projects including Supercyclers, a design project focused on clever and beautiful reuse of waste shown Milan Design Week, 2012. lianerossler.com

A DAY IN THE DESIGN EMERGENCY CLASSROOM A typical day in the Design Emergency classroom might see students working with a real-life designer, collaborating on a number of activities to identify an issue relevant to them the sports equipment is messy, broken, dirty and not used and set a design goal When we are using the sports equipment we would like to have fun, improve skills and play with friends. They then discuss, share, and observe everything they can collectively discover presenting the issue in a creative way using collages, videos, sketches, quotes, interviews and notes to visually display all of their findings. As a group they will investigate and discuss their findings and come up with the design emergency, for example How can Year 6 design the sports room experience so that students are responsible for the care and organization of the equipment and can easily retrieve and return it in good order? Using a number of design techniques including developing personas, creating to discover, using metaphors and crowdsourcing they develop some ideas to prototype and test, finally arriving at a solution to pitch to the group. Sessions are fun, interactive, collaborative and above all, relevant to the students themselves. Students arrive at solutions that work for them.

Design Emergency In-School Pilots In 2011 Object piloted four variations of Design Emergency in four schools in NSW. How might we design the sports room experience so that students are responsible for the care and organization of the equipment? At Bourke Street Public (Surry Hills, Sydney) the Object Learning Coordinator with designer Michael Alvisse, worked through the full Design Emergency program over a seven-week period. They worked with a composite class grade 4-6 to find a problem that was relevant to the day-to-day experience of their whole school. Students worked to find solutions to the issues surrounding their sports room and after doing some empathetic research, they discovered that the real problem was around ownership. Using a metaphor of a retail experience they redesigned the organisation and working of the sports equipment room to allow students the opportunity to play with accessible and well looked after equipment. How might we have equal access to the sports equipment in the school? At St Mary s Public School (St Mary s), the Learning Coordinator spent time training the class teacher to conduct Design Emergency with their class and they shared the running of the program over 5 weeks. Designer Michael Alvisse spent a day with the students helping them set their goals for the challenge and share his design practice with the students. Using design thinking they developed and prototyped a solution whereby they labelled all of the equipment and divided it equally into containers labelled for each class. Students then took responsibility for loaning the equipment out at break times and collecting and sorting it back into the appropriate container at the end of the break. How can we make Wellington a better place for kids? At Wellington Public School (North-West NSW), the Learning Coordinator delivered Design Emergency over an intensive two days Design Emergency in a nutshell. The students in Years 4-6 focused on their community and what they thought was needed in Wellington for kids. The program highlighted the already existing opportunities to be found in the town and encouraged students to create solutions around these. They ve got a really good idea of the process of design and different types of design. Tammy Hill, teacher How might we create greater opportunity for everyone to use the laptops? At St Rose Catholic Primary School (Collaroy), Object s Learning Coordinator spent the majority of the time training the teacher who facilitated the session exclusively with the class. A designer visited the school for a morning, helping the students set their goals by discussing the findings that emerged from their discoveries. He was able to share his experience as a designer.

DESIGN EMERGENCY PILOT AT VIVID FESTIVAL In May 2012, Object trialed another delivery method as part of the Vivid Ideas festival. Forty students attended from five diverse Sydney schools for an intensive Design Emergency atop the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney. Each school worked with a highly respected designer and a tertiary design student, combining the Discovery research undertaken beforehand in their school with a streamlined Design Emergency program. Over five hours, the students delved into issues identified by them, using empathy and research to devise achievable solutions. At the end of the day the students presented their issues, their methodology, their outcomes and prototyped models to the greater group. object.com.au/news-reviews/object-eye/entry/ design_emergency_live_from_vivid_sydney/

PILOT OUTCOMES The past 18 months of developing and piloting Design Emergency has delivered various outcomes: Feedback and input The most important aspect of the pilots has been learning how to improve the program. Our plan for next steps respond to this feedback, which includes the need for teacher training; creation of different modes and platforms of delivery (in particular digital/online); increased incorporation of current teaching methodology; and more direct contact with designers. Demonstrated need The success of the pilots has provided us with evidence for the need and demand in the community for such a program. Direct results for participating schools Teachers have reported many students showing a greater engagement in learning; schools have gained real solutions to issues at their school. Range of delivery models Rather than one style of program, the pilots have helped us test different models of delivery and experiment with the format. Teacher network Object has developed a network of Design Emergency teachers who are keen and committed to developing it further and continuing participation in the program. Resources and website We have created a manual and website comprising of teachers notes and student resources that will eventually act as a stand-alone resource after teacher training. The students enjoyed the discussion and decision making process. Meeting and working with a designer was also a highlight for students. Being able to have their proposal put into place was also powerful for students involved. Gayle McLister, Teacher

Goals for the future In order to achieve a generation of design thinkers, our main goal for Design Emergency is to expand the reach of the program through greater school participation across Australia. Our blue-sky dream is to see every child equipped with design thinking skills, in the same way that they are taught to read and write. What we need to achieve our goals Funding Object is seeking support for our next steps, to take Design Emergency to the next stage in its development Partners As a small non-profit organisation Object always looks for partners to collaborate with, to achieve our shared goals

Next steps Pilots In the short term, Object needs to conduct more pilots to test the models in more schools, document the background research, and increase the curriculum links. In the medium-term Object will run national pilots through CUSP: designing for the next decade creative program. Digital Strategy Develop a digital strategy that would take advantage of the National Broadband Network by connecting schools with designers and schools with each other via video conferencing and other ideas for digital integration and leveraging. Address the need for different modes and platforms of delivery including online modules for teacher training. Teacher training is imperative to the success of the Design Emergency. It will allow for the dissemination of the program and encourage teachers to use design thinking in their programming and school administration. We plan to run teacher training workshops introducing teachers to design thinking methodology and taking them through the Design Emergency program and how it can be run in their school. Teacher Training Teacher training is imperative to the success of Design Emergency. It allows for the dissemination of the program and encourages teachers to use design thinking in their programming and school administration. We plan to run teacher training workshops, introducing teachers to design thinking methodology, taking them through the Design Emergency program and showing how it can be run in their school. Keeping current In any program that incorporates design, education and technology, it is critical to keep up to date with ongoing developments; maintaining relevance and interest. Also it is important to incorporate what is learnt from teachers and students as they participate in Design Emergency to continue to improve the program.

Educating for unpredictability. We don t know what the world will look like in the next five years. Children have extraordinary capabilities for innovation. Kids will take a chance and if they don t know they ll have a go. If you re not prepared to be wrong you won t come up with anything original. Education systems focus on mistakes - sucking out the creativity. We get educated out of our creativity. Creativity is as important in education as literacy and we should treat it with the same status. Sir Ken Robinson Watch his talk