Fuel4Design http://www.fuel4design.org Future Education and Litteracy for Designers Sun, 12 Nov 2023 18:18:50 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.1 http://www.fuel4design.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/cropped-F4D-favicon-1-32x32.png Fuel4Design http://www.fuel4design.org 32 32 Design Futures Literacies: 2 free e-books published http://www.fuel4design.org/index.php/2023/11/12/design-futures-literacies-2-free-e-books-published/ http://www.fuel4design.org/index.php/2023/11/12/design-futures-literacies-2-free-e-books-published/#respond Sun, 12 Nov 2023 10:27:38 +0000 http://www.fuel4design.org/?p=4937 Design Futures Literacies in 2 volumes

We are pleased to announce the publication of two new e-books on DESIGN FUTURES LITERACIES as final outcomes from the FUEL4DESIGN project.

The publications draw on a diversity of views, experience, practices and commitments that have led to the development of resources, experiences and reflections on placing futures perspectives and anticipatory designing and pedagogies within design education.

The covers of the 2 ebooks about Design Futures Literacies

 

To download the digital books and promotional material

The two free PDF e-books are available on the Design Futures Manual page.

A flier on the books can be downloaded here.

 

On the books

DESIGN FUTURES LITERACIES: PRACTICES & PROSPECTS (VOL. 1) positions our funded collaborative project within discourses and practices of design education. It shifts it towards futures in design education and builds upon pedagogies and research on futures of design education. Detailed overviews are given of work carried out under five work packages mediated through the project website. Our anticipatory design pedagogies and related literacies are summarised and positioned in regard to articulating possible and illustrative transformative teaching and learning, less definitive and normative frames. Examples are provided from novel work carried out by project partners, students and participants. These are more than merely illustrative. They point to actual accessible resources that are online and suggest some of the ways design futures literacies might be approached in interplays between futures and design.

 

This work is placed within wider transdisciplinary relational design inquiry in the second book DESIGN FUTURES LITERACIES: ESSAYS & REFLECTIONS (VOL. 2). Here a weave of eight extended essays provides elaboration on pedagogies and practice, making, learning and reflection presented in Volume 1. Through a mix of presentational modes, the essays enact a situated, relational and collaborative design rhetoric that articulates dynamics in working with futures and design as learning and compositional materials. In so doing, futures and literacies are positioned as plural, situated and located within emergent acts and processes of becoming geared towards supporting wider creative-critical knowing connected to 21st design literacies. Such acts and processes are located within learning and teaching through anticipatory designing. They draw together creative, critical imaginaries in shaping shared futures by design in working towards alternative presents and actionable futures.

 

Intended audiences

Drawing together a range of innovation, experimentation and critical reflection, these publications will also be of interest to graduate students Design and related educators and researchers. They offer frank and contextualised material on working to make pragmatic yet critical sense of the complex challenges of developing preparatory curricula and situated content for building 21st century competencies and fluencies within and beyond Design. These books will be of interest to design students, educators and researchers together with those working in related practice and with policy. The publications also cover matters of wider communication of design’s roles in shaping shared sustainable futures and thereby offer pragmatic and analytical resources for educators, researchers, administrators and strategists beyond Design.

 

Contributions to design, learning and futures

Our work in Design Futures Literacies points to difficult, complex and entangled engagement with learning and teaching to take care ahead of time. It encompasses creative, ethical articulations of working with challenges of uncertainty and change. Systemically, these are matters that matter immensely for higher education and how Design universities may contribute influence and impact for wider societal transformation in which ecology and businesses, making and consumption, resource uses and the pursuit of wider global equity may be realised. We hope that the publications bring novel connections between Futures Studies and Design pedagogies and research and indicate some of the ways in which design may engage productively and critically with shaping shared futures.

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Exploring Weak Signals to Design and Prototype for Emergent Futures http://www.fuel4design.org/index.php/2021/04/30/exploring-weak-signals-to-design-and-prototype-for-emergent-futures/ http://www.fuel4design.org/index.php/2021/04/30/exploring-weak-signals-to-design-and-prototype-for-emergent-futures/#respond Fri, 30 Apr 2021 09:12:38 +0000 http://www.fuel4design.org/?p=4289 While technology and design have progressed greatly, they have also produced imbalances that affect the way we live and work. Additionally, they have also contributed to the use of the planet’s resources to fill our homes with unnecessary devices and objects. We must de-objectify and de-colonise the way we design technologies to make for more inclusive and diverse futures. One way to do that is to recognise our shortcomings and experiment with them in a way that is productive and promotes a more peaceful coexistence among living systems.

Design for emergent futures

Design can give us the power to shape the environment and the imagination to create a desired future reality (Dunne and Raby 2013; Schultz 2015; Blythe 2014). However, one of the challenges for designers today is how to embrace non-linear strategies in a world of complexity and chaos. Designing emergent futures means de-objectifying and de-colonising design to focus on designing interventions in the present from a 1st person perspective (Tomico, Winthagen, and Heist 2012) and to create new narratives about possible, desirable futures that we cannot anticipate – but which we can intimately play with and learn from (Søndergaard and Koefoed 2018).

