The Design Help Desk: A collaborative approach to design education for scientists and engineers.
Visual design, learning sciences, and nanotechnology may be strange bedfellows; yet, as this paper highlights, peer interaction between a designer and a scientist is an effective method for helping scientists acquire visual design skills. We describe our findings from observing twelve sessions at th...
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doaj-eaa61e469a2049e79c9e356baf0510542021-03-03T20:42:21ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01145e021250110.1371/journal.pone.0212501The Design Help Desk: A collaborative approach to design education for scientists and engineers.Timothy O'MahonyJason PetzJonathan CookKaren ChengMarco RolandiVisual design, learning sciences, and nanotechnology may be strange bedfellows; yet, as this paper highlights, peer interaction between a designer and a scientist is an effective method for helping scientists acquire visual design skills. We describe our findings from observing twelve sessions at the Design Help Desk, a tutoring center at the University of Washington. At each session, a scientist (who is expert in his own domain but a novice in design) consulted a designer (who is expert in design but a novice in science) in order to receive advice and guidance on how to improve a scientific visualization. At the Design Help Desk, this pairing consistently produced a momentary disequilibrium in the scientist's thought process: a disequilibrium that led to agency (where the scientist gained ownership of his/her own learning) and conceptual change in the scientist's understanding of visual design. Scientists who visited the Design Help Desk were satisfied with their experience, and their published work demonstrated an improved ability to visually communicate research findings-a skill critical to the advancement of science. To our knowledge, the Design Help Desk is a unique effort to educate scientists in visual design; we are not aware of any other design-advice/tutoring centers at public or private universities in the United States or abroad.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0212501 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Timothy O'Mahony Jason Petz Jonathan Cook Karen Cheng Marco Rolandi |
spellingShingle |
Timothy O'Mahony Jason Petz Jonathan Cook Karen Cheng Marco Rolandi The Design Help Desk: A collaborative approach to design education for scientists and engineers. PLoS ONE |
author_facet |
Timothy O'Mahony Jason Petz Jonathan Cook Karen Cheng Marco Rolandi |
author_sort |
Timothy O'Mahony |
title |
The Design Help Desk: A collaborative approach to design education for scientists and engineers. |
title_short |
The Design Help Desk: A collaborative approach to design education for scientists and engineers. |
title_full |
The Design Help Desk: A collaborative approach to design education for scientists and engineers. |
title_fullStr |
The Design Help Desk: A collaborative approach to design education for scientists and engineers. |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Design Help Desk: A collaborative approach to design education for scientists and engineers. |
title_sort |
design help desk: a collaborative approach to design education for scientists and engineers. |
publisher |
Public Library of Science (PLoS) |
series |
PLoS ONE |
issn |
1932-6203 |
publishDate |
2019-01-01 |
description |
Visual design, learning sciences, and nanotechnology may be strange bedfellows; yet, as this paper highlights, peer interaction between a designer and a scientist is an effective method for helping scientists acquire visual design skills. We describe our findings from observing twelve sessions at the Design Help Desk, a tutoring center at the University of Washington. At each session, a scientist (who is expert in his own domain but a novice in design) consulted a designer (who is expert in design but a novice in science) in order to receive advice and guidance on how to improve a scientific visualization. At the Design Help Desk, this pairing consistently produced a momentary disequilibrium in the scientist's thought process: a disequilibrium that led to agency (where the scientist gained ownership of his/her own learning) and conceptual change in the scientist's understanding of visual design. Scientists who visited the Design Help Desk were satisfied with their experience, and their published work demonstrated an improved ability to visually communicate research findings-a skill critical to the advancement of science. To our knowledge, the Design Help Desk is a unique effort to educate scientists in visual design; we are not aware of any other design-advice/tutoring centers at public or private universities in the United States or abroad. |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0212501 |
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