posted on 2006-03-13, 17:58authored byJ.L. Cubbitt, Tony Hodgson, Eddie Norman
Traditional approaches towards the teaching and learning of design and technology are becoming more
difficult to sustain and the need to consider alternative strategies is becoming more urgent. A number
of factors have contributed to the need to consider strategies intended to be more flexible and
accommodating :
worsening staff / student ratios;
the need to provide an increasingly wide range of technological information at the relevant point
of design development;
a belief that design students and teachers are entitled to relevant technological knowledge in a
form which is appropriate to their needs.
This paper describes the selection, development and evaluation of trial materials which aim to support
individual student learning in design and technology. The initial student groups were identified as first
year industrial design and technology undergraduates and A/AS-level design and technology students.
This target is continually widening, however, and might also include teachers who wish to develop their
own technological capability through INSET.
History
School
Design
Research Unit
IDATER Archive
Pages
27957 bytes
Citation
CUBBITT, J.L., HODGSON, A.R. and NORMAN, E.W.L., 1993. The development of a ‘flexible learning’ strategy for design and technology. IDATER 1993 Conference, Loughborough University