In order to exemplify this approach, we present and analyze a series of projects developed over the course of the Master’s in Design for Emergent Futures (Diez and Tomico 2020). Through the lens of critical and speculative design and technological exploration, students expand the focus of their interests and acquire the skills to turn protests into prototypes (Malpass 2019) and ideas into actions, and by harnessing the potential of digital fabrication, artificial intelligence, synthetic biology and blockchain, students are able scale up the impact of their actions to address systemic challenges of our current socio-economic paradigms (Hand et al. 2010). The program’s focus is on the design of personal interventions in the real world (Desjardins and Wakkary 2016) in the form of products, platforms and other deployments based on present weak signals in order to explore new emergent futures.

 

Cover pages of the pictorial “Exploring Weak Signals to Design and Prototype for Emergent Futures”, by Tomas Diez, Oscar Tomico and Mariana Quintero. https://doi.org/10.46467/TdD36.2020.70-89 

 

The paper attached explores the concept and practice of identifying these shortcomings via the “Atlas of Weak Signals.” The Atlas is a tool for combatting future challenges by actively creating opportunities for design interventions to dissolve the troubling problems of our times. In order to support this claim, we present and analyze a series of projects developed over the course of a master’s program. Specific emphasis is placed on how the Atlas of Weak Signals was generated between students and faculty as a methodology to better understand the view of the world in which we live today from the one in which we design from. The projects are mapped in relation to emerging trends in both local and global contexts and the interconnections between these trends as generators of design opportunities. To conclude, it presents the lessons we learned in the form of a toolkit so other design practitioners, researchers, teachers and students can generate their own methods and tools.

This paper was part of the special issue of Temes de Disseny #36, Design Futures Now: Literacies and Making. The issue presents the challenge of framing design’s role in futures making through a series of contemporary scientific works. Design Futures is a discipline with its own literacies and making methodologies, and aims to address the world’s complexity and phenomena by delivering options and opportunities for alternative presents.

You can explore the full issue following this link.

 

 

Cover of Temes de Disseny #36, Design Futures Now: Literacies and Making. Guest Editors: Andrew Morrison and Laura Clèries. http://tdd.elisava.net

 


 

Blythe, Mark. 2014. “Research through Design Fiction: narrative in real and imaginary abstracts.” In CHI 14: Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, 703-712. New York: ACM. https://doi.org/10.1145/2556288.2557098 

Desjardins, Audrey, and Ron Wakkary. 2016. “Living In A Prototype: a Reconfigured Space.” In Proceedings of the 2016 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, 5274-5285. New York: ACM. https://doi.org/10.1145/2858036.2858261 

Diez, Tomas, and Oscar Tomico. 2020. “The Master in Design for emergent futures.” IAAC. https://iaac.net/educational-programmes/masters-programmes/master-in-design-for-emergent-futures-mdef/. 

Dunne, Anthony, and Fiona Raby. 2013. Speculative Everything: Design, Fiction, and Social Dreaming. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press. 

Hand, Chris, Anab Jain, Tessy Britton, Graham Burnett, Darryl Chen, Christopher Collett, Sanjiv Sharma, Charlie Tims, and Liam Young. 2010. “The Power of 8: Encouraging Collaborative DIY Futures”. In Proceedings of the 6th Swiss Design Network Conference: Negotiating Futures – Design Fiction, 194-205. Basel: Swiss Design Network.  

Malpass, Matthew. 2019. Critical Design in Context: History, Theory, and Practices. London: Bloomsbury Academic. 

Schultz, Wendy L. 2015. “A Brief History of Futures.” World Futures Review 7(4): 324–331. https://doi.org/10.1177/1946756715627646 

Søndergaard, Marie Louise Juul, and Lone Koefoed Hansen. 2018. “Intimate Futures: Staying with the Trouble of Digital Personal Assistants through Design Fiction”. In DIS ’18: Proceedings of the Designing Interactive Systems Conference, 869–880. New York: ACM. https://doi.org/10.1145/3196709.3196766 

Tomico, Oscar, Vera Winthagen and Marcel van Heist2012. Designing for, with or within: 1st, 2nd and 3rd person points of view on designing for systems.” In NordiCHI ’12: Proceedings of the 7th Nordic Conference on Human-Computer Interaction, 180–188. New York: ACM. 

  


 

Text by Oscar Tomico, Tomas Diez and Mariana Quintero.

Full article available at: https://doi.org/10.46467/TdD36.2020.70-89

 

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PHD FUTURES THINKATON | PROCESS AND STRUCTURE http://www.fuel4design.org/index.php/2021/04/23/futures-thinkaton-process-and-structure/ http://www.fuel4design.org/index.php/2021/04/23/futures-thinkaton-process-and-structure/#respond Fri, 23 Apr 2021 00:24:20 +0000 http://www.fuel4design.org/?p=4272

Workshop Process & Structure

All groups were instructed to go through the same process. However, we used different tools for each group to test them and their effectiveness on the outcome of each group.  The final purpose was to observe, evaluate and reflect upon how the teams will respond to the same goal using different tools or methods. Some of the tools and methods were common for all groups. These tools were new tools to be introduced by the project that needed wider testing to support their development. The workshop was phased into 8 phases; each corresponds with a phase of the design futures elements identified through the research project intellectual outputs

Workshop Structure

The first phase of the workshop process was the Horizon Scanning or blue-sky research. Participants were asked to discuss the topic in detail and to research about the issues and challenges discussed in the keynote speech. The aim of this phase is to give a chance for the team dig deeper in the research topic and to formulate a common understanding about the focus points they would like to develop in the project. At the end of this phase the teams have gathered weak signals and macro-trends around the area of focus they have selected. Following the Horizon scanning is the second phase of the workshop which was the Framing Signals; at which each group has systematically identified and reorganized the insights and macro trends they have gathered in order to tackle the focus issue of the project. The aim of this phase to interpret and segment the gathered concepts and ideas and to eliminate the irrelevant ones. Tools used in this was the PESTLE Analysis, CIPHER Analysis, VERGE and Futures Wheel.

