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Responsible Design Acts in a Graduate Program: Slowing Down for More Qualified Social Life

Year 2015, Volume: 10 Issue: 39, 46 - 55, 29.10.2015
https://doi.org/10.19168/jyu.40119

Abstract

Design is a discipline mostly producing for consumer culture; basically, commercial considerations have driven design since the Industrial Revolution. Responsible Design came to prominence in the late 19th and early 20th century because design was demand-based (and judged) on economic success. Since the second half of the 20th century, it has considered not only economical consequences, but also social, political, ecological and ethical consequences. Parallel to this, design education in undergraduate level is commonly preparing designer-candidates for commercial, business world, rooted from economic-based understanding. Academic studies and graduate programs in design have independent approaches, such as “Responsible Design” has been finding a habitat in which to flourish within design education since 90’s, and is still growing. The main purpose of this paper is to contribute Socially Responsible Education by applying Responsible Design, which has deeper place in design education, rooted from individually, socially well-being and ecological-based understanding. It will be presented the context of a graduate course titled “Responsible Design 1” (RD1) led by the author in the Art and Design Graduate Program at Yaşar University in Izmir, Turkey (Fall, 2013) as a case study for supporting the purpose. The context and outcomes of this course contains both theoretical and practical experience by an academic infrastructure with social, ecological, ethical issues and sustainability among art and design graduate students, via Design Acts or Design Activism. The value here is challenging experiences in the process of gaining knowledge and awareness through practical applications in the discipline. Conducting projects generated from responsible thinking and how to convert this approach into practice-based outcomes to spread awareness by responsible design is the main research question here. The approach of the course is to search for “how to gain knowledge to conceptualize and materialize ideas in responsible design acts?” Based on this question, in seven weeks, the theoretical issues such as; responsibilities in design, ethics, environmental design, slow design, life span of products, ecology and politics, human-centered design were studied. National and international activist projects on service, system design were reviewed. TED Talks and speeches were reviewed; and relating documentaries were watched. In following 7-week, a practical implication completed: Students created “Six Activist Projects” in subjects of their research interest. These met with audience in an exhibition, held at the campus of Yaşar University at the end of the semester. Briefly, the program of the course was enriched by various visual sources, interrelating design discourses alive-study cases and eventually learning-by-doing method. The complexity and challenges of responsible design acts and/or design activism in education will be argued in this paper. By observing the design concepts, processes and outcomes of the six projects, it revealed that the development of responsible design acts is basically simple, which sparks further practice-based design research. The impact of the course on the students’ further studies will be also shared briefly. The results of RD1 have a potential to discuss about how to develop further responsible design-acts in education to create deeper social and ecological impacts by design. Finally, an idea of “Slowing down design education” rooted from Slow Schooling in Slow Movement by Honoré (2009) - will be suggested

