Using Failure to Teach Design
Author(s) -
Rob Sleezer,
Jacob Swanson,
Rebecca Bates
Publication year - 2016
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.18260/p.27145
Subject(s) - journaling file system , context (archaeology) , reflection (computer programming) , computer science , feature (linguistics) , learning design , software engineering , mathematics education , psychology , programming language , paleontology , linguistics , philosophy , data file , biology
Learning from failure during large ill-defined design projects provides students with opportunities to practice their abilities to explore other solutions, demonstrate that a required feature may violate physics, and propose design changes. This learning requires students to embrace their failures, something they have been trained to avoid in the past. This paper presents a case study where design students were encouraged to discuss failure in the context of design loops using reflection journaling and continuously evolving design requirements.
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