Design Thinking

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Lecturer
Umemuro Hiroyuki  Michael Peng  Ishikawa Shunsuke  Nonomura Kenichi  Tanaka Kaoru 
Place
Mon5-6(W932)  
Credits
Lecture2  Exercise0  Experiment0
Code
67038
Syllabus updated
2014/3/26
Lecture notes updated
2014/7/28
Access Index
Semester
Spring Semester

Outline of lecture

In today窶冱 society, there are a number of problems that can be solved through the thinking way of design, or design thinking, from simple designs to large and complex social problems.
The goals of this class are to learn the fundamentals of design thinking, as well as to propose solutions to actual problems in the real world.
Students work as groups. First to learn the concept and methods of design thinking, and then to work as groups to propose solutions through actual practices, including field study, research, ideation, prototyping, and user testing.

Purpose of lecture

In today窶冱 society, there are a number of problems that can be solved through the thinking way of design, or design thinking, from simple designs to large and complex social problems.
The goals of this class are to learn the fundamentals of design thinking, as well as to propose solutions to actual problems in the real world.
Students work as groups. First to learn the concept and methods of design thinking, and then to work as groups to propose solutions through actual practices, including field study, research, ideation, prototyping, and user testing.

Plan of lecture

1. Introduction and guidance
2. Fundamentals of design thinking
3. Group formation and design brief
4. Field Studies
5. Research
6. Ideation
7. Prototyping
8. Testing
9. Refinement and further testing
10. Final Proposal

Textbook and reference

Tim Brown (2009). Change by Design. Harper Business.
Tom Kelley, David Kelley, (2013). Creative Confidence. William Collins.
Marc Stickdorn, Jakob Shneider (2011). This is Service Design Thinking. Wiley.
Gavin Ambrose, Paul Harris (2011). Design Thinking. AVA Publishing.
Thomas Lockwood (ed.) (2010). Design Thinking: Integration, Innovation, Customer Experience, and Brand Value.

Related and/or prerequisite courses

None

Evaluation

Final report: 40%, Final proposal: 40%, Class contribution: 20%

Comments from lecturer

This class will be conducted in English. Active participation in class discussion will be highly evaluated.

Supplement

https://www.facebook.com/DesignThinkingTokyoTech

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