This document summarizes a campaign by theyellowtree.org to engage with projects from the 2014 World Design Capital in Cape Town. It will analyze projects for evidence of transformative principles and practices with educational impact. The goal is to ensure sustainability of project outcomes from WDC2014 and encourage discussion. Theyellowtree.org will work with project leaders to translate principles into curriculum designs and policies. The campaign aims to critically engage with projects and design thinking practices. It will map how projects approach issues like social justice, innovation, collaboration and knowledge dissemination.
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Craft Based Teaching and Learning
This document summarizes a campaign by theyellowtree.org to engage with projects from the 2014 World Design Capital in Cape Town. It will analyze projects for evidence of transformative principles and practices with educational impact. The goal is to ensure sustainability of project outcomes from WDC2014 and encourage discussion. Theyellowtree.org will work with project leaders to translate principles into curriculum designs and policies. The campaign aims to critically engage with projects and design thinking practices. It will map how projects approach issues like social justice, innovation, collaboration and knowledge dissemination.
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Seldom does an opportunity arise that engages such diverse thinkers,
leaders, educators, individuals and institutions. The World Design
Capital Cape Town 2014 offers this occasion. This is not necessarily the case with all capitals of design. The City of Cape Town has taken an active, involved, and engaged interest in this juncture of design, as the opportunity to Live Design! Transform Life! Against this backdrop, theyellowtree.org is launching its campaign for 2014, looking at and reporting on evidence of transformative principles and practices that have educational or curricula impact, as reflected across a number of the almost 450 projects in the World Design Capital 2014 (WDC2014) programme. theyellowtree.orgs interest resides in transformative principles and ideas and how these may either illustrate, or contribute towards, new and innovative practices in curriculum development. We hope that our project will serve as a mechanism to ensure future sustainability and multiplication of this valuable project collateral from WDC2014. We also hope to encourage conversation, open up dialogue, and support debate amongst stakeholders and practitioners, policymakers and students, creatives and the world of business. Mike Thoms and I have collectively engaged with curriculum policy, critique, debate and design over a number of years and we hope to use this experience, to work with the WDC2014 projects and their principles, ideas, critiques, possibilities and evolution. This opportune moment offers occasions to translate or codify the underlying principles into new forms of educational relay, whether as curriculum principles, contemporary policies or potential curriculum designs for future delivery. The WDC2014 projects offer a unique occasion to engage with key stakeholders, wider design audiences and a global platform, and one that can simultaneously contribute to innovation, explore critical social issues, and transform lives. In the development of the campaign, it is our aim to contextualise the opportunities and debates, to raise diverse and critical questions, and to reflect on the projects and their teaching & learning practices. We endeavour to map and appraise collateral developed through engaged, design thinking, during WDC2014 for future curricula. In future posts, we will cover some of these exciting WDC2014 projects, as well as looking more closely at the concept and practices of design thinking, in relation to 21st century knowledge creation and dissemination, knowledge production, knowledge forms and knowledge relations. Our 2014 Campaign reflects theyellowtree.orgs four guiding principles for the ongoing research and curatorial project, namely: Social Justice, Innovation, Collaboration & Democratisation, and the
development of new digital Archives & Resources. Does your project
recognise the potential for any of these principles? Having been selected as a winning concept by WDC2014, does your project strongly focus on socially responsive design? In what ways does your project recognise and mobilise Cape Towns considerable design resources towards addressing critical issues? In what ways do you envisage your project to engage with the design thinking, to activate and transform? It is the City Of Cape Towns aim to deal with past imbalances and inequalities across three broad themes: rebuild Cape Town through community cohesion reconnect the city through infrastructural enhancement reposition the city for the knowledge economy theyellowtree.org supports the slogan Live design. Transform Life. Contact us if you are interested to share or contribute to this powerful moment in the lives of every Capetonian, fellow South Africans, and global thought-leaders and citizens.
Critical Thinking: The Key to a successful education.
As a lecturer in higher education, the most commonly asked questions I am asked relate to the scope of the next test, project or exam students are facing. What they are actually asking of course is for me to tell them exactly which parts of the curriculum they need to study, and the types of question they are likely to be asked. This really means that students believe that a piece of paper with the word Diploma or Degree printed at the top is a passport to a better life. In reality, it means nothing, because if the transfer of knowledge is made (and assessed) through a parrot learning style, even an A student is unlikely to be able to apply that knowledge in the workplace and that is what really matters. At Boston Media House, many subjects are what could be described as craft-based. Students study Journalism, Graphic Design, Advertising and PR amongst others - subjects that require a hands-on, practical learning style. It is no coincidence that Advertising and PR companies call themselves practitioners. A key element of this mode of educating is critical thinking and this is sadly lacking in many of our students. Adli Jacobs, author, journalist and fellow lecturer believes this lack of critical thinking relates directly
to the thesis of Citizen and Subject, well documented by Mahmood
Mamdani, in his 1996 book of the same name.1 The
1 Mamdani, M. 1996. Citizen and Subject: Contemporary Africa and the
Legacy of Late Colonialism. Princeton University Press.
Knowledge Sharing Tutorial: Where Technology Is Advancing, Economies Challenged, and Communities Evolving, Nothing Is More Essential Than the Development of Learning Resources in School and at Work