Horizon Scanning from the working sessions

Framing Signals from the working sessions (CIPHER Canvas)

The third part of the workshop was the Futures Philosophical Pills. In this stage, each group have reflected upon their findings by using pre-selected philosophical concepts that are meant to disrupt future discussion upon their focus issue in order to trigger new dimensions and to challenge the teams for further exploration in the futures plurality and challenges that might affect their focal issue. The concepts selected were Post-Anthropocene, Animism, Decolonisation, Border Politics/Displacement. After this, participants were asked to reorganise their findings after reflecting upon the philosophical pills. This phase was introduced and presented by Dr. Betti Marenko the principal investigator of the Philosophical Pills and one of the guest speakers in this workshop.

Philosophical Pills Canvas from the working sessions

Following the Philosophical Pills, participants were asked to go through the fourth phase of Design Interventions. This phase capitalises on the design practice. It does acknowledge design action as the main driver and tool which engages in materialising futures.

The purpose of this phase is to encourage participants to design futures through first person perspective by creating alternative present as a method to engage oneself in futures discussions. This element was presented and explained by Dr. Oscar Tomico who was one of the guest lecturers to this workshop.

Design Interventions Canvas from the working sessions

Following the Design intervention, participants were asked to go through Consequences Mapping The aim of this activity was to project on the focal issue they identified in the design interventions and discuss what could be the implications that the focal issue might cause or affect in the future. Consequences Mapping exercises helped the participants to create different scenarios focusing on several paths.

Mapping Consequences Canvas from the working sessions ( 4 Archetypes Canvas)

Following the Mapping Consequences is developing Scenarios. At this stage, participants were asked to put the insights gathered from the previous stages into one scenario. The scenarios were created according to criteria that were developed due the course of the project research. The criteria were: Immediacy, Provocation, Sensoriality, Consistency, Coherence. Participants were asked to follow these criteria in developing their scenario.

Scenarios Canvas from the working sessions

Following Scenarios, we asked participants to develop Future Personas. A persona that should be situated within the scenario of the future. The participants used different types of tools and canvases to create the persona, the methods were: A Day in a Life, Futures Persona, Story World and Palmistry.

Future Persona Canvas from the working sessions ( A day in a Life)

The last activity during the workshop was the Provot-typing. Provo-typing is a word that mixes between the word prototype and the word provoke. In other words, it means a provocative prototype. We asked the participants to create a prototype with the aim to open up a discussion about the future through designing an artifact, story or a video. All groups were asked to select one type of provo-typing methods that suits their projects, the types suggested were storyboard, provo-typing, future filming and future-telling.

Provotyping Canvas from the working sessions (Future Telling)

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PHD FUTURES THINKATON | OUTCOME AND DISCUSSION http://www.fuel4design.org/index.php/2021/04/23/phd-futures-thinkaton-outcome-and-discussion/ http://www.fuel4design.org/index.php/2021/04/23/phd-futures-thinkaton-outcome-and-discussion/#respond Fri, 23 Apr 2021 00:10:46 +0000 http://www.fuel4design.org/?p=4278

Workshop Outcome & Discussion

Each group of the four groups presented a concept at the end of the presentation. Two groups presented storyboards and digitally developed prototypes for their concepts and one group presented a rough physical prototype besides creating a design fiction video. The fourth group has created a digital prototype and supported it by a role play over a video presentation.

PROVO-TYPING Outcome from working sessions 

PROVO-TYPING Outcome from working sessions 

Participants were engaged to try out the different tools and methods presented. They were excited to discuss their findings within their group’s private sessions. Participants were also engaged in the debates initiated in the general sessions by the guest speakers. The topic presented was a quite challenging project, allowing participants to delve into new realms of discussions about the future of humanity and its relationship with technology. It succeeded in inaugurating discussions about the critical perspectives and inquiries in design futures. The tools presented were meant to work as a catalyst in this process of discourse around future issues, they played the role of triggering actions, activating debates, and disturbing discussions around the focal issues. Tools -for instance the philosophical pills- added new dimensions to the debate which, in turn, widened the participants’ understanding of topical issues in design futures such as Animism and Post-Anthropocene. The fact that these tools were designed to disrupt the process with either early action or an action that encourages critical view of the future has nurtured how the groups are looking at their focal issue from plural and deep perspectives.

Some tools needed higher intellectual interpretation than others, for example the VERGE analysis versus the PESTLE analysis. Some participants had difficulties in responding to the difficult concepts in the VERGE analysis in a compact workshop; while the straightforward terminology in the PESTLE analysis led to a smoother brainstorming session which might indicate that we need to highlight the differences in the required time for conducting particular tools. In general, participants response to tools with direct or understandable call of action was higher than tools that need extra understanding and knowledge beforehand (for example: CIPHER and Future Filming). Participants tended to use the tools they better relate to and understand.

