In the name of civic collaboration, my research and practice disrupts hierarchies between adult, child, teacher learner
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Workshops between December 2007 and March 2011 |
Abstract
This thesis explores how designing and story-making
capabilities can be combined and used as everyday inventiveness for all. It
examines the learning that arises out of “getting lost” in child-play and
fictional speculation when combined with an iterative design process. The
research highlights the value of this combination for individual
self-discovery, criticality, fostering social engagement and responsibility.
This thesis reviews existing cases where designing and
playfulness have been combined and highlights the lack of examples where design
is recognised as a valuable everyday process for everyone. At the same time, it
explores the consequences of losing the childhood expertise with the onset of
adulthood.
In this context, this thesis examines a partnership between
adult designers and children working together on an imaginary design brief. The
aim is to explore the possibility for children to acquire capabilities and
experience how they might stream their playfulness into their adult roles as
everyday designers, researchers and story-makers. At the same time, this thesis
explores if and how the adult designers can temporarily plunge back to a
childhood state and learn from the children.
The research involved undertaking and analysing a series of
explorations with children or adult participants that led to the final
adult-child partnerships. While, the “learning in action” nature of these
engagements bears similarities with “Action Research”, this thesis trials a new
approach introducing story-making as a research method.
The thesis findings propose a new method that allows adults to look at
the world through the lenses of child expertise and for children to value their
own expertise and experience its applications in adulthood. The thesis is
primarily directed at designers and the design education research community,
although its findings are relevant for educators, parents and everyone that is
interested in creativity in life.
parts of this research have been presented and published in
2013 / Media Arts Festival, Honf Fab Lab, Indonesia
2011 / 7th Creative Engagements Speaking with Children - Mansfield College Oxford
2011 / PATT 25 & CRIPT 8: Perspectives on Learning in Design & Technology Education
2011 / Between Narrative and Embodiment, Czech Memorial Scrolls Museum, London
2010 / After fiction - Copenhagen University
2010 / Modelling, Designing, Society. Ken Banes Seminar Series - Goldsmiths, TERU
2010 / Aesthetics and History - Stockholm University
2010 / Inter-Art. Metaphors in Aesthetic Theory - Freu University Berlin
2009 / 5th Creative Engagements, Thinking with Children - Mansfield College Oxford
2009 / Forms of Engagement, Concepts of Politics - Copenhagen University
2009 / Desperately Seeking Authenticity - Goldsmiths, London
2008 / Once Upon a tine to Ever After - Thursday club, Goldsmiths, London
find some of my papers here
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