Signature pedagogies: exploring how industrial designers acquire their professional culture and identity
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instname:Universidad de Bogotá Jorge Tadeo Lozano
reponame:Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad de Bogotá Jorge Tadeo Lozano
Autor
Téllez Bohorquez, Fabio Andrés
Institución
Resumen
This paper explores the conditions in which Industrial
Design (ID) students acquire the identity and culture
associated with their profession. For this purpose, the
author uses—as a framework—the concept of signature
pedagogies in order to identify those conditions and
explore how these mold the identity of future industrial
designers.
Shulman (2005) defines signature pedagogies as
the particular forms of teaching and learning that
preserve and transmit the culture of a profession. These
pedagogies are used to instruct future practitioners in
how to think, perform, and act with integrity according
to the canons of their profession, and are defined by
three structures: surface structure—the observable
actions of teaching, deep structure—assumptions about
how to best transfer knowledge and skills, and implicit
structure—beliefs, attitudes, values, and dispositions
held by faculty.
In this paper, these structures are used to describe
and analyze ID education, aiming to explain identity
development in their future practitioners.
The paper concludes that the interplay between these
structures are partially responsible for molding the
identity of the future industrial designers, but raises
questions about how rigid or fluid this identity is to
tackle the challenges of an uncertain and ever-changing
world.