In regard to workshop structure and organization, participants were quite satisfied by the fact that the workshop was structured beforehand, saving time to organize their thoughts and brainstorming sessions was beneficial for the smoothness of the process.

The guest lecturer talks have played a big role in expanding the understanding of particular tools and methods as well as opening up new debates within the teams. They furthered the knowledge of the participants about futures design in general and futures literacy in particular. On the other hand, in some of the phases, the participants felt that they could have had explicit and detailed instructions on how to apply particular tool and to be able to conduct it efficiently.

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PHD FUTURES THINKATON | A DIGITALLY-BOOSTED PHD WORKSHOP http://www.fuel4design.org/index.php/2021/04/21/phd-futures-thinkaton-a-digitally-boosted-phd-workshop/ http://www.fuel4design.org/index.php/2021/04/21/phd-futures-thinkaton-a-digitally-boosted-phd-workshop/#respond Wed, 21 Apr 2021 07:23:10 +0000 http://www.fuel4design.org/?p=4228

By fall 2020, we (PoliMi team) have managed to organize and moderate the PhD Futures Thinakton C2 Event.

1.Introduction

Due to COVID-19 emergency, the Thinkaton was conducted digitally using platforms specially made for teams working remotely which are “Microsoft Teams” and “Miro: An Online Visual Collaboration Platform for Teamwork”. The platforms, canvases and tools used during the presentation were prepared beforehand to make sure participants would have a smooth process and organised structure for the workshop; this helped participants to save time usually spent in organising digital working spaces.

The Design Futures Thinkaton was an intensive three days’ workshop for PhD candidates. The event was meant to be a training event to introduce futures literacy methods to PhD researchers and to apply such futures literacy methods and content in the PhD research practice. Besides testing and validating the use of the “Futures Design” toolkit during its development phase. We also tested the integration of other Intellectual outputs such as the Philosophical Pills, Design Interventions and some essentials from the Lexicon during the workshop.

2.Participants

Participants of the workshop were 19 PhD researchers from each of the partner institutions: Politecnico di Milano, Oslo School of Architecture and Design, University of the Arts London and Barcelona School of Design Engineering  ELISAVA.

Their research interests and backgrounds varied from industrial design, interior design and communication design. Participants were contacted beforehand with the pre-preparation material in order to familiarize themselves with the project and activities of the workshop. Some articles from the FUEL 4Design “Futures Lexicon” have been shared with them as a background material to build upon in the workshop.

Participants have been grouped into 4 groups, each facilitated by one of the research project members. All of the participants worked on the same topic but each one focused on a precise point of view.

3.Organization and structure

The workshop was meant to be a training event. So, we introduced some sessions and discussions in-between the group working sessions in order to further develop the understanding of the participants about the design futures.

The main topic of discussion for the workshop was presented by Prof. Derrick de Kerckhove on the topic of “Digital Twin”. Prof. de Kerchove triggered the discussion about the relation between the digital twin and design. He raised inquiries about the implications of digital twin in the future context such as How do we make this new and complex technology easy to use, secure and useful? And How do we model the behaviour of this twin?

The purpose of introducing a topic for discussion was to trigger the critical discussion about future issues and to inaugurate the debate between the team members.

The workshop was an intensive three days’ workshop from 10:00 to 17:00. Each day had its agenda allowing participants to have some time to work together in private sessions as well as having some time slots for discussions with all the participants giving reflection and feedback about the used tools and methods. Other slots were dedicated to guest speakers as well as extra lectures on particular activities. The last day was organised to leave the participants with sometime time to develop their projects and to present the output at the end of the day. Participants were asked to meet and discuss in Microsoft teams while collaborating within Miro Board.

4.Tools and Canvases Layout

Canvases were designed to allow participants to brainstorm freely by including a design space which is a blank a space for each team to gather ideas, visual material and design before adding them to the canvas as a final output.

Each phase had its own canvases that are used to systematically allow participants to organize their thoughts and to capitalize on the diagramming capabilities of the canvases. The canvases were made in the form of templates that the participants fill out with brainstorming and discussion results. The Miro board that the groups used was pre-designed. Each group had their own space for each day where they can work within its borders. We have also dedicated a space for reflection and feedback. Another space was designed for extra resources and material; where facilitators share documents, papers and presentations to help the team in their brainstorming and to boost their knowledge with extra material. These spaces were shared with all the participants.

We also included some aiding material to support the participants in the brainstorming sessions an on taking decisions throughout the workshop.

Full Miro Board Structure

Aiding Material

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Reflections on remote practice by Pras Gunasekera http://www.fuel4design.org/index.php/2021/02/06/reflections-on-remote-practice-by-pras-gunasekera/ http://www.fuel4design.org/index.php/2021/02/06/reflections-on-remote-practice-by-pras-gunasekera/#respond Sat, 06 Feb 2021 17:30:00 +0000 http://www.fuel4design.org/?p=3877

It’s nearing the end of February 2020. We (the UAL Team) have facilitated our first workshop with postgraduate students from the UAL community in early February (see Silke Lange’s blog post “Hacking Futures – Futures Hacking: reflection on co-created futures”) which gave us the opportunity to test out the first iteration of four of the final 40 Future Philosophical Pills, which at that time were initial draft containers for information (see Fig 1). Through a process of collaboration and co-creation with our postgraduate student cohort, we realised that we had to crystallise aspects of content and design a system to engage with it in order to make the Philosophical Pills, well, digestible.

