DESIGN THINKING — A BUZZWORD OR THE HOLY GRAIL OF DESIGN?

DS 93: Proceedings of the 20th International Conference on Engineering and Product Design Education (E&PDE 2018), Dyson School of Engineering, Imperial College, London. 6th - 7th September 2018

Year: 2018
Editor: Erik Bohemia, Ahmed Kovacevic, Lyndon Buck, Peter Childs, Stephen Green, Ashley Hall, Aran Dasan
Author: Hillner, Matthias
Series: E&PDE
Institution: LASALLE College of the Arts, Singapore, Royal College of Art, London
Section: Design and Engineering Education Practices
Page(s): 62-67
ISBN: 978-1-912254-02-6

Abstract

Design Thinking constitutes a concept that appears to reflect the zeitgeist of current design education. At the same time, recent interpretations of ideas surrounding design thinking raise most fundamental questions about the validity of traditional design-disciplinary practices. Large proportions of relevant writings are anchored in business management studies rather than in design. So how wide a circle should we draw around design thinking? And where exactly may we expect to find the centre of this circle? Design? Business? This paper draws on four different definitions of design thinking as articulated by Richard Buchanan at the Design Management Institute conference in London in 2014: an imaginative act, a cognitive decision-making process, a spirit, a discipline. In pursuit of a more in-depth understanding of Buchanan’s design thinking concepts, a series of interviews conducted with designer-entrepreneurs at InnovationRCA, a London-based design business incubator, reveals particular attributes which all interviewees seemed to share: an enterprising spirit and a deep-seated ambition to foster radical innovation. Might this connect with the spirit that Buchanan was alluding to? Are the design thinkers of the future, the designer-entrepreneurs who we see emerge at present? If so, can this spirit be taught and nurtured through academic provisions? In the book ‘Design Thinking for the Greater Good’, Jeanne Liedtka et al. claim that design thinking is human-centred, ‘possibility-driven’ [1]. So, what are the possibilities of innovating design education to nurture design thinking as a spirit and to develop this process into a discipline? And what are the challenges?

Keywords: Entrepreneurialism, collaboration, T-shaped, designerly thinking, d.School, innovation, start-ups, interdisciplinary, design business

Download

Please sign in to your account

This site uses cookies and other tracking technologies to assist with navigation and your ability to provide feedback, analyse your use of our products and services, assist with our promotional and marketing efforts, and provide content from third parties. Privacy Policy.