Review Article Stefanie Panke* Design Thinking in Education: Perspectives, Opportunities and Challenges
Table 2: Overview of results and key takeaways. Research Question
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Table 2: Overview of results and key takeaways.
Research Question Results Key Takeaways Potential: What is the potential of design thinking for education? Nine themes emerged from design thinking literature: Tacit experiences, increased empathy, reduced cognitive bias, playful learning, flow/verve, collaboration, productive failure/resilience, surprising solutions, creative confidence. Themes for describing the goals and evaluating the outcomes of design thinking Settings: How is design thinking applied in different educational settings (K12, informal learning, higher education)? Informal settings: (1) designing exhibits, experiences and services; (2) service learning and organizational collaboration; (3) extending exploration of artifacts, spaces and services; (4) making and crafting. Schematic overview for contextualizing new case studies; corpus for further analysis Formal settings (K12 / higher education): (1) as an instructional design method in course material development; (2) as a curricular development technique; (3) as a teaching strategy to achieve subject-specific learning goals; (4) as a learning goal in and of itself; (5) as a facilitation technique in student support, i.e., mentoring, advising, counseling; (6) as a method for process improvement or product development; (7) as an approach for leadership and organizational development. Tools: What tools, techniques and methods characterize design thinking? Review yielded 50 different tools, models, techniques, methods. Granularity varied from single technique (e.g., crazy eights) to whole process (d.school process, STEM Fab Studio Design Process). Various origins and subject trajectories. Planning help for design thinking facilitators; corpus material for further analysis Limitations: What are the limitations of design thinking? Review identified eight potential negative outcomes: Lack of creative confidence, teamwork conflicts, anxiety and frustration, shallow ideas, idea creation over evaluation, lack of long-term impact, overconfidence, misalignment between learning content and design thinking process. Themes for evaluating the outcomes of design thinking, decision-making help for educators Design Thinking in Education: Perspectives, Opportunities and Challenges 303 Brown, T., & Wyatt, J. (2010). Design thinking for social innovation. Development Outreach, 12(1), 29–43. Brown, A. (2018). Exploring Faces and Places of Makerspaces. AACE Review. Retrieved from March 3, 2019 https://www.aace.org/ review/exploring-faces-places-makerspaces/ Buchanan, R. (1992). Wicked problems in design thinking. Design Issues, 8(2), 5–21. Callahan, K. C. (2019). Design Thinking in Curricula. In The International Encyclopedia of Art and Design Education (pp. 1–6). American Cancer Society. Camacho, M. (2018). An integrative model of design thinking. In The 21st DMI: Academic Design Management Conference, ‘Next Wave’, London, Ravensbourne, United Kingdom, 1–2 August 2018 (p. 627). Cañas, A. J., Novak, J. D., & González, F. (2004). Using concept maps in qualitative research. In Concept Maps: Theory, Methodology, Technology Proc. of the First Int. Conference on Concept Mapping (pp. 7–15). Cantoni, L., Marchiori, E., Faré, M., Botturi, L., & Bolchini, D. (2009, October). A systematic methodology to use lego bricks in web communication design. In Proceedings of the 27th ACM Download 495.81 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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