Fig 1. Initial ‘containers’ for the Future Philosophical Pills. 7 February 2020 © James Bryant, 2020.

As we closed the Hacking Futures – Futures Hacking workshop in February, the students were vocal in their interest in supporting the development of the Future Philosophical Pills through another workshop. Not only would this provide a timeframe with which we could develop the Philosophical Pills, but also another opportunity for students across the UAL campuses to come together to co-produce, facilitating cross-cultural communication and connection as a community of practice in order to think, make and learn (Eyler 2018).  We eagerly set a date for a follow up workshop.

It’s early March 2020. Through design development and iteration, we created print-and-play card decks for the Philosophical Pills, containing nine clusters (each cluster containing four Philosophical pills) along with ten groups of Prompts ranging from side effects to ingredients that could be drawn upon to activate the Pills. We have refined our materials and I can feel the energy building as we prepare to come together again as a team and facilitate another workshop when something from the pluriverse arrives…

The emergence of Covid-19 has started to take effect globally and countries within Europe are starting to close their borders in a bid to slow transmission. I am based in Berlin and it became clear that I would not be able to be physically present in the workshop and that we were going to test out supporting from a remote perspective. This is not to say that this form of working was totally new to us: I had been working remotely or at distance since the project started and our wheels were somewhat greased. We work well as a team, utilising different platforms such as SharePoint for project organisation or WhatsApp to communicate with each other as and when these are needed but this was different. A precursor to what was to become the ‘new normal’, this was a remote facilitation pilot.

Fig 2. Blended facilitation. 6 March 2020 © James Bryant, 2020.

I began to realise what now seems commonplace – collaborating in a remote context requires a different, repurposed set of skills. The ingredients that facilitate facilitation like body language, the natural flow of conversation (or knowing when to contribute so that it doesn’t feel like an interjection) and the subtle cues that you pick up from one another by being in the same physical space are removed, reduced to a 15-inch digital frame through which you have to push (sometimes strain) your charisma through in order to keep the connection (not talking bandwidth here), energy and group ‘moving’. This was a new experience for me with which to reflect, learn, iterate and apply.

Fig 3. Blended facilitation. 6 March 2020 © James Bryant, 2020.

The pandemic presented a pivot point for us in relation to the Future Philosophical Pills, for our planned event Speculative Space and raised key questions as to how we approach collaboration, teaching and learning, design practice and…being human.

John Heskett (2002, p. 6-7) argues that the history of design can be seen as a process of layering:

… in which new developments are added over time to what already exists. This layer, moreover, is not just a process of accumulation or aggregation, but a dynamic interaction in which each new innovative stage changes the role, significance, and function of what survives.

The pandemic may not have presented a new development, more so a point of transition or a portal between one world and the next (Roy, 2020), with which we were propelled to rethink and innovate on what we had achieved so far. Perhaps, without the pandemic, the next Pills iteration would have been to reconfigure the content into an online interactive tool. Due to the pandemic this became an imperative next step.

We began to focus our efforts on iterating our materials and developing the ‘journeys’ that could unfold when utilising the Pills and Prompts in order to feed into the development of an ‘beta’ interactive tool.

It’s October 2020. The materials we have co-created for the Future Philosophical Pills have been made available on the Fuel4Design site. Most importantly, Speculative Space will happen as an online experience. Thus, we have created an initial iteration of the Future Philosophical Pills as an online interactive tool. Thinking back to the first pilot of remote facilitation in March and all the subsequent teaching and learning I have facilitated online, I prepare myself for the upcoming event – our team running through the ‘participant journeys’ on the multiple platforms we would be utilising for the day.

Fig 4. Speculative Space, Miro board. 6 October 2020.

Speculative Space provided a key opportunity for us to gain insights as to how our partners and critical friends within design and pedagogy engaged with the tools and importantly, in an online facilitated environment across multiple platforms. Insights that would not only help in fine tuning ways to engage with the Pills but also our approaches to online facilitation.

Looking back over the past year, developing the Future Philosophical Pills during a global pandemic has not only encouraged us to explore and design tools to facilitate philosophy in action but also, as educators through practice-led teaching, to innovate what we do and how we do it to meet the demands and challenges of this very specific situation.

Fig 5. Speculative Space on MS Teams, Europe. 6 October 2020.

References:

Eyler, J. (2018). How humans learn: The science and stories behind effective college teaching. Morgantown: West Virginia University Press.

Heskett, J. (2002). Toothpicks and logos: Design in everyday life. New York: Oxford University Press.

Roy, A. (2020). ‘The pandemic is a portal’, The Financial Times. 3 April. Available at: https://www.ft.com/content/10d8f5e8-74eb-11ea-95fe-fcd274e920ca (Accessed: 24 January 2021).

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Collective Design Spaces http://www.fuel4design.org/index.php/2021/02/02/collective-design-spaces/ http://www.fuel4design.org/index.php/2021/02/02/collective-design-spaces/#respond Tue, 02 Feb 2021 09:10:05 +0000 http://www.fuel4design.org/?p=3812

The first term of the Design Studio of the Master’s Degree in Design for Emergent Futures (MDEF) aims to create a solid ground for the students to start developing their design projects. Weekly activities are set to interlink results from the courses like their mappings, cartographies, experiments, 1st person design activities, prototypes, with their personal development plan.

