JiscMail Logo
Email discussion lists for the UK Education and Research communities

Help for PHD-DESIGN Archives


PHD-DESIGN Archives

PHD-DESIGN Archives


PHD-DESIGN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK


View:

Message:

[

First

|

Previous

|

Next

|

Last

]

By Topic:

[

First

|

Previous

|

Next

|

Last

]

By Author:

[

First

|

Previous

|

Next

|

Last

]

Font:

Proportional Font

LISTSERV Archives

LISTSERV Archives

PHD-DESIGN Home

PHD-DESIGN Home

PHD-DESIGN  October 2011

PHD-DESIGN October 2011

Options

Subscribe or Unsubscribe

Subscribe or Unsubscribe

Log In

Log In

Get Password

Get Password

Subject:

Re: Making the Shift to Research-Based Practice

From:

"Derek B. Miller" <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

PhD-Design - This list is for discussion of PhD studies and related research in Design <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Sun, 9 Oct 2011 09:23:39 +0200

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (331 lines)

Very helpful, ken. Thank you. Explains many if the tensions we feel in working with design PhDs programmes and students today.

Also very helpful for me personally because of our current work on evidence-based programming for field operations. They too are moving off a practice-based approach to a research supported one. 

This nexus between knowledge and action will be an extensor rich point for continued development across the board.

- Quick note from Derek's iPod

On Oct 9, 2011, at 4:52, Ken Friedman <[log in to unmask]> wrote:

