Learning Spatial Design through Interdisciplinary Collaboration
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. The Court’s Critic
1.2. Interdisciplinary Collaboration in Spatial Design Practice
1.3. Interdisciplinary Collaboration in Education
1.4. Research Questions
2. Methods
3. Results
3.1. Divergent Perspectives
3.2. Reflection and Critique
3.3. Pedagogical Maturity
3.4. Language
3.5. Immersion
3.6. Fairness
3.7. Trust
4. Discussion
4.1. The Pedagogical Basis for Interdisciplinary Collaboration in the Design Process
4.2. Effective Teaching/Facilitation Techniques
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- Ensuring that, early on, there is a founding idea or frame expressed as a diagram that guides the progressive development of the project;
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- Encouraging different interpreations of the context by different students to provide different ways of seeing the problematic; and
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- Ensuring that there are regular exercises that will require interaction between students to keep up, push the envelope and continue the process of design iteration and experimentation in between class.
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- Encourage deconstruction of inaccessible jargon so that the student has clarity in ideation and the interdisciplinary peer can understand and work with shared ideas;
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- Conversely make use of disciplinary jargon as a generative source of different ways of seeing new possibilities; and
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- Providing advice on how to be critical. Critiquing is a basic skill in communicating and listening without which the studio would flounder. Students need to be taught how to critique early in the course.
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- ensuring workloads and partnerships are equal;
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- that students are encouraged to have and to give equal voice in their partnerships and that partnerships encourage an empathetic sense of working for each other;
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- providing a basis for partners to get to know and trust each other (e.g., site excursions);
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- Ensuring that students have knowledge-based pedagogical maturity of the principles and background of their disciplines. Students cannot come to the table unless they are confident of their own knowledge. If students are at earlier stages in the programme, they would need to be provided a platform to undertake this interdisciplinarity.
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Data Collection Method | Details | Analysis |
---|---|---|
Weekly teacher/researcher journal reflections. | Students documented weekly feedback which formed the brief for weekly tasks. | The journal provided a basis for cross-checking themes with student design progress. |
Questionnaire at the beginning and end of each course. | Quantitative questions were primarily intended to measure change in attitude towards interdisciplinary collaborations, and change in creative design skills as a result of the interdisciplinary collaboration. Nineteen questions were asked requiring numerical responses based on agreement or disagreement. Scores for each class were calculated and averaged. | Questions which had the biggest and most moderate change provided themes for cross-checking written and verbal results. The results were important in verifying the development of creative design skills. |
Questionnaire at the beginning and end of each course. | Qualitative questions were intended to solicit issues, techniques and successes. The questions were designed to assess how the collaborations helped their design work, and the teaching format/facilitation techniques that worked. | Results were important because they confirmed thematisation, such as design skills, communication, workload and conflict resolution. |
Focus group interview at the end of each course. | Seven (year 3) and ten (year 4) students elaborated on various aspects of the collaborations and their outcomes, discussed what made them better designers, why they preferred interdisciplinary collaboration at the early stages of a project, and where it could be improved. | Transcripts were categorised into thematic headings established in the qualitative questionnaire. Thematic headings were expanded because the results were particularly revealing in identifying design skill development. |
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Bryant, M. Learning Spatial Design through Interdisciplinary Collaboration. Land 2021, 10, 689. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10070689
Bryant M. Learning Spatial Design through Interdisciplinary Collaboration. Land. 2021; 10(7):689. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10070689
Chicago/Turabian StyleBryant, Martin. 2021. "Learning Spatial Design through Interdisciplinary Collaboration" Land 10, no. 7: 689. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10070689
APA StyleBryant, M. (2021). Learning Spatial Design through Interdisciplinary Collaboration. Land, 10(7), 689. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10070689