The Global Studio - Incorporating Peer-Learning into the Design Curriculum

In ‘tutor-led’ design education, lecturers reside at the centre of teaching & learning activi­ties. We argue that tutor-led design education does not prepare graduates sufficiently for working in highly complex professional capacities. We outline an alternative learning envi­­ron­ment named the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Aysar Ghassan, Erik Bohemia
Format: Article
Language:Danish
Published: Formakademisk, Oslo 2015-07-01
Series:FORMakademisk
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.hioa.no/index.php/formakademisk/article/view/1406
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spelling doaj-230a6eec5339465eb1dbae4b4cb01ee82020-11-24T21:59:46ZdanFormakademisk, OsloFORMakademisk1890-95152015-07-018110.7577/formakademisk.1406906The Global Studio - Incorporating Peer-Learning into the Design CurriculumAysar GhassanErik Bohemia In ‘tutor-led’ design education, lecturers reside at the centre of teaching & learning activi­ties. We argue that tutor-led design education does not prepare graduates sufficiently for working in highly complex professional capacities. We outline an alternative learning envi­­ron­ment named the Global Studio in which lecturers are more ‘distant’ in pedagogical activities. This ‘distance’ opens up learning spaces which expose students to complex project situations in preparation for professional working life. Global Studio projects are ‘student-led’ and contain explicit opportunities for peer tutoring to ensue. Feedback indicates that learners benefitted from engaging in peer tutoring. However, many students struggled with making important decisions when operating outside of the tutor-led learning environment. To maximise their benefit, we argue that student-led projects featuring peer-tutoring should be scaffolded throughout design programmes to provide students with a sufficient level of expo­sure to this mode of learning.  Image by artist Malcom Jones. http://www.malcomjones.com/index.htm https://journals.hioa.no/index.php/formakademisk/article/view/1406peer tutoringpeer learninglearning to deal with complexitytutor-led learningstudent-led learning
collection DOAJ
language Danish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Aysar Ghassan
Erik Bohemia
spellingShingle Aysar Ghassan
Erik Bohemia
The Global Studio - Incorporating Peer-Learning into the Design Curriculum
FORMakademisk
peer tutoring
peer learning
learning to deal with complexity
tutor-led learning
student-led learning
author_facet Aysar Ghassan
Erik Bohemia
author_sort Aysar Ghassan
title The Global Studio - Incorporating Peer-Learning into the Design Curriculum
title_short The Global Studio - Incorporating Peer-Learning into the Design Curriculum
title_full The Global Studio - Incorporating Peer-Learning into the Design Curriculum
title_fullStr The Global Studio - Incorporating Peer-Learning into the Design Curriculum
title_full_unstemmed The Global Studio - Incorporating Peer-Learning into the Design Curriculum
title_sort global studio - incorporating peer-learning into the design curriculum
publisher Formakademisk, Oslo
series FORMakademisk
issn 1890-9515
publishDate 2015-07-01
description In ‘tutor-led’ design education, lecturers reside at the centre of teaching & learning activi­ties. We argue that tutor-led design education does not prepare graduates sufficiently for working in highly complex professional capacities. We outline an alternative learning envi­­ron­ment named the Global Studio in which lecturers are more ‘distant’ in pedagogical activities. This ‘distance’ opens up learning spaces which expose students to complex project situations in preparation for professional working life. Global Studio projects are ‘student-led’ and contain explicit opportunities for peer tutoring to ensue. Feedback indicates that learners benefitted from engaging in peer tutoring. However, many students struggled with making important decisions when operating outside of the tutor-led learning environment. To maximise their benefit, we argue that student-led projects featuring peer-tutoring should be scaffolded throughout design programmes to provide students with a sufficient level of expo­sure to this mode of learning.  Image by artist Malcom Jones. http://www.malcomjones.com/index.htm
topic peer tutoring
peer learning
learning to deal with complexity
tutor-led learning
student-led learning
url https://journals.hioa.no/index.php/formakademisk/article/view/1406
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