Conference Papers
Initiating problem directions by respecting cultures and everyday practices: A case study of the design project experience of engineering students
- Initiating problem directions by respecting cultures and everyday practices: A case study of the design project experience of engineering students
- Thinking qualities initiative conference proceedings: 2000 & 2001
- Hong Kong
- Centre for Educational Development, Hong Kong Baptist University : Hong Kong Society for the Advancement of Learning and Teaching of Thinking
- 2002
- Thinking Qualities Initiative Conference
-
- Hong Kong
-
- 1997.7 onwards
-
- Post-Secondary Education
- The School of Design has been providing a design subject for engineering students since 1998. The subject aims at enriching students' experience in creative thinking, as well other design activities. Through project activities, each student attending the subject is required to initiate a design idea, and later to put the idea into practice. The first evaluation of the subject was conducted in 1999. The results show that engineering students, who normally tackle problems pre-defmed by teachers/supervisors or with only limited choices, find it difficult to initiate "creative" ideas without a direction and well- defined scope. Thus, in 1999/2000, instead of designing and innovating objects without any guidelines or boundaries, or, on the contrary, being provided with fixed/limited topics, the students were encouraged to respect cultures and users' practices in order to identify needs and opportunities, and then develop their ideas. The results of the subject evaluation in 2000 indicate that respecting cultures and users' practices is a good direction and scope set for students to carry out creativity activities, particularly for those students without much experience in initiating creative ideas. On the one hand, it allows students a certain degree of guidance in initiating ideas. On the other hand, it does not limit the possibility for students to initiate and develop their ideas, as "cultures and users' practices" is a dynamic everyday life topic which allows students much flexibility to investigate and explore, and a good basis for generating ideas. This paper explains the concept of respecting cultures and users' practice, and the rationale underlying student creativity activities. By illustrating some of the students' work and the results of evaluations, the paper discusses the advantages and limitations of this kind of idea initiation activities for students in general and for engineering students in particular.
-
- English
- Conference Papers
-
- 962858894X
- https://bibliography.lib.eduhk.hk/bibs/f76f83d5
- 2011-05-27
Recent Conference Papers
Autonomy and relatedness: Motivating Hong Kong kindergarten teachers in an online professional development courseConference Papers
Young children’s math competence in Hong Kong: The influence of working memory, self-regulation, and family socioeconomic statusConference Papers
Exploring the domain-specific relations between Chinese language abilities and Mathematical skills in Hong Kong kindergarten childrenConference Papers
Preservice teachers’ experiential learning: Production of digital stories to nurture children’s positive valuesConference Papers
繼往開來:語文教育與歷史教育的相互作用Conference Papers
小學文言文閱讀教學尋趣Conference Papers
Using the robot-assisted Attention-Engagement-Error-Feedback-Reflection (AEER) pedagogical design to develop machine learning concepts and facilitate reflection on learning-to-learn skills: Evaluation of an empirical study in Hong Kong primary schoolsConference Papers
What is the language goal in EMI? An analysis of vocabulary demand in a high-stakes assessment in Hong KongConference Papers