IASDR 2023

September 1, 2023 1:42 PM

Peter Scupelli will present a paper titled “Teaching to transfer Causal Layered Analysis from Futures Thinking to Design Thinking” at the 2023 IASDR conference held in Milan, Italy October 9-14 at The Politecnico di Milano.

Abstract
We live in exponentially changing worlds. Design educators are challenged to teach new design methods to productively engage with ongoing societal problems with planetary implications such as the Sustainable Development Goals, the unfolding climate disaster, zero-carbon lifestyles, circular economies, nuclear disarmament, etc. Such societal-level problems require both short-term design action and strategic long-term vision goal alignments. How might design educators teach new design methods effectively and efficiently within already packed design education curriculums? In this paper, I describe a required design futures course that teaches an experimental form of design, called Dexign Futures, it merges design thinking with futures thinking. One often unstated goal of teaching new design methods is to enable students to transfer such knowledge to other design courses, and, ultimately, to their professional practice. The futures thinking method, Causal Layered Analysis (CLA) is the focus of this paper. Prior research on Dexign Futures, made clear that with a “Personal Futures CLA” assignment, only 19.8% of design students could articulate how the Futures Thinking method CLA related to future design methods and practice. In this paper, I describe a new way to teach CLA called “Studio Project CLA”; it more than tripled the number of undergraduate design students (62%) who described applications of CLA to their design practice. I posit that transfer of knowledge mechanisms likely explain observed performance gains. I hypothesize key insights relevant for design educators to create design exercises for undergraduate design students that likely facilitate knowledge transfer from futures thinking methods into design practice.

Design Studio Learning Environment Research

November 14, 2014 9:00 AM

Studio-based design education is changing to include multidisciplinary design teams, geographically distributed teams, information technology, and new work styles. In this research, we describe the graduate design studio redesign in the School of Design at Carnegie Mellon University. The old graduate studio went from a single room design studio to four interconnected spaces: an area with individual workspaces, collaborative spaces, a kitchen and social cafe area, and a classroom with distance learning technology.

  • Study 1 indicates student satisfaction significantly improved. However, open-ended survey comments suggest that functional needs were met, but some pleasure-related and emotional needs linked to habitation were problematic.
  • Study 2 explores ownership, personalization, aesthetics, function, acoustics, upkeep, and agency in the four connected studio spaces (i.e., individual workspaces, collaborative spaces kitchen and social cafe area, the distance learning classroom). Research methods included an online survey and desk interviews.
  • Study 3 determines student occupancy levels in the design studio spaces via a time-lapse study. One picture is taken every minute to determine where students work in the four interconnected spaces.

Key findings include: (a) users evaluated studio spaces holistically based on functionality, emotional response, and pleasure; (b) owned spaces differed significantly from shared spaces; (c) individual work and collaboration work occurred throughout the studio (e.g., collaboration in quiet individual workspaces, and individual work in loud collaboration spaces). The research approach above informs the study of IDeATE studio-learning spaces.

Principal Contact

Peter Scupelli, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor in IxD
School of Design
scupelli@cmu.edu

Research Team

Bruce Hanington
Associate Professor & Head of Graduate Studies
School of Design

Andrea Fineman
Graduate Research Assistant
School of Design

Xiaowei Jiang
Graduate Research Assistant
School of Design

Frances Yin Wang
Graduate Research Assistant
School of Design

Collaborative spaces and individual workspaces in design studios: a study on ownership, personalization, agency, emotion, and pleasure

October 24, 2014 9:00 AM

Studio-based design education is changing to include multidisciplinary design teams, geographically distributed teams, information technology, and new work styles. In this talk, I describe the graduate design studio redesign in the School of Design at Carnegie Mellon University. The old studio went from a single room design studio to four interconnected spaces: an area with individual workspaces, collaborative spaces, a kitchen and social cafe area, and a classroom with distance learning technology. Study one indicates student satisfaction significantly improved but some open-ended survey comments suggest that functional needs were met, but some pleasure-related and emotional needs linked to habitation were problematic. Study two used an online survey and a time-lapse study to explore ownership, personalization, aesthetics, function, acoustics, upkeep, and agency in the four connected studio spaces: individual workspaces, collaborative spaces kitchen and social cafe area, and the distance learning classroom. Don Norman’s Emotional Design and Patrick Jordan’s Designing Pleasurable Products books are used as frameworks to explore user needs in design studios.

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