Centre For Research Development - University of Brighton
Research News - Edition 11 2005
DETM: The future of design education
Lawrence Zeegen (School of Arts and Communication) recently attended
Design Education: Tradition and Modernity (DETM) 05, the first
international design conference of its kind, at the National Institute
of Design (NID) in Ahmedabad, India, presenting his paper It's
not the Winning: it's the Taking Part.
NID, host to DETM 2005, attracts candidates from across India
and the continent. The institute offers professional programmes
in Product Design, Furniture and Interior Design, Ceramic & Glass
Design, Textile Design, Apparel Design & Merchandising, Lifestyle
Accessory Design, Toy Design & Development, Exhibition Design,
Graphic Design, Animation Film Design, Film & Video Communications,
New Media Design, Information & Digital Design, Software & User
Interface Design and Strategic Design Management.
Design Education: Tradition and Modernity, the first international
conference of its kind in the Indian sub-continent, invited 60
speakers from around the globe to participate. The over-arching
theme for the conference encompassed aspects of design education
across the world that refiected a diverse spectrum of economic,
regional and social dynamics. Whilst many traditions in design
education continue to incorporate regional aspirations many design
educators, students and researchers are breaking regional barriers
and are crossing continents in search of new sensibilities, alternative
methodologies and collaborative opportunities, the 'global village'
has become a reality due to technological developments in recent
years.
Dr. Darlie O Koshy, Executive Director for NID, in his opening
remarks stated that 'the 21st century has been ushered in with
a refreshing change in the world economic order. The Asian economies,
after years of sluggish growth and diffidence, are now riding
on a new wave of impressive economic performances and growth ambitions.'
He went on to reinforce this message 'Asia is emerging as the
new manufacturing hub of the world and China is euphemistically
called the 'factory to the world'. Asian economies are slowly
but surely growing out of their domestic mindset and are rapidly
integrating with a globalising world'. Design education must continue
to adapt to global changes, Koshey went on to call for 'a fresh
approach, shaking out the old - like the tails of lizards by themselves,
with an open mind towards new academic structures, curricula,
integration of design and technology and adoption of new teaching
and learning pedagogy and methodologies'.
The three-day event saw academics representing institutes from
countries across the globe. Speakers came from countries that
included Australia, Brazil, Bulgaria, Botswana, China, Germany,
Hong Kong, Hungary, Italy, The Netherlands, New Zealand, Portugal,
Singapore, South Africa, South Korea, United Arab Emirates, United
Kingdom and USA.
Zeegen presented his paper on the first day of the conference
focussing on issues faced by today's design educators. The opening
statement of Zeegen's paper reflected the broader topic he proceeded
to cover 'Design education can't win. Or so it seems. Sat between
a rock and hard place, the best courses in design education seek
to create forward-thinking, motivated and talented designers with
a thirst for knowledge, enquiring minds and ecologically and socially
responsible attitudes' he stated. 'On the outside, looking in,
the design industry rarely acknowledges or demands such positive
attributes from graduates entering the work place, preferring
to seek the short term fixes of strong computing skills, current
design practice awareness and the ability to work hard for long
hours for little pay without question' he added.
Zeegen's paper proceeded to discuss the issues facing design educators
from education itself 'Matters may be no better from within:
many educational institutions often placing more value on issues
such as admission and retention rates, external accreditation
and health and safety monitoring than providing a conducive learning
environment' he stated. The paper continued - 'too many courses
in design have been trapped in a stranglehold of conformity, trapped
by assessment regulations and inflexible modular structures, trapped
by systems that work against and hinder rather than encourage
and support the flow of creativity. Breaking boundaries, challenging
rules and attempting new, untried and untested methods can move
knowledge and understanding of the discipline forward; taking
risks is integral to successful design education. And that is
risk-taking by staff as well as students'.
DETM 05 received national interest in India, reported upon by
national television news channels and newspapers. The Times of
India noted that the conference had attracted over '300 design
practitioners and educationists from around the world'. Koshy's
hopes for modern design education creating 'Global' designers
had moved a little closer by the close of the conference.


