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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
211

The Dismissive Actually

Egner, Alexander 06 May 2009 (has links)
This project is about giving in to the impulse of ideas. My mind is a little messy and cluttered, swirling with bits of stimuli. The spark of an idea happens when the bits collide. I prefer not to initiate or control the process so much as keep it fed and active. Through graphic design, I bear witness to these ideas, giving them form as a series of visible, tangible objects. Viewed comprehensively, the work establishes an ongoing chronicle of my creative life and mind.
212

The Unwantables: An Exploration of Visual Narrative

Valdes, Marius I. 01 January 2005 (has links)
The Unwantables is a creative project that has evolved from my lifelong interest in and relationship with visual stories. To me the most compelling aspect of visual storytelling is "imagination". The author possesses the ability to create new worlds, interesting characters, and situations that can have the potential to communicate about any topic. My project explores visual narrative as a communication tool to explain the role of imagination in my life.
213

After August: Museums As Mirrors

Pinholster, William 23 May 2008 (has links)
The After August Museum collects and exhibits an open, user-generated body of content. Its primary objective is to help heal the post-Katrina Lower Ninth Ward community. It is respectful and considerate of the area's established traditions, present concerns, and future goals. The museum assumes multiple shapes and plays multiple roles as it acts as the center of the transitioning community.
214

Mobile Exhibition System

Columbus, Sanford Jillian 06 August 2009 (has links)
Through the development and design of a Mobile Exhibition System (MES) in this thesis, I will demonstrate the benefits and possibilities of a flexible and mobile system within an exhibition environment. A flexible system will be able to adapt to a wide range of content, while at the same time, maintaining a synergy between its form and function. By the reuse and reappropriation of shipping containers as the exhibition envelope, the goal of mobility can be achieved, reaching out to those who might not otherwise experience learning through an exhibition environment.
215

Elevating the Everyday: Designed Objects as Companions

Hester, Cassie 01 January 2012 (has links)
From fleeting interactions to long affairs, our relationships with things are diverse and complex. Like people, designed objects and environments are close companions in our lives. The way we understand and engage with artifacts is parallel to the way we interpret and interact with each other. A constant source of comfort and delight, frustration and anxiety, their personalities inform our everyday dialogues and experiences. Designed artifacts assume engaging and pleasurable personalities when they transcend materials, challenge perceptions, and garner active, reflective interactions. Through the investigation of familiar materials such as concrete, crayons, paper, sequins, and thread in unfamiliar formats and contexts, I am creating objects that are playful in construction and interaction. By imbuing objects with friendly and intriguing personalities, everyday interactions and experiences with these objects are elevated, as users invest in pleasurable forays and relationships.
216

Experience as an Experiment

Walker, James 01 January 2013 (has links)
My work is an exploration of new media that demonstrates the influence a community has on visual communication. The community reveals content as objects go unnoticed after they become a permanent part of the landscape and assumptions are made from cultural archetypes. Through exploration, immersion, and reflection, I am able to recognize the invisible and expected, establish a familiarity with a community, and design responses that communicate directly to it.
217

Comfort Toys: Coping Tools for Children with an Epileptic Parent

Evjen, Benjamin 01 January 2016 (has links)
When a caregiver suffers from epilepsy, a child can often feel frightened, vulnerable, and alone whenever a seizure occurs. In my thesis project I intend to help children negotiate this struggle with the use of therapeutic toys. Through play, children can navigate feelings that are often overlooked by adults. The visual appeal, simplicity, and materials used in their creation help facilitate comfort through sensory cues. By applying coping mechanisms to deal with stress caused by the passage of time, provide tactile comfort, and equip the child with tools to take action, their emotional needs are met. These toys address an overlooked need for children who consistently deal with the emotionally taxing occurrences that come with having an epileptic caregiver.
218