References

  • Çöp(m)adam. (2009). Çöp(m)adam. (U. T. A.Ş., Producer) Retrieved April 15, 2014 from www.copmadam.com/tr
  • Aravind Eye Hospital. 1976. Retrieved 2013 from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3cjnNPua7Ag
  • Beverland, M. 2011. Slow Design, design for Triple Bottom Line - Society, Environment, Business. Design Managment Institute.
  • Dobson, A., & Eckersley, R. (Eds.). 2006. Political Theory and Ecological Challenge. Cambridge University Press.
  • Dobson, A., 2007. Environmental Citizenship: Towards Sustainable Development. Sustainable Development 15.
  • Erlhoff, M., & Marshall, T. (Eds.). 2008. Design Dictionary, Perspective on Design Terminology. Basel, Boston, Berlin: Birkhauser Verlag AG.
  • Gary, H. (director). 2009. Objectified [Motion Picture]. Produced by Gary Hustwit
  • Honoré, C. 2005. In The Phraise of Slowness. TED Talks, Retrieved 2015 from https://www.ted.com/talks/carl_honore_praises_slowness
  • Honoré, C. 2009. In The Phraise of Slowness. Orion Books.
  • Leerberg, M., Riisberg, V., & Boutrup, J. 2010, July. Design Responsibility and Sustainible Design as Reflective Perspective Practice: An Educational Challenge. Sustainable Development (18), pp. 306-317.
  • Leonard, A. 2008. The Story of Stuff project. Retrieved April 15, 2014 from storyofstuff.org
  • McCorquodale, D. and Hanaor, C. (eds.) 2006. Recycle, The Essential Guide, Black Dog Publishing, London.
  • McDough, W., & Braungart, M. 2002. Cradle to Cradle. North Point Press.
  • Minority Rights Group International (MRG), 2012. Minorities and Indigenous Peoples 2012, Events of 2011. (S. Richmond, Ed.) Retriewed July 25, 2014 from UNESCO: http://www.unesco.org/library/PDF/MRG.pdf
  • Papanek, V. J. 1971. Design for The Real World, Human Ecology and Social Change (Second Edition ed.). New York: Pantheon Books.
  • Peter, J., (director) 2007. Zeitgeist, The Movie, distributed byGMP LLC
  • Shön, D. 1983. The Reflective Practitioner. How Professionals Think In Action. London: Temple Smith.
  • TMO, 2013. Toprak Mahsülleri Ofisi Genel Müdürlüğü, Research on Wasting Bread in Turkey, (Türkiye’de Ekemek İsrafı Araştırma Raporu), Retreived 2015 from http://www.ekmekisrafetme.com/uploadresim/ekmekyayinlar/turkiyedeekmekisrafi.pdf
  • Turkish Law# 28300 2012. (AEEE) Atık Elektrikli Ve Elektronik Eşyaların Kontrolü Yönetmeliği, Retreived 2015 from http://www.denetimcevre.com.tr/attachments/article/31/ATIK%20ELEKTRIKLI%20VE%20ELE KTRONIK%20ESYALARIN%20KONTROLU%20YONETMELIGI.pdf
  • i “More recently, alternative socioeconomic models and systems are becoming important third root for slow design, as observed of
  • the convergence of new (>) social grouping and technology, eco-entrepreneurialism, social enterprise, and ways of living (Manzini &
  • Jegou). Various forms of slow activism such as The Italian Slow food and Slow Cities movements, as well as the establishment
  • Eternally Yours (van Hinte), a Dutch foundation that encourages more physically and emotional enduring (>) artifacts, were also
  • significant stimuli for the emergence of slow design.
  • The first formal publication of a “slow design manifesto’ in 2003 (Fuad-Luke) for repositioning the focus of design on a triad of
  • individual, social cultural, and environmental well-being, and posited eight overlapping themes: ritual, tradition, experiential,
  • evolved, slowness, eco-efficiency, open-source knowledge, and (slow) technology.” (Erlhoff & Marshall, 2008: 362).

Bir Yüksek Lisans Programında Sağduyulu Tasarım Eylemleri: Daha Kaliteli Sosyal Yaşam için Yavaşlamak

Year 2015, Volume: 10 Issue: 39, 46 - 55, 29.10.2015
https://doi.org/10.19168/jyu.40119

Abstract

Purpose / Objective: According to the literature review,in general, design is a discipline mostly producing for consumer culture. Basically, economic-based understanding has grown it since the Industrial Revolution. Responsibility in design became an issue in the late 19th and early 20th century. It was demand-oriented, based-on economic success. Since the second half of the 20th century,it has considered not only economical consequences, but also social, political, ecological and ethical consequences. Parallel to this, design education has commonly focused on commercial design and consumer culture, and responsibility in design became an issue in the design education in the 90’s, which has been still growing. The main purpose of this paper is to present outcomes and the process of a graduate course titled “Responsible Design 1” (RD1) led by the author in Art and Design Graduate Program at Yaşar University in Izmir, Turkey (Fall, 2013). It is as a case study in a design curriculum to create academic infrastructure in social, environmental, ethical issues and sustainability among art and design graduate students to contribute Socially Responsible Education.

