posted on 2008-05-01, 12:11authored byBill Nicholl, Ros McLellan
Design and technology (D&T) educators have pointed to a
‘crisis’ in creativity within the subject. Creative cognition literature
suggests lack of creativity in design work is at least partly the
result of ‘fixation’ (difficulty in generating novel ideas due to
imagination being ‘structured’ by pre-existing knowledge). This
paper applies these ideas in the context of current practice in
D&T to shed light on how students generate design ideas and
how a particular teaching approach, product analysis, influences
these processes. Data are reported from the six schools
involved in the preliminary phase of a Gatsby-funded ongoing
research and intervention project1. A number of methods
including interviews with D&T teachers (N=14) and focus
groups of students (N=126), lesson observations (N=10) and
an analysis of documents and student work were utilised to
address the question: ‘How does the use of product analysis
contribute to fixation in secondary school students’ design
work?’ Product analysis was found to be frequently used by
teachers at different points in design and make projects,
particularly during initial research work prior to the generation of
design ideas and as a starting point for the generation of ideas
during an idea generation lesson. Example of these different
uses of product analysis are outlined, however the impact each
has on students’ generation of design ideas was similar: current
practice leads to fixation as thinking is constrained down a
particular path. Implications for practice are noted.
History
School
Design
Research Unit
D&T Association Conference Series
Citation
NICHOLL, B. and MCLELLAN, R., 2007. The contribution of product analysis to fixation in students’ design and technology work. IN: Norman, E.W.L. and Spendlove, D. (eds.). The Design and Technology Association International Research Conference 2007, University of Wolverhampton, Telford Campus, 4,5,6 July. Wellesbourne : The Design and Technology Association, pp. 71-76.