> Dear Colleagues,
> 
> This book review (published in 2003 in Design Research News) tells part
> 
> of the story of how medical school made the shift from pure practice
> to
> research-based practice and more recently to evidence-based practice.
> 
> There are lessons here for design schools.
> 
> Best regards,
> 
> Ken Friedman
> 
> -
> 
> Bonner, Thomas Neville. 2002. Iconoclast. Abraham Flexner and a Life in
> Learning. Baltimore, Maryland: The Johns Hopkins University Press.
> 
> In the first half of the twentieth century, Abraham Flexner had an
> unparalleled position as an expert on higher education. Even today, he
> remains a major influence on the world’s great universities, joining
> Kant and Humboldt of Germany, Turgot of France, or Newman of England in
> defining a vision of the great research university and shaping the
> institutional traditions that realize the vision.
> 
> Flexner also had a unique role in shaping research-based professional
> education at the graduate level. Flexner’s (1910) report on medical
> education was a landmark document that remains relevant for any field
> that educates practitioners in research-based professions. This role
> makes Flexner and his work particularly important to the design research
> community.
> 
> Thomas Neville Bonner’s Iconoclast places Flexner’s ideas and
> achievements in perspective, looking back from today’s world to a life
> centered on education and ideas. Abraham Flexner’s role in the
> development of today’s universities and professional schools makes
> this an intellectual history as well, written by a distinguished retired
> professor who dealt directly with these kinds of issues during a career
> in which he served as president of three universities.
> 
> Bonner (2002: ix) writes that Flexner raised questions about
> university-level professional education that remain relevant today.
> About college education, Flexner asked “Is it the place to get a
> broadly liberal education or does it represent an unnecessary
> postponement of serious study?” about the university, he asked “Is
> it a uniquely democratic opening of higher education or an undigested
> potpourri of academic and vocational units? How is professional study,
> especially for doctors, best structured to produce a scientifically
> trained and practical yet humane practitioner? What institutional
> arrangements stimulate the most rapid advances in research?”
> 
> Flexner’s answers to these questions are relevant to university-level
> design education and particularly significant for doctoral education in
> design.
> 
> The past five years have seen two conferences on doctoral education in
> design. The first took place in Columbus, Ohio (Buchanan, Doordan,
> Justice, and Margolin 1999), the second in La Clusaz, France (Durling
> and Friedman 2000) and a third is about to be held in Japan. There have
> been spirited on-line debates (DRS 2000, PhD-Design 2000-2003), working
> parties (Frayling. 1997; UKCGE 2001), special journal issues (Durling
> and Friedman 2002), reports (UCISOD 2002), and an increasing gray
> literature of unpublished studies.
> 
> Doctoral education in design brings multiple challenges to schools
> offering – or planning to offer –the doctorate. The vast majority of
> such programs are less than a decade old. Most are far younger.
> 
> The design field faces many problems in doctoral education. The largest
> of these is the need to build a robust structure for doctorates in a
> field that has no tradition of graduate research training.
> 
> This is compounded by a unique problem. Many schools that now offer a
> Ph.D. in design lack an experienced staff of senior faculty and
> supervisors. In many cases, faculty members responsible for doctoral
> education have not themselves earned a doctorate, and they have little
> or no personal experience with the kinds of graduate level research
> training for which they are assuming responsibility. The result is
> predictable, and it is most visible in the contrast between two kinds of
> doctoral programs, those at universities with a rich tradition of
> research education and universities new to the field.
> 
> Universities with a rich array of outstanding doctoral programs in
> multiple research fields and long experience in doctoral education are
> building staff carefully for doctoral education in design and moving
> into the field slowly. 
> 
> In contrast, some new universities and independent art and design
> schools are expanding into doctoral programs without sufficient trained
> research staff to cover the growing number of research students.
> 
> At one extreme, top ranked research universities run small doctoral
> programs. These universities view doctoral education as a necessary
> expense that mature schools absorb within a larger research mission.
> These schools are heavily overstaffed in relation to the number of
> doctoral students they accept. While the staffing ratio will shift as
> programs grow, it necessarily begins far too high as these schools build
> experience and a repertoire of programs for the future. These programs
> also use the full range of university resources, drawing on teachers,
> courses, and advisors from other fields and encouraging students to do
> so on an individual basis. Many schools also draw on visiting professors
> and advisory boards that are integrated into the work of the school and
> its programs. This is what some call the “go slow to go fast” model.
> Building solid programs will allow these schools to expand effectively
> in the years to come.
> 
> At the other end of the scale, we see a fair number of schools taking
> on a large number of candidates for poorly defined programs in which one
> or two supervisors handle a more-than-full load of research students.
> One teacher in a “practice-based” doctoral program boasts of
> supervising fourteen doctoral research candidates as though this were a
> mark of the program’s excellence (and profitability) rather than a
> declaration of poor standards and a demonstration that she has no
> comprehension of doctoral education and research training. Another
> school attempted to manage nearly fifty doctoral candidates with two
> supervisors on staff. The solution was to rent doctoral advisers from
> nearby universities, paying for five hours of thesis supervision per
> student per year for the planned three years of the degree program. Yet
> another school has signed up doctoral candidates who will live and study
> at other schools while technically being enrolled at (and partially
> supported by) a studio school that plans in this way to demonstrate that
> it can graduate successful doctoral candidates.
> 
> In some cases, the effort to hide the quality and workings of poor
> programs reaches astonishing levels. These practices are often rendered
> obscure by the differences in education law governing universities in
> differing nations or even within nations. This is visible in a growing
> number of situations and cases. One is particularly interesting.
> 
> Two common criteria the Ph.D. are a contribution to the knowledge of a
> field and proof of the ability to conduct research. This is demonstrated
> by the doctoral dissertation. For centuries, publishing a dissertation
> has contributed to knowledge public while providing proof of research
> training. Accredited research universities in Canada and the United
> States file copies of doctoral dissertations at UMI in Ann Arbor. These
> copies form a permanent public record accessible through Dissertation
> Abstracts International and UMI dissertations are available on order in
> several formats. In Europe, most departments publish the dissertation in
> book form, placing copies in key national and international libraries. 
> 
> The UK uses neither system. Instead, the candidate’s department is
> expected to archive a copy of the doctoral thesis in the university
> library. From there, it should be accessible to anyone who wishes to
> read it.
> 
> A recent attempt to locate examples of finished Ph.D. dissertations at
> several UK universities disclosed that some universities have no copies
> of their doctoral dissertations in design. One might well suspect that
> certain art and design schools do not wish the field to examine their
> Ph.D. awards too closely.
> 
> Doctoral education in design involves a field in transition. It also
> involves an explosion of doctoral awards relative to a baseline set only
> five years ago. Some degrees are awarded to outstanding candidates
> capable of independent research and well prepared to teach the next
> generation of research scholars in our field. Others are not. Since most