Originality / Value: The context and outcomes of this course contains both theoretical and practical experience by an academic infrastructure in the Faculty of Art and Design. It is aimed to share here challenges of the process of gaining knowledge and awareness by practical applications within the Faculty. Conducting projects generated from responsible thinking and how to convert this approach into practice-based outcomes in order to spread awareness on “responsibility in design” is the main research question here.

Research Approach / Methodology / Design:  The approach of the course is to equip students both theoretical and practical knowledge in the sense. How to gain knowledge, to conceptualize and materialize ideas with responsibly design act? Based on this question, in 7-week, the theoretical issues such as; responsibility in design, ethics, environmental design, slow design, life span of products, ecology and politics, human-centered design were studied. National and international activist projects on service, system design were reviewed. Ted Talks speeches were listened; and relating documentaries were watched. In following 7-week, a practical implication completed: Students created “Six Activist Projects” in subjects of their research interest. These met with audience in an exhibition, held at the campus of Yaşar University at the end of the semester. Briefly, the program of the course was enriched by various visual sources, interrelating design discourses alive-study cases and eventually learning-by-doing method.

Findings / Results:  The complexity and challenges of responsible design act will be argued in this paper. By observing the design concepts, processes and outcomes of the six projects, it is found out that the design of them is basically simple, which sparks further practice-based design research. The results of RD1 have a potential to discuss on how to develop further responsible design-acts in education to create deeper social and ecological impacts by design. Also, slowing design education, rooted from Slow Movement - a living philosophy described by Honoré (2009) - will be suggested. On the other hand, the impact of the course on the students will be presented for their further studies regarding to responsible thinking and design act.  

References

  • Çöp(m)adam. (2009). Çöp(m)adam. (U. T. A.Ş., Producer) Retrieved April 15, 2014 from www.copmadam.com/tr
  • Aravind Eye Hospital. 1976. Retrieved 2013 from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3cjnNPua7Ag
  • Beverland, M. 2011. Slow Design, design for Triple Bottom Line - Society, Environment, Business. Design Managment Institute.
  • Dobson, A., & Eckersley, R. (Eds.). 2006. Political Theory and Ecological Challenge. Cambridge University Press.
  • Dobson, A., 2007. Environmental Citizenship: Towards Sustainable Development. Sustainable Development 15.
  • Erlhoff, M., & Marshall, T. (Eds.). 2008. Design Dictionary, Perspective on Design Terminology. Basel, Boston, Berlin: Birkhauser Verlag AG.
  • Gary, H. (director). 2009. Objectified [Motion Picture]. Produced by Gary Hustwit
  • Honoré, C. 2005. In The Phraise of Slowness. TED Talks, Retrieved 2015 from https://www.ted.com/talks/carl_honore_praises_slowness
  • Honoré, C. 2009. In The Phraise of Slowness. Orion Books.
  • Leerberg, M., Riisberg, V., & Boutrup, J. 2010, July. Design Responsibility and Sustainible Design as Reflective Perspective Practice: An Educational Challenge. Sustainable Development (18), pp. 306-317.
  • Leonard, A. 2008. The Story of Stuff project. Retrieved April 15, 2014 from storyofstuff.org
  • McCorquodale, D. and Hanaor, C. (eds.) 2006. Recycle, The Essential Guide, Black Dog Publishing, London.
  • McDough, W., & Braungart, M. 2002. Cradle to Cradle. North Point Press.
  • Minority Rights Group International (MRG), 2012. Minorities and Indigenous Peoples 2012, Events of 2011. (S. Richmond, Ed.) Retriewed July 25, 2014 from UNESCO: http://www.unesco.org/library/PDF/MRG.pdf
  • Papanek, V. J. 1971. Design for The Real World, Human Ecology and Social Change (Second Edition ed.). New York: Pantheon Books.
  • Peter, J., (director) 2007. Zeitgeist, The Movie, distributed byGMP LLC
  • Shön, D. 1983. The Reflective Practitioner. How Professionals Think In Action. London: Temple Smith.
  • TMO, 2013. Toprak Mahsülleri Ofisi Genel Müdürlüğü, Research on Wasting Bread in Turkey, (Türkiye’de Ekemek İsrafı Araştırma Raporu), Retreived 2015 from http://www.ekmekisrafetme.com/uploadresim/ekmekyayinlar/turkiyedeekmekisrafi.pdf
  • Turkish Law# 28300 2012. (AEEE) Atık Elektrikli Ve Elektronik Eşyaların Kontrolü Yönetmeliği, Retreived 2015 from http://www.denetimcevre.com.tr/attachments/article/31/ATIK%20ELEKTRIKLI%20VE%20ELE KTRONIK%20ESYALARIN%20KONTROLU%20YONETMELIGI.pdf
  • i “More recently, alternative socioeconomic models and systems are becoming important third root for slow design, as observed of
  • the convergence of new (>) social grouping and technology, eco-entrepreneurialism, social enterprise, and ways of living (Manzini &
  • Jegou). Various forms of slow activism such as The Italian Slow food and Slow Cities movements, as well as the establishment
  • Eternally Yours (van Hinte), a Dutch foundation that encourages more physically and emotional enduring (>) artifacts, were also
  • significant stimuli for the emergence of slow design.
  • The first formal publication of a “slow design manifesto’ in 2003 (Fuad-Luke) for repositioning the focus of design on a triad of
  • individual, social cultural, and environmental well-being, and posited eight overlapping themes: ritual, tradition, experiential,
  • evolved, slowness, eco-efficiency, open-source knowledge, and (slow) technology.” (Erlhoff & Marshall, 2008: 362).
There are 27 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language English
Journal Section Articles
Authors

