Design transformations: teaching design through evaluations
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to synchronize two courses to focus on the students working with learning and applying tools in the one course and acting on understandings gained to produce artefacts in the other.
Design/methodology/approach
Working with real users throughout all stages of the design process, the authors structured two courses so findings from the evaluation methods learnt in the one course (their analyses) were directly acted on in the other (their re-designs). The authors fostered a group-spirited learning environment where students presented designs-in-process; explained the findings from focused evaluation methods using tangible representations; identified the relationship from these findings for subsequent re-design rationales; and discussed and critiqued each other's work using multiple feedback, teach-back and discursive strategies.
Findings
The authors found that in-depth coverage of material, working with real data and users at all stages of assessment and producing visualizations from evaluations, naturally forced student motivation to act and redesign better solutions. The authors noted improved attendance and students reported high engagement and content appreciation.
Research limitations/implications
Ensuring relevance, by adding larger context concerns, expansive critical methods and feedback processes in a cycle of understanding, acting, learning can have useful practical and social implications. This is germane when designing for quality of everyday use in, for example, education, urban environments and mobile applications.
Practical implications
The paper includes implications for the development of learning environments where course and semester content is developed in tandem to support integrated learning by acting with project output and teach back “presentations” throughout the course.
Originality/value
The paper proposes a unifying tandem approach to learning and applying evaluation tools with real users, teachback and acting to improve redesigns with potential to improve human computer interaction educational standards for learning and design outcomes.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
The authors thank the students for their willingness to learn in a developing learning environment.
Citation
Morrison, A. and Knoche, H. (2014), "Design transformations: teaching design through evaluations", Kybernetes, Vol. 43 No. 9/10, pp. 1372-1380. https://doi.org/10.1108/K-07-2014-0153
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2014, Emerald Group Publishing Limited