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CREATE! University Honors Colloquium Fall 2014 Logistics Tuesday, 4-6:00 p.m. Merryman Learning Studio, 253 Moss Arts Center Instructor s Derick Maggard Liesl M. Baum Benjamin Knapp [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] Office hours by appointment via e-mail Descriptio n This course is designed to lead students through the process of creative inquiry, design, and collaboration to explore the boundaries of the arts, science, and design. Through activities and discussions students will build an understanding of the ties between multiple disciplines. To identify these ties, students will engage in activities that build participation and questioning strategies for workshops and lectures, problem finding, analogical and metaphorical thinking, and collaboration in multiple formats. The collaboration of students, faculty, and visiting artists will encourage students to explore their own interests as they are situated within the boundaries of disciplines and provide strategies to create and innovate within and among disciplines. Objectives The goals for students participating in this course are to: identify characteristics of individual disciplines that can be connected with other disciplines; identify ways in which individuals of a variety of disciplines learn and communicate; develop communication strategies with classmates and instructors that allow for connections between disciplines to be fostered; identify problems or questions within disciplines and connections to problems or questions within other disciplines; ideate to develop possible solutions or approaches to address problems or questions; identify ways to empathize with audience or recipient of solutions or approaches; coordinate knowledge and skills of team members; develop a collaboration strategy; collect resources and communicate with outside entities to collect and apply required skills and information; conduct periodic full-class review and evaluation of plans, prototypes, and information; communicate ideas and present ideas to faculty, students, and artists for review and evaluation; apply feedback from periodic reviews for product improvement; develop planning documents, proposals, and implementation plans. Final Product There are several products/deliverables for this course. In addition to smaller, weekly deliverables listed on the calendar and in-class participation, the products are a.) the prototype or production plan of a product to address a particular problem or question, b.) a video documentary of your process, and c.) a personal growth reflection portfolio documenting the process from your perspective. The prototype or plan will include an investigation and application of skills and knowledge from a variety of disciplines. The

Create! Fall2014

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CREATE!University Honors ColloquiumFall 2014

Logistics Tuesday, 4-6:00 p.m.Merryman Learning Studio, 253 Moss Arts Center

Instructors Derick MaggardLiesl M. BaumBenjamin Knapp

[email protected]@[email protected]

Office hours by appointment via e-mail

Description This course is designed to lead students through the process of creative inquiry, design, and collaboration to explore the boundaries of the arts, science, and design. Through activities and discussions students will build an understanding of the ties between multiple disciplines. To identify these ties, students will engage in activities that build participation and questioning strategies for workshops and lectures, problem finding, analogical and metaphorical thinking, and collaboration in multiple formats. The collaboration of students, faculty, and visiting artists will encourage students to explore their own interests as they are situated within the boundaries of disciplines and provide strategies to create and innovate within and among disciplines.

Objectives The goals for students participating in this course are to: identify characteristics of individual disciplines that can be connected with other disciplines; identify ways in which individuals of a variety of disciplines learn and communicate; develop communication strategies with classmates and instructors that allow for connections

between disciplines to be fostered; identify problems or questions within disciplines and connections to problems or questions within

other disciplines; ideate to develop possible solutions or approaches to address problems or questions; identify ways to empathize with audience or recipient of solutions or approaches; coordinate knowledge and skills of team members; develop a collaboration strategy; collect resources and communicate with outside entities to collect and apply required skills and

information; conduct periodic full-class review and evaluation of plans, prototypes, and information; communicate ideas and present ideas to faculty, students, and artists for review and evaluation; apply feedback from periodic reviews for product improvement; develop planning documents, proposals, and implementation plans.

Final Product

There are several products/deliverables for this course. In addition to smaller, weekly deliverables listed on the calendar and in-class participation, the products are a.) the prototype or production plan of a product to address a particular problem or question, b.) a video documentary of your process, and c.) a personal growth reflection portfolio documenting the process from your perspective. The prototype or plan will include an investigation and application of skills and knowledge from a variety of disciplines. The deliverables will come in the form of public presentation and/or exhibition, written documents, and design booklet outlining the proposed process and plans, and brief video. These will be defined more thoroughly as we move through the semester.

Grading Students will be placed in cross-disciplinary teams to combine skills from various disciplines. Teams will attend class and class activities as outlined in the course calendar and convene for development work during times outside of class, as decided by each team.

Students can expect to spend about two hours a week attending regularly scheduled class time as well as 9-12 hours outside of class engaged in course activities and assignments. Grades will be based on the following:

Class participation/attendance 15%Short-term deliverables/critiques 30%Final prototype/plan 15%Final design document 20%Final reflections/portfolio 20%

Schedule Please pay careful attention to dates, special events, and deliverables.

All classes will meet in MAC 253, unless otherwise noted.

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* Dates, assignments, and topics are subject to change at any point throughout the semester. Please be observant of these changes by attending class, reading email messages, and checking the course Scholar page regularly.

** All assignments will be posted within 24 hours of class meeting. You will be notified via scholar when the assignment is posted. Please be diligent in checking email and the Scholar site.

Date Topic Homework/notes8/26 Course introduction and overview

What is at YOUR boundary of art, science, and design?Due 9/2: Self- and Disciplinary identity presentation

9/2 Self-identity and multidisciplinary exploration: presentations

9/9 Ideation9/16 Ideation, cont.

Guest speaker: Steve Grant, head of strategy, MODEA9/23 Documentation workshop

Guest speaker: Aki Ishida, School of Architecture and Designhttp://www.vtnews.vt.edu/photo-galleries/2013/062013-icat-lantern/lantern-gallery.html

Due 9/30: prepare for pin up/critique

9/30 PIN UP #1 Note: Guests will be determined by direction of individual projects.

10/7 Reflection and idea refinement; customer discoveryGuest speaker: Mike Abbott, director of new product development, Adaptive Technologies

Due 10/14: documentation of customer discovery/market analysis

10/14 Reporting on customer discovery, market analysis, documentation

10/21 Effective PresentationsGuest speaker: Adam Soccolich, Executive co-chair, TEDX Virginia Tech

Due 10/28: prepare for pin up/critique

10/28 PIN UP #2 Note: Guests will be determined by direction of individual projects.

11/4 Critique reflection11/11 Video documentation

Guest speaker: Joan Grossman, visiting assistant professor, School of Performing Artshttp://www.icat.vt.edu/content/edge-i-