The Design Studio activities consist of presentations, group activities, short exercises, and personal coaching that led to propose an area of intervention at the end of the trimester.

On November 16, 2020, the Collaborative Documentation and Swarm Intelligence session was held. The activity revolved around building a collective framework to document explorations using the existing digital platforms and building a physical map of resources for the design studio. The goal was to explore and develop forms of aggregative documentation and building collective intelligence resources.

The result was a collaborative map of projects, resources, news, etc in the form of a design space that populates the students physical working space and that can support the sharing of relevant information.

A design space is a physical collection of experiments, reference objects, products, or materials that support the development of a design intervention as an action research exercise.

In detail, the students were asked to frame their prototypes and experiments in relation to their area of interest provided in the Atlas of Weak Signals (for more information about the AWS, refer to the article published in Temes de Disseny) and make these relations between students visible.

In order to do so, each student brought:

  • 3 objects/products that represent the issues they were enquiring in a tangible way
  • 3 kinds of materials that express some of the qualities of these issues
  • 3 reference projects or initiatives that are working around those issues (pictures, blueprints, etc)
  • 2 reference technologies/methodologies that are being used to investigate/attend to that problem
  • 2 possible contexts in Barcelona which they would be interested to place an intervention
  • 2 experiments that allow them to prototype their intervention.

All these materials were rearranged every time a student tried to make sense of the design space (always trying to keep the related materials next to each other). Lines of different colours visualise the personal relations between elements serving as a personal framing and at the same time as an invitation to collaborate.

The presented session was realised within the Master’s Degree in Design for Emergent Futures (MDEF), organised by the Institute for Advanced Architecture of Catalonia and Elisava Barcelona School of Design and Engineering, in collaboration with the Fab Academy.

For more information about the Master’s Degree in Design for Emergent Futures (MDEF), visit: https://www.elisava.net/en/masters-postgraduates/master-design-emergent-futures


Text by Oscar Tomico and Guim Espelt
Photos by Oscar Tomico

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Hacking Futures – Futures Hacking: reflections on co-created futures by Silke Lange http://www.fuel4design.org/index.php/2021/01/22/hacking-futures-futures-hacking-reflections-on-co-created-futures-by-silke-lange/ http://www.fuel4design.org/index.php/2021/01/22/hacking-futures-futures-hacking-reflections-on-co-created-futures-by-silke-lange/#comments Fri, 22 Jan 2021 15:09:34 +0000 http://www.fuel4design.org/?p=3798

At the beginning of February 2020, we, the UAL team: Betti Marenko, Pras Gunasekera, and I, facilitated a workshop with Masters students from across UAL. Earlier in the year, we had sent out a call to our postgraduate student community, reaching out to various disciplines, with the aim of creating a transdisciplinary learning environment, in which practices of exchange and interaction could inform our ongoing research for Fuel4Design. Following a positive response to the call, we selected a group of 22 students from subjects including: material futures, art and science, innovation management, and applied imagination. Hacking Futures – Futures Hacking was ready to go!

The collaboration with students has been a priority for us in this project. Developing, testing and implementing new approaches and resources without students’ input would simply have been wrong. After all, we were aiming to equip both learners and educators with innovative and adaptable tools to imagine, perform and enact a plurality of futures by design. This process had to be led by co-creation.

The relevance of co-creation in higher education is not a new concept, and has previously been highlighted by Chemi and Krogh ‘for a future that needs to strengthen human relationships and practices of sharing, the ability (or disposition) of creating a shared value in spite of differences is strategically fundamental’ (2017, p. x). In a world in which diverse cultures, disciplines and generations have to come together to meet challenges we don’t yet know of or understand, collaboration and co-creation is crucial. Teaching and learning methods that served the age of industrialisation are no longer relevant and need to be replaced with approaches that recognise the value of positionality, empathy and multiple perspectives. The Philosophical Pills to be tested in the workshop were precisely facilitating such an approach: affording a lens through which students could take a renewed look at their design practice. Pills such as Speculation, Counterfactuals, Heterotopias, Divination provided different ways of thinking about the future.

Hacking Futures – Futures Hacking created a space for philosophy in action, with the architecture of the workshop space inviting students to engage in a number of activities. These included a silent brainstorm exploring questions such as: How do you imagine futures through your practice? What do you see? What concerns do you have? What issues? and ‘Futures’ collage building – think in images not words (Fig. 1). We engaged in collective sense-making and individual reflection. Instead of reproducing knowledge, students were encouraged to co-produce knowledge – the pills are an accelerating tool for such processes – encouraging knowledge exchange and knowledge co-production.

Figure 1: Futures’ collage building – think in images, not words. © James Bryant, 2020

We were using pre-designed templates to guide the process and encouraged students to populate a Padlet wall (Fig.2) to create a virtual exhibition of their findings and key stages in their development process. The workshop was full of energy, intelligence and creativity – all of which fed into the approach and tool we were testing.

Figure 2: Padlet wall displaying virtual exhibition of process and students’ findings.

During the evaluation of the workshop, students expressed their appreciation of having been able to participate. They very much valued the approach we had taken – for students, the workshop has been a new approach to teaching design, not only the tools we are developing as part of Fuel4Design. According to students, Hacking Futures – Futures Hacking provided a learning environment in which they were enabled to: share concerns, feel nurtured, enriched and empowered, develop collective understanding, connect their values, no longer think and make in isolation, find a common language, and create a community.

