Productive Brainstorming
PREWORK LEADS TO GREAT BRAINSTORMING
PREWORK LEADS TO GREAT BRAINSTORMING
Research
Precedents
"help students get specific"
"help students get inspired"
Often aspirational prior work by:
playful furniture precedents
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ENCOURAGE WILD IDEAS
Wild ideas can often give rise to creative leaps
SUSPEND JUDGEMENT
Being judgmental stifles creativity
GO FOR QUANTITY
Aim for as many new ideas as possible
BUILD ON IDEAS
Build and expand on the ideas of others
BE VISUAL
Sketching ideas can help develop and clarify them
NUVU BRAINSTORMING TENETS
THINK-PAIR-SHARE BRAINSTORMING
General Template:
Considerations:
THINK-PAIR-SHARE BRAINSTORMING
BUILDING BLOCK BRAINSTORMING
General Template:
BUILDING BLOCK BRAINSTORMING
BUILDING BLOCK EXAMPLE
BUILDING BLOCK BRAINSTORMING
"In this studio, students will consider the landscape of play within the context of furniture design.
Each student group will design a furniture piece that facilitates a playful experience between a child and an adult care-taker."
Studio Prompt
BUILDING BLOCK BRAINSTORMING
Research Activities:
Studio "Play" Research
BUILDING BLOCK BRAINSTORMING
Selected Precedents
BUILDING BLOCK BRAINSTORMING
Brainstorming Context
BUILDING BLOCK BRAINSTORMING
Brainstorming - Part 1: List Generation
BUILDING BLOCK BRAINSTORMING
Brainstorming - Part 2: Mix and Match to Build a Project Concept
x 5 per team!
THE TEACHER'S ROLE
Pre-Brainstorming
THE TEACHER'S ROLE
During Brainstorming
THE TEACHER'S ROLE
After Brainstorming
UH OH - WE HAD A BAD BRAINSTORM?
POSSIBLE SOLUTIONS
Boring project ideas?
Students "inventing" existing things?
Everyone wants to do the same thing?
Ignoring project constraints?
CONCEPTUAL THINKING
WORKSHOP EXAMPLE
CONCEPTUAL THINKING WORKSHOP EXAMPLE
WHAT WE ARE MAKING
WHY WE ARE MAKING IT
Conceptual thinking exercises that involve understanding and organizing complex ideas and relationships.
To step back from a challenge to see the bigger picture, to make connections, and identify patterns, leading to innovative solutions.
EXERCISE 1
IDENTIFY AN UNDERLYING CONCEPT THAT THE OBJECTS ON EACH PAGE SHARE.
Identify the difference between
CONCRETE and ABSTRACT concepts.
CONCEPTUAL THINKING
Identify the underlying concept
Identify the underlying concept
Identify the underlying concept
EXERCISE 2
CONCEPTUAL PICTIONARY
CONCEPTUAL THINKING
DRAW A CUP
1st
DRAW SOMETHING THAT HOLDS LIQUID
2nd
DRAW SOMETHING THAT SHINES
(LITERALLY OR METAPHORICALLY)
3rd
DRAW SOMETHING THAT MOVES LIVING THINGS FROM POINT A TO B
4th
DRAW SOMETHING THAT MAKES A BEAUTIFUL NOISE
5th
THE TEACHER'S ROLE
Pre-Exercise
Concrete
Abstract
"Draw a cup"
"Draw something that holds liquid"
"Draw something that shines"
"Draw something that moves living things from point A to B"
"Draw something that makes a beautiful noise"
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THE TEACHER'S ROLE
Post-Exercise
REFLECTION