Visual learning in a graphic design setting

Chmela-Jones, Katarzyna Anna 10 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.Tech. - Graphic Design, Dept. of Visual Arts and Design, Faculty of Human Sciences) -- Vaal University of Technology / An exploratory study was undertaken at three campuses of the Vaal University of Technology in response to weak examination results in one of the subjects of the graphic design curriculum. The aim of the study was to investigate visual learning strategies as used in conjunction with co-operative learning approaches in a higher education setting and to asses the appropriateness of these learning approaches in the discipline of graphic design at first-year level. The research questions that guided the study focused on how first-year graphic design learners experience (a) visual learning strategies, (b) a cooperative learning environment, as well as (c) the combination of these. The literature review component of the study covered (1) the fundamentals of visual learning, including the concepts of visual literacy, visual semiotics and visual culture; (2) graphic design education, especially in a South African context; and (3) principles of co~operative learning, including Avenant's requirements for successful group work. In the field work component of the study, multiple-choice questionnaires, open-ended questionnaires and focus group interviews were used as the main data collection methods. The results of the study did not indicate that first-year learners enrolled in the discipline of graphic design are likely to benefit from a combination of visual learning and co-operative learning strategies. Therefore, the implementation of a combination of the above-mentioned teaching strategies is not recommended in this setting.
219

Flexible Learning: The Design Thinking Process as an Educational Tool

Lord, Katia C 11 May 2013 (has links)
Flexible Learning is a personal investigation of the relationship between the design-thinking process and standardized primary education. The problem-solving methods used in graphic design, are studied as a means of enhancing skills among students—skills that are not generally being developed, some of which are creativity, engagement, collaboration, evaluation, refinement, and presentation techniques. While I access and synthesize information from my clients, a child also access and synthesize information from his or her teacher. When a client comes to me with a design request, I research, create, and then present the most appropriate solution. In the classroom, this kind of thinking process is also possible when the teacher offers students the opportunity to solve a problem, usually in the form of a project. I will explain how more intensive and creative application of design thinking process could expand the horizons for whole brain learning and creative thinking among students.
220

Le designer graphique et les sens de la responsabilité : étude descriptive de la modélisation morale du praticien / The meanings of responsability to graphic designers : a descriptive study of professionals' moral model-making

Brunel-Lafargue, Karen 16 November 2018 (has links)
L’essentiel du corpus théorique consacré au design et à la responsabilité de son praticien adopte une approche prescriptive où leurs auteurs dictent les contours d’une pratique responsable. Mais compte tenu de l’impact du design graphique sur notre quotidien, ne serait-il pas utile d’appréhender plus précisément le sens que ses praticiens donnent à leur responsabilité ? À notre avis, oui. L’objectif de notre recherche est donc de recueillir et de comprendre les significations de la responsabilité, et ainsi d’analyser les délibérations et les modélisations morales des praticiens du design graphique pour en proposer une description. Par le biais d’une étude qualitative, via des entretiens de groupes, nous avons réalisé une analyse en deux temps. D’abord, une synthèse de chaque groupe nous a permis d’identifier que la responsabilité fait sens comme habitude — au sens peircien du terme — qui se structure par rapport à la représentation que se fait le designer des enjeux de sa pratique au sein d’un réseau de parties prenantes. Ensuite l’examen des schémas individuels, qui ont donné lieu à la modélisation de trois des périmètres potentiels de ce maillage d’acteurs. / Design theory tends to adopt a prescriptive approach to designers’ responsibility, taking it upon itself to lay out guidelines for good conduct. However, given the impact of graphic design on human behavior and the fabric of society as a whole it seems essential to study how designers’ themselves define their responsibility. Thus, the purpose of our research is to collect, interpret and describe the meanings practitioners assemble with regard to their moral obligations. A qualitative study, built upon group interviews, has offered us a dual assessment. First, the analysis of each group allowed us to identify responsibility as a habit, in the Peircean sense of the term, that each designer establishes in relation to a network of stakes and stakeholders he or she articulates around his or practice. Secondly, the study of individual discourses revealed models of three potential perimeters of the system within which they evaluate their obligations.

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