Monday, July 8, 2013

How to Apply Design Thinking in Class, Step by Step

Duncan, Laura

Stevens, A. (2013, June 26).  How to apply design thinking in class, step by step.  [Web log comment].  Retrieved from http://blogs.kqed.org/mindshift/2013/06/how-to-use-design-thinking-in-class-step-by-step/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+kqed%2FnHAK+%28MindShift%29

This article walks the reader through the basic process of transforming the classroom environment into a design thinking classroom.  First, the author says that a space needs to be created that invites possibility, creativity, surprise and engagement from the students.  Typically, a gym is often a school's "space of possibility," since there is little imposing material in a gym that dictates its use.  The challenge is making the classroom environment produce the same effect.   The author recommends holding "studio time," in which students are invited to freely create and adjust to the new set of expectations for this more flexible time.  Further, teachers can engage students in creating a new design thinking curriculum, by encouraging them to brainstorm about design careers (e.g. interior design, architecture) and then start thinking like designers.  Students should be invited to contribute how they'd like to develop the new classroom and what tools they'd like to add.  Concept development is an important part of the process.  Teachers should help students through the creative process, giving them up to an hour to think, brainstorm and draft out their ideas.  At the end of studio time, it's important for teachers to engage students in reflection about their work and the experience of studio time.

This article is useful, though not as step by step as it claims, in my opinion.  Since the concept of design thinking and studio time is somewhat abstract and probably fairly unfamiliar to most readers, it would have been helpful if the author had spent more time elaborating on the concepts of design thinking and studio time themselves.  Nonetheless, it's a creative concept and inspires teachers to think outside the box and promote flexibility.

1 comment:

  1. I agree with your analysis. Design thinking is another technique to allow more students a voice in their own learning. There are so few students who get to do so. In the next couple of weeks in our class, you will get a peek of a QuickMOOC experience that allows you much more freedom as learners and we will see how you respond. The mystery will unfold soon...

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