Practice-based Design ResearchLaurene Vaughan Bloomsbury Publishing, 26 jan. 2017 - 232 sidor Practice-Based Design Research provides a companion to masters and PhD programs in design research through practice. The contributors address a range of models and approaches to practice-based research, consider relationships between industry and academia, researchers and designers, discuss initiatives to support students and faculty during the research process, and explore how students' experiences of undertaking practice-based research has impacted their future design and research practice. The text is illustrated throughout with case study examples by authors who have set up, taught or undertaken practice-based design research, in a range of national and institutional contexts. |
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Sida vii
... Haslem Chapter 19 GROKKING THE SWAMP: ADVENTURES INTO THE PRACTICAL ABYSS, AND BACK AGAIN Jeremy Yuille Index 165 175 189 199 211 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 5.1: A topological view on sociocultural perspectives Contents vii.
... Haslem Chapter 19 GROKKING THE SWAMP: ADVENTURES INTO THE PRACTICAL ABYSS, AND BACK AGAIN Jeremy Yuille Index 165 175 189 199 211 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 5.1: A topological view on sociocultural perspectives Contents vii.
Sida viii
Laurene Vaughan. LIST. OF. ILLUSTRATIONS. 5.1: A topological view on sociocultural perspectives on doctoral design education. 6.1: The practitioner reflects on a body of work and works in progress within the context of a wider community of ...
Laurene Vaughan. LIST. OF. ILLUSTRATIONS. 5.1: A topological view on sociocultural perspectives on doctoral design education. 6.1: The practitioner reflects on a body of work and works in progress within the context of a wider community of ...
Sida 12
Laurene Vaughan. the culture of a programme. It can create a very limited perspective on what will be researched and how the research will relate to practice outside the academy; and it is also short-sighted in that not all PhD graduates ...
Laurene Vaughan. the culture of a programme. It can create a very limited perspective on what will be researched and how the research will relate to practice outside the academy; and it is also short-sighted in that not all PhD graduates ...
Sida 24
... perspective of their clients or 'end-users'' experiences but from the impact to the entire supply side of design. In order to effect change in the ecological impacts of design, designers must develop a political economical accounting of ...
... perspective of their clients or 'end-users'' experiences but from the impact to the entire supply side of design. In order to effect change in the ecological impacts of design, designers must develop a political economical accounting of ...
Sida 35
... perspective of the kind of neoliberal performativity that Lyotard is arguing was structuring universities at the time, design therefore has the added advantage of getting on with the job of producing things. It moves faster – something ...
... perspective of the kind of neoliberal performativity that Lyotard is arguing was structuring universities at the time, design therefore has the added advantage of getting on with the job of producing things. It moves faster – something ...
Innehåll
1 | |
7 | |
9 | |
19 | |
29 | |
Part 2 Sociocultural Impacts of the Design PhD in Practice | 41 |
Chapter 5 Designing the PhD Curriculum in the Design Disciplines Henry Mainsah Andrew Morrison Jonny Aspen and Cheryl E Ball | 43 |
ADAPTr Architecture Design and Art Practice Research a European Commission Marie Curie Initial Training Network Richard Blythe and Marcelo ... | 53 |
Chapter 11 Embracing the Literacies of Design as Means and Mode of Dissemination Laurene Vaughan | 111 |
Reflecting on the Exegesis in the Thesis by Compilation Model Andrew Morrison | 119 |
Part 4 Graduate Reflections on the Design PhD in Practice | 129 |
Resisting the impoverishment of knowledge Pia EdnieBrown | 131 |
Curating as a generative and collaborative process of infrastructuring Katherine Moline | 141 |
Chapter 15 The researcherly designerthe designerly researcher Joyce Yee | 155 |
Sensemaking the Affordances of a practiceBased PhD in Design Lisa Grocott | 165 |
Shifting from a Commercial to a Researchfocused Design Practice Zoë Sadokierski | 175 |
Chapter 7 Knowledge Exchange through the Design PhD Ben Dalton Tom Simmons and Teal Triggs | 65 |
Chapter 8 Educating the Reflective Design Researcher Pelle Ehn and Peter Ullmark | 77 |
Chapter 9 Building Theory through Design Thomas Markussen | 87 |
Part 3 Structures for Supporting Design PhD Programmes | 99 |
Chapter 10 Design Research Practice Thomas Binder and Eva Brandt | 101 |
Challenges and Rewards Neal Haslem | 189 |
Adventures into the Practical Abyss and Back Again Jeremy Yuille | 199 |
Index | 211 |
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academic accessed ADAPTr aesthetic approach art and design artefacts articulate Bauhaus candidate Carnegie Mellon University challenges co-design collaborative communication design community of practice concepts context contribution Courtesy the author critical critique culture curating Design Education design PhD design practice Design Thinking designerly disciplinary disciplines discourse doctoral education doctoral research domains engage exegesis exhibition experience experimental design expertise explore field focus framework Gaver innovation inquiry insights inter-organizational interaction design interdisciplinary knowledge exchange learning master’s methods modes monomyth neoliberal onomatopoeia Oslo outcomes paratext participatory participatory design perspective PhD researchers PhD students political potential practice-based design research practice-based research practice-led PhD practice-led research practitioner-research practitioners production reflection research degree research practice research through design RMIT University role Sadokierski scaffolding theories Schön situation social specific supervisors tacit knowledge Technology theory thesis transformation understanding Vimeo visual wicked problems words writing