> of these awards are designated as a Ph.D., this is burdening the field
> with improperly credentialed doctors who are gaining research positions
> without the requisite background. 
> 
> As problematic as this is, the history of education offers several good
> models for ways to move forward. Thomas Neville Bonner’s biography of
> Abraham Flexner tells the story of one distinguished educator who
> examined – and helped to rebuild – a field that was one in an
> equally chaotic state: medical education in the United States.
> 
> From this side of the new century, it is difficult to realize just how
> bad most American medical schools were at the dawn of the last century.
> While professional education in all fields must continually be evaluated
> in the light of changing times, new technology, shifting resources, and
> growing knowledge, medical education has done reasonably well in
> producing well trained doctors to meet the demand for medical care. This
> is certainly the case in North America, where medical schools are
> located within research universities and linked to teaching hospitals.
> It was not always so.
> 
> In the first decade of the 1900s, the United States and Canada had more
> than one hundred and fifty medical schools with over twenty-five
> thousand students. These were the survivors. They remained from nearly
> five hundred medical schools that had sprung up across North America
> since the early 1800s. Many schools had vanished as quickly as they had
> emerged. By 1910, the schools that remained accounted for well over half
> the world’s medical students.
> 
> Things were not all bad. “A dozen universities offered quality
> instruction, and another twenty stood out from the rest. Still others
> were making valiant efforts to improve. But changes had not reached a
> large number of the marginal schools. These schools were typically
> housed in a single building, often in poor repair. Classrooms were bare,
> except for chairs, a table, and perhaps a blackboard. Laboratories were
> tiny or non-existent. Equipment was sparse” (Bonner 2002: 70). Those
> who have been to visit a wide range of design schools may recognize the
> sound of these facilities. The comparison also extends to teaching
> staff, where the “schools’ faculties, chiefly local doctors,
> lectured at stated hours but were otherwise not to be found.”
> 
> The question was what to do to improve the situation. Henry Pritchett,
> head of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, had the
> answer. In 1908, Pritchett, former president of Massachusetts Institute
> of Technology, hired Abraham, Flexner to study medical education in the
> United States and Canada.
> 
> Flexner had already shown himself to be a rigorous and intelligent
> thinker on the subject of education. After graduating from Johns Hopkins
> University in 1886, Flexner started an experimental school in
> Louisville, Kentucky. This was four years before John Dewey launched his
> famous laboratory school in Chicago, and this brought him the attention
> of Harvard’s president, Charles Eliot. In 1908, he wrote a
> controversial critique of American undergraduate education titled The
> American College.
> 
> Within a month of accepting his new position, Flexner was at work, and
> his surveys of – and reports on – medical education and other issues
> set a new standard for critical inquiry into professional education
> (Bonner 2002: 69-113). The survey also had practical results. Quack
> medical schools rapidly began to vanish, many as swiftly as they had
> arisen. Flexner’s report recommended that 120 of 155 medical schools
> should be closed, and most of the 120 schools he labeled as inadequate
> did, indeed, close. In one notable example, eleven of Chicago’s
> fourteen medical schools simply disappeared. 
> 
> The report also led to positive improvements as universities
> strengthened professional education for medical practice. These
> improvements had worldwide influence as the new vigor of North American
> medical training also influenced the rest of the world. Flexner himself
> went on to survey medical education in Europe, and his views were so
> influential that one British medical school dean in the 1960s credited
> Flexner with the evolution of British medical education to its modern
> state. 
> 
> In the years following the report, Flexner took on a central role in
> building medical schools, as we know them today. In a central position
> at the Rockefeller-funded General Education Board, he helped to raise
> – and spend – over 600 million dollars. While this sum was vastly
> more impressive in those days, half a billion dollars goes a long way in
> education circles even today.
> 
> In 1930, Flexner published his major book on university education in
> the United States, England, and Germany. This book once again had an
> impact that was unrivalled until 1936, when Robert Maynard Hutchins
> published The Higher Learning in America. Flexner’s (1994)
> Universities is still in print.
> 
> Later, Flexner established the Institute for Advanced Studies in
> Princeton, New Jersey, and served as its first director. In this role,
> he brought Albert Einstein from Germany to the United States.
> 
> Born in 1866, Abraham Flexner died in 1959. He lived through a
> turbulent century that began just after the American Civil War and ended
> just as the Soviet Union and the United States entered outer space. Over
> the course of nearly a century, he lived a productive life of education,
> research, writing, and public service. 
> 
> Flexner reshaped medical education from what it once was to what it
> remains today. He helped to shape a debate on undergraduate education
> that continues productively to this day. He was a leader for
> improvements in public education, and he was an early advocate of
> medical insurance for all. 
> 
> For all these reasons and more, this book is an important study in the
> evolution of professional education, higher learning, research
> education, and postdoctoral training. Given recent debates in design
> research, readers will find Bonner’s chapters on the 1910 Flexner
> report particularly useful for universities making their first steps
> into doctoral education in design.
> 
> -- Reviewed by Ken Friedman
> 
> 
> References
> 
> Bonner, Thomas Neville. 2002. Iconoclast. Abraham Flexner and a Life in
> Learning. Baltimore, Maryland: The Johns Hopkins University Press.
> 
> Buchanan, Richard, Dennis Doordan, Lorraine Justice, and Victor
> Margolin, editors. 1999. Doctoral Education in Design. Proceedings of
> the Ohio Conference. October 8-11, 1998. Pittsburgh: The School of
> Design. Carnegie Mellon University.
> 
> DRS. 2000. Archives of the DRS Discussion List. JISCMAIL. URL: 
> http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/drs.html  Accessed 2003 July 30.
> 
> Durling, David and Ken Friedman, editors. 2000. Doctoral Education in
> Design. Foundations for the Future. Proceedings of the La Clusaz
> Conference, July 8-12, 2000. Stoke-on-Trent, United Kingdom:
> Staffordshire University Press.
> 
> Durling, David and Ken Friedman, editors. 2002. Best Practices in
> Doctoral Education. Art, Design, and Communication in Higher Education,
> Vol. 1, No. 3. [Special journal issue].
> 
> Flexner, Abraham. 1910. Medical Education in the United States and
> Canada. Bulletin No. 4. New York: Carnegie Foundation for the
> Advancement of Teaching.
> 
> Flexner, Abraham. 1994 [1930]. Universities: American, English, German.
> With a new introduction by Clark Kerr. New Brunswick, New Jersey:
> Transaction Publishers.
> 
> Frayling, Christopher, editor. 1997. Report of the working party on
> practice-based doctorates in creative and performing arts, UK Council
> for Graduate Education. Lichfield, Staffordshire, UK: United Kingdom
> Council for Graduate Education.
> 
> PhD-Design. 2000-2003. Archives of the PhD-Design Discussion list.
> JISCMAIL. URL: http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/phd-design.html  Accessed
> 2003 July 30.
> 
> UCISOD. University of California Irvine School of Design Committee.
> 2002. Proposal for a School of Design at the University of California,
> Irvine. November 2002. Irvine: University of California, Irvine. URL:
> http://www.evc.uci.edu/growth/design/SoD-proposal.pdf  Accessed
> 2003 May 2.
> 
> UKCGE. United Kingdom Council for Graduate Education. 2001. Research
> Training in the Creative and Performing Arts & Design. Castle View,
> Dudley, UK [now at Lichfield, Staffordshire, UK]: United Kingdom Council
> for Graduate Education. URL: http://www.ukcge.ac.uk  Accessed 2001
> December 15.

