Thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree
Doctor of Technology: Design
in the Faculty of Informatics and Design
at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology, 2012 / The aim of the research is to explore design education and designing as social
practice; working with and for others to inform a more sustainable and meaningful
future. Ways in which the lived experience of participants in the discipline of design,
in the culturally diverse university and community contexts can be harnessed for
social benefit, are interrogated. Themes are explored around the value of different
world views and forms of knowing in design education to inform design research,
in order to extend the knowledge paradigm to include lived experience not only as
site of knowledge formation, but also of wisdom acquisition.
The thesis presents an amalgamation of professional practice, creative practice and
narrative set in qualitative research methods appropriate to the designer and artist
who desire to work with lived experience in the academic context. Lived
experience informs all we do and each educational event and encounter ought to
be appraised and responded to in a contextually sensitive way. An important
aspect flowing from this amalgamation is the recognition and analysis of the coexisting
relationships of the roles inhering in the educator and the student. In order
to immerse oneself in research and teaching, all aspects of the process have to be
lived and filtered through the senses. This implies resisting abstractions by
grounding research, teaching, design and making in the experience of the moment.
The original contribution of this research then, is the synthesis of design, art and
narrative writing that accompanied in a parallel line, the academic writing process
to culminate in this design folio — a testament to grounding the research project in
practice. Pedagogical approaches and lived experience embodied as recontextualised
expressions in design teaching, supervision and creative practice,
are presented in the folio.
The boundaries of qualitative methods were tested with narrative and life writing,
autoethnography, poetry, studio observations, extensive journalling, drawing,
photography and printmaking processes.
The results showed that a phenomenology of the senses in creative work, and
locating the designer in her or his biography, is where original and imaginative design
resides. Social and cultural aspects are some of the foundation stones of design
education and ought to be informants of the creative process until the finish.
Furthermore, authentic openness is required in supervision and teaching to facilitate
deep listening, interpretation, intuition and “in-seeing” in educational encounters.
Finally, being an active creative practitioner in design teaching is as important if not
more important than content knowledge in that discipline, since the active
practitioner “becomes” the Other through the collective dimension of design work.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:cput/oai:localhost:20.500.11838/1335 |
Date | January 2012 |
Creators | Chisin, Alettia Vorster |
Publisher | Cape Peninsula University of Technology |
Source Sets | South African National ETD Portal |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis |
Rights | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/za/ |
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