Review Article Stefanie Panke* Design Thinking in Education: Perspectives, Opportunities and Challenges
particularly in management. ‘Design thinking’ then becomes a
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10.1515 edu-2019-0022
particularly in management. ‘Design thinking’ then becomes a
simplified version of ‘designerly thinking’ or a way of describing a designer’s methods that is integrated into an academic or practical management discourse.” (Johansson‐Sköldberg et al., 2013, p. 123) Elsbach and Stigliani (2018) describe design thinking as an approach to problem solving that uses tools traditionally utilized by designers of commercial products, processes, and environments. According to Cochrane and Munn (2016) the three main elements of design thinking are observational research, visual sense making, and rapid prototyping. The authors describe a typical design thinking process as a cycle of (1) empathizing and observing, (2) defining the problem, (3) creating ideas, (4) prototyping, and (5) testing (Cochrane & Munn, 2016). Design thinking has been recognized repeatedly for its contributions to business and management practices. This has led to an increase in the number of higher education programs that teach design thinking to business students, managers and executives (Matthews & Wrigley, 2017). In order to be marketable and competitive, students need to understand, embrace and generate innovation by developing and implementing new and meaningful ideas (Wright & West, 2010). Moreover, even the design discipline recognizes that the procedural knowledge of design thinking might be more important than the actual design skills – “the survival of design as a profession may depend less on traditional design education and more on responding strategically to contemporary changes, influenced by ethical and environmental issues as well as technological advancements” (Cassim, 2013). In the context of this article, I follow a similar view of design thinking as a process and mindset, specifically positioned to address wicked problems in line with the rich descriptions by von Thienen, Meinel, and Nicolai (2014): “Design thinking offers ample help to solve wicked problems of a liberal type where you may fail and experiment first to become all the more successful later on. It does so by establishing mindsets and offering tools which save you from the impossible task of finding ‘the correct problem view’ or ‘the optimal solution’. Instead, attention is drawn to needs which await their fulfillment. New interpretations of the problem are advanced which take into account the perspectives of different stakeholders and which help to look at the matter from a new angle – since the old problem views turned out to be blind alleys. Finally, a lot of tools are provided to propel the process of problem solving in a productive direction – making sure the process remains flexible, jaunty and unrestrained by arbitrary formalizations.” (von Thienen et al. 2014, p. 105) Download 495.81 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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