smallfire: design strategy, research & methods to support participation


Archived entries for presentation

Co-design: some principles, theory and practice…


designing with users

I recently had the pleasure of teaching a workshop on co-design techniques at UTS as part of their new Design Masters program. The term co-design refers to a range of things and is a philosophical and political approach to design best applied throughout the design life cycle [1]. The focus of this particular session was on techniques that you might use at the fuzzy-front end of the design process and included hands-on examples of the kinds of activities we might do as part of a co-design workshop. This post is a summary of the key messages on co-design covered as part of the session. (A second post will summarise the day and some of the questions from the students).  Continue reading…

Design in the wild: PDC’10 Presentation


 

I’ve finally uploaded my presentation (with annotations) from last years Participatory Design Conference held in Sydney. The presentation (and paper) explores how social technologies both enable and demand new participatory approaches to designing with our future communities, which pushes design out of the studio and ‘into the wild’. A preprint of the paper is also available.


Dissolving Boundaries – OZCHI 2009 Paper

designshapes

The discipline of design is in a constant state of change. As noted in the previous post one of the most significant trends currently impacting on design practice is the opening up of the design process. Design is moving out from the studio and into the wild, taking place where people live [1].  Users are being re-cast as co-designers, co-creators and co-developers. Trends such as ‘open design’, ‘crowdsourcing’, designing for design in use, post-release iterations and ‘emergent design’ provide new ways for people to participate in the design process,  and challenge some of our traditional models of design.

Continue reading…



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