Mine Ovacık

Publication Date October 29, 2015
Published in Issue Year 2015 Volume: 10 Issue: 39

Cite

APA Ovacık, M. (2015). Responsible Design Acts in a Graduate Program: Slowing Down for More Qualified Social Life. Yaşar Üniversitesi E-Dergisi, 10(39), 46-55. https://doi.org/10.19168/jyu.40119
AMA Ovacık M. Responsible Design Acts in a Graduate Program: Slowing Down for More Qualified Social Life. Yaşar Üniversitesi E-Dergisi. December 2015;10(39):46-55. doi:10.19168/jyu.40119
Chicago Ovacık, Mine. “Responsible Design Acts in a Graduate Program: Slowing Down for More Qualified Social Life”. Yaşar Üniversitesi E-Dergisi 10, no. 39 (December 2015): 46-55. https://doi.org/10.19168/jyu.40119.
EndNote Ovacık M (December 1, 2015) Responsible Design Acts in a Graduate Program: Slowing Down for More Qualified Social Life. Yaşar Üniversitesi E-Dergisi 10 39 46–55.
IEEE M. Ovacık, “Responsible Design Acts in a Graduate Program: Slowing Down for More Qualified Social Life”, Yaşar Üniversitesi E-Dergisi, vol. 10, no. 39, pp. 46–55, 2015, doi: 10.19168/jyu.40119.
ISNAD Ovacık, Mine. “Responsible Design Acts in a Graduate Program: Slowing Down for More Qualified Social Life”. Yaşar Üniversitesi E-Dergisi 10/39 (December 2015), 46-55. https://doi.org/10.19168/jyu.40119.
JAMA Ovacık M. Responsible Design Acts in a Graduate Program: Slowing Down for More Qualified Social Life. Yaşar Üniversitesi E-Dergisi. 2015;10:46–55.
MLA Ovacık, Mine. “Responsible Design Acts in a Graduate Program: Slowing Down for More Qualified Social Life”. Yaşar Üniversitesi E-Dergisi, vol. 10, no. 39, 2015, pp. 46-55, doi:10.19168/jyu.40119.
Vancouver Ovacık M. Responsible Design Acts in a Graduate Program: Slowing Down for More Qualified Social Life. Yaşar Üniversitesi E-Dergisi. 2015;10(39):46-55.