I am writing these reflections almost one year later, in January 2021. Shortly after Hacking Futures – Futures Hacking, COVID-19 began to spread across the globe, interrupting the way in which humans interact. Workshops, like the one described above, in which the physical proximity between the participants contributed to building trust and created the sense of community students were yearning for, transitioned online. Face-to-face, in-person meetings of any kind were postponed until further notice, and traveling between countries was restricted to essential purposes only. Unexpectedly, the very future of the Fuel4Design project itself had to be reconsidered. We had to turn the imposition into an opportunity, embrace the challenge and learn how to collaborate and co-create whilst socially distancing.

References

Chemi, T. and Krogh, L. (2017) ed. Co-Creation in Higher Education: Students and Educators Preparing Creatively and Collaboratively to the Challenge of the Future, Aalborg University, Aalborg, Denmark, Sense Publishers, Rotterdam.

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Crafting a Speculative Space in a Pandemic by Betti Marenko http://www.fuel4design.org/index.php/2021/01/22/crafting-a-speculative-space-in-a-pandemic-by-betti-marenko/ http://www.fuel4design.org/index.php/2021/01/22/crafting-a-speculative-space-in-a-pandemic-by-betti-marenko/#respond Fri, 22 Jan 2021 15:01:52 +0000 http://www.fuel4design.org/?p=3783

As the PI of the Future Philosophical Pills I found myself in the unexpected and slightly paradoxical situation of being right in the middle of a project about future speculation, the unknown and landscapes of uncertainty when the project  was derailed by the onset of the current pandemic. Suddenly, the very instrument (the Future Philosophical Pills) that we were developing at UAL with the purpose of amplifying the range of potential futures that can be imagined, anticipated and speculated upon, hit, quite literally a wall. With Covid-19 brutally rewriting our present, the notion of future we were handling in our intellectual output had to be re-assessed.

It’s March 2020. The UAL team is due to host Speculative Space, a three-day training event for a large international group of design educators at the Design Museum in London. A key purpose of this event is to present the Future Philosophical Pills and introduce them to our colleagues with a series of hands-on training sessions. The idea is to live-test the deck of cards we have created in the previous months (through a series of iterative workshops with our postgraduate students – see Silke Lange’s blog post “Hacking Futures – Futures Hacking: reflection on co-created futures”). The cards offer a way to interrogate and craft potential futures, using an inquiry into chance (the random draw of the card) as an opportunity to build meaningful, unexpected and open-ended trajectories of knowledge production around futures. We have designed print-and-play card prototypes and assembled a number of hard copies of the decks for immediate play. We are ready.

Figure 1. Preparing the cards for Speculative Space: Betti at Central Saint Martins, 5 March 2020 (photo by Jerneja Rebernak)

The pandemic forces us to put our future-crafting strategies on hold.

Our Speculative Space event is cancelled. Indefinitely postponed. All our energies and resources (both institutional and individual) are diverted to emergency remote teaching. The entire world enters suspended animation. The lesson cannot be more ruthless. No, the future cannot be predicted. Yes, future-proofing is an oxymoron.

There is a certain irony (which doesn’t escape us) in an endeavour like the Future Philosophical Pills being disrupted by an unanticipated global event. A twist of fate perhaps. What matters, though, is that it both humbled and spurred us in renewing our work around futures. If it is true that how we think about the future cannot protect us from the pure contingency of its manifestations, what it can do is to amplify the range of intellectual, imaginative, anticipatory, pragmatic means at our disposal to craft appropriate, enriching, and most of all nimble responses.

Figure 2. Students workshop Central Saint Martins, 6 March 2020 (photo by James Bryant)

Like everyone hit by the pandemic, our team had to adapt, rethink and reorganize. Deadlines were being pushed forward to accommodate sudden and unrelenting demands on our time and resources, both professional and personal.

As an educator involved in teaching large international cohorts of product design students at Central Saint Martins, I quickly realised the huge difference between emergency remote teaching and the complexity of the demands of remote learning, remote collaboration, and remote community building. Writing this reflection in January 2021, if there is one thing that the past ten months have made abundantly clear it is that teaching and learning online is not and cannot be simply a matter of uploading the same content only to a different medium/platform. We are dealing with an entirely different landscape that requires rethinking methods, fine tuning our modus operandi, conventions around temporalities and scale, even the rationale behind the initiatives we are hosting, and certainly the modes of engagement we put forward and expect from the participants (students, learners, peers).

When Speculative Space finally happened in October 2020 not only was the world a rather different place; our shared expectations of what an academic gathering with a focus on building a pedagogical experience had also morphed to adjust to the new normal. What is more, the palpable lack of control evidenced by the pandemic had the effect of unhinging those notions of the future as a somewhat ‘chartable’ landscape. Suddenly one of the key drives of our project – how to use uncertainty as a material to work with, and deploy the unknown as an opportunity to create meaning – became a goal (or at least a buzzword) shared world-wide. Thus, Speculative Space shifted from being the intellectually on-trend title of an academic future-oriented event; it became the emblematic qualifier of a new present. What emerged was the realisation that a radical rethinking of pedagogical instruments, epistemological methods, and ontological underpinnings of the ‘future’ itself was needed.

