Tasks Due Today
- Research Paper
This Weekâs Topics
At the end of this session, students should have an understanding of the following:
- How to define your Research Project Topic / Question
- The Research Project & Presentation guidelines and due date
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Begin class:Â What is your manifesto?
Write for 5 minutes in your research journal
Use bulleted points that you can share the class
Discussion
 What is design?
The objective for this discussion is to compose your Design Manifesto.
Use short declarative statements to define the philosophy, intentions and requirements for the designer of today.
State the social, political and ethical questions that are necessary for a designer to consider.
Identify the technological concerns that designers must embrace or reject. Don’t shy away from poetics or abstraction.
Feel free to re-write passages from the Futurist and Constructivist manifestos that we’ve read.
It will take a bit of time for me to read the papers posted this week.
Activities
Below find the information covered in this session. Complete all of the following activities, videos, and assignments.
1. Finding Your Research Topic (30 min)
âOur identity is abstract and ever-changing. The ways in which weâre shaped by our world can evolve as the world around us changes and we encounter new experiences⌠With diverse representation comes a wealth of experiences and perspectives that elevate the design industry.â KALEENA SALES FROM EXTRA BOLD, PRINCETON ARCHITECTURAL PRESS, 2021.
Who are you? What do you care about?:
If you havenât seen it yet, watch Abstract: The Art of Design > Paula Scher to learn how a designerâs 40-year career was influenced by her life, her culture, her city, her passion.
Defining Your Research Topic
Your research should explore the relationship between specific theories that we cover in class and a specific contemporary design project, aesthetic, or approach within the last 40 years that puts these theories into practice. Begin with a particular writing, concept, or design project that you find compelling and draw connections between it and the theories weâve discussed.
Start broad and then focus in.
You might start broadly with a general area of interest.
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- Design + Gender
- Design + Diversity
- Design + Protest
- Design + Gaming
- Design + Health
- Design + Politics
- Design + Identity
- Design + Technology
- Design + Music
- Design + Social Justice
- Design + Film
- Design + ?
Check out AIGAâs Eye On Design for numerous examples that would make interesting design theory research topics. You will need to define your own topic, but these should give you some ideas.
Embrace the past
Itâs difficult to look at our current time to clearly see what will be influential to the next generation (which styles or trends or political or cultural influences will have a lasting impact), but we can look to the past to see what, how, and why those influences are visible today, whether as reaction/rebellion or as influence/nostalgia. We are always asking WHY? Here are two examples where a designer, design movement, or graphic style was influenced by the past (pop culture, politics, technologies, social conflicts). When exploring these types of topics, historical sources should play a big role.
Reject the past
We can also look at current social-political movements to look deeply at our design field and our culture to consider how these events are influencing the present design field. In these examples, current social-political changes are informing/changing our approach to language, communication, design, and how we relate to each other. When exploring these topics the theories of communication, meaning, psychology, signs & symbols, etc. play a big role. Again we are always asking WHY?
Defining Your Research Question
Once you have narrowed down your research topic. Start to ask some questions in order to define your research question or thesis statement. Here are some tips.
Choosing a Research Topic: Purdue Online Writing Lab
Writing Strong Thesis Statements: Purdue Online Writing Lab
2. Research Project & Presentation GuidelinesÂ
Review the Research Project and Presentation guidelines and start to define your research topic following the suggestions.
Find detailed guidelines in Research Project & Presentation
3. Assignment: Reading Response 5Â (2+ Hours)
DUEÂ Monday, March 21, at 6pm
Karl Gerstner, Designing Programmes (1964):
Josef MĂźller-Brockmann, Grid and Design Philosophy (1981):
Resources
Assignment: Reading Response 5
Research Project & Presentation
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