Top of Message | Previous Page | Permalink

JiscMail Tools


RSS Feeds and Sharing


Advanced Options


Archives

April 2024
March 2024
February 2024
January 2024
December 2023
November 2023
October 2023
September 2023
August 2023
July 2023
June 2023
May 2023
April 2023
March 2023
February 2023
January 2023
December 2022
November 2022
October 2022
September 2022
August 2022
July 2022
June 2022
May 2022
April 2022
March 2022
February 2022
January 2022
December 2021
November 2021
October 2021
September 2021
August 2021
July 2021
June 2021
May 2021
April 2021
March 2021
February 2021
January 2021
December 2020
November 2020
October 2020
September 2020
August 2020
July 2020
June 2020
May 2020
April 2020
March 2020
February 2020
January 2020
December 2019
November 2019
October 2019
September 2019
August 2019
July 2019
June 2019
May 2019
April 2019
March 2019
February 2019
January 2019
December 2018
November 2018
October 2018
September 2018
August 2018
July 2018
June 2018
May 2018
April 2018
March 2018
February 2018
January 2018
December 2017
November 2017
October 2017
September 2017
August 2017
July 2017
June 2017
May 2017
April 2017
March 2017
February 2017
January 2017
December 2016
November 2016
October 2016
September 2016
August 2016
July 2016
June 2016
May 2016
April 2016
March 2016
February 2016
January 2016
December 2015
November 2015
October 2015
September 2015
August 2015
July 2015
June 2015
May 2015
April 2015
March 2015
February 2015
January 2015
December 2014
November 2014
October 2014
September 2014
August 2014
July 2014
June 2014
May 2014
April 2014
March 2014
February 2014
January 2014
December 2013
November 2013
October 2013
September 2013
August 2013
July 2013
June 2013
May 2013
April 2013
March 2013
February 2013
January 2013
December 2012
November 2012
October 2012
September 2012
August 2012
July 2012
June 2012
May 2012
April 2012
March 2012
February 2012
January 2012
December 2011
November 2011
October 2011
September 2011
August 2011
July 2011
June 2011
May 2011
April 2011
March 2011
February 2011
January 2011
December 2010
November 2010
October 2010
September 2010
August 2010
July 2010
June 2010
May 2010
April 2010
March 2010
February 2010
January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000
1999
1998


JiscMail is a Jisc service.

View our service policies at https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/policyandsecurity/ and Jisc's privacy policy at https://www.jisc.ac.uk/website/privacy-notice

For help and support help@jisc.ac.uk

Secured by F-Secure Anti-Virus CataList Email List Search Powered by the LISTSERV Email List Manager