Speculative Space was hosted as an entirely remote event over two days in October 2020. This meant drastic adjustments to the planned structure, content and format. Our team used a combination of digital platforms to deliver it: MS Teams (with different channels for each working group), Miro boards (for collaborative workshop activities) and Simmer (hosting a prototype of the interactive Future Philosophical Pills). In fact, the whole event may be described as a prototype of sort, as none of us had ever hosted, produced and implemented a multiplatform event of this kind. Undeniably, there were technical challenges and the learning curve was steep. Still, the event managed to mobilize the content we had planned, and engage participants in working their way through the deck of cards, debating the intersection of futures with some of the key concepts proposed by the cards, and furnishing us with feedback for iteration.

Figure 3. Speculative Space on MS Teams, Europe, 6 October 2020

Since then, between October 2020 and January 2021, I have hosted several more Future Philosophical Pills workshops in a wide range of contexts, and scale: embedded as tailored course material for Product and Industrial Design undergraduate students; as part of the Politecnico di Milano-hosted Thinkathon for doctoral students; as brainstorming/speed-dating activity to kickstart the collaborative Hybrid Futures Hackathon part of the Digital Innovation Season at Central Saint Martins; as prompting/reflective tool for the postgraduate and PhD students at Tokyo Institute of Technology enrolled in my course Hybrid Futures: Designing for Uncertainty, Designing for the Post-Anthropocene. In particular, within the highly transdisciplinary context offered by Tokyo Institute of Technology the Future Philosophical Pills participate to the ongoing research around hybrid methodologies, across art and design and science and technology, bringing together practical philosophy, the critique of technology and ‘future-crafting’[1].

The salient characteristic of this approach concerns working at the hinge of the speculative and the pragmatic to develop intellectual interrogations that can scaffold tangible design-led interventions, which in turn are able to feed back onto speculation. It is important to stress this point: the speculative and the pragmatic are not opposed to each other. Pragmatic doesn’t mean practical as opposed to speculative or theoretical. Here I draw on what philosopher Brian Massumi calls speculative pragmatism[2]: how we stay open to invention and future making (speculative) while staying close to what is happening, the how, the method (pragmatism). The ‘how’ is crucial. It means that philosophy in action is in the business of activating ideas through prototyping techniques that engage with what does not exist yet; that turn uncertainty into modes of knowing; that use uncertainty as an opportunity to create meaning. This is an approach that is not afraid to embrace the unknown, and that boldly asks us to generate multiple routes of “figuring out”. It is precisely this capacity that has been thrown into stark relief in the course of this project in 2020. Not only did it turn Speculative Space into a (unexpected) meta-project. It made us alert, more than ever, to the fact that our instruments of knowledge-production are not just reflecting the contingency of the world, they are that very contingency.

[1] Betti Marenko (2020) Future-Crafting: The Non-humanity of Planetary Computation, or How to Live with Digital Uncertainty. In Susanne Witzgall et al. (eds) Hybrid Ecologies. University of Chicago Press / Diaphanes, pp. 216-227

[2] Brian Massumi (2011) Semblance and event. Activist philosophy and the occurrent arts. Cambridge MA and London: MIT Press

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Collaborative Futures Making – Malmö http://www.fuel4design.org/index.php/2020/12/01/collaborative-futures-making-malmo/ http://www.fuel4design.org/index.php/2020/12/01/collaborative-futures-making-malmo/#respond Tue, 01 Dec 2020 20:18:18 +0000 http://www.fuel4design.org/?p=3767

Visual note making as an active and shared act of shaping meaning together used across the event. Photo Andrew Morrison.

Shaping futures together is a shared interest between Malmö University and AHO and our respective design related research sections. In mid November 2019 I gave one of four plenary invited talks at a workshop in Malmö entitled Imagining Collaborative Future-Making. The event was a partnership between Malmö University’s research platforms Collaborative Future-Making and Medea

I chose to present and to connect a number of future making projects, including design, teaching and research, I’ve been a part of at AHO, including the newly launched FUEL4DESIGN. I gave the talk the title ‘Design & Anticipation’.

In the latter part of the talk I presented some draft material from a book I’m writing called A Poetics of Anticipation. This book currently includes an inventory of 450 design futures words that I have been gathering over the past five years and which underpin some of the build of the DESIGN FUTURES LEXICON in FUEL4DESIGN.

Morrison. A. (in progress). A Poetics of Anticipation. Extract from draft manuscript.

Morrison. A. (in progress). A Poetics of Anticipation. Extract from draft manuscript.

I also showed some of the recent classroom activity carried out with my project colleague Nina Bjønstad at AHO in a master’s course called TECHNOFORM on 3-dimensional form shaping. We’d run a workshop trailing aspects of the LEXICON as part of collaborative futures designing with multimodal literacies at the core. We sought out making connections between working with abstract terms and design futures terms in 3D form making. Read more about the workshop here.

‘Futures’ and ‘Literacies, part of a set of futures terms taken up as prompts to 3d clay modelling, TECHNOFORM Master’s course, Institute of Design, AHO, November 2019. Photo Andrew Morrison. 

Read the journal article in Temes di Disseny here and our lexicon blog post on the special issue here.

Prof Dagny Steudahl (OsloMet) pointing to the composition visual note making image summarising some of the events shared future making. Photo Andrew Morrison.

Reference:
Morrison A. (2019). ‘Anticipation and design’. Invited guest speaker. Imagining Collaborative Future-Making. Workshop: Malmö University: Malmö. 12-13 November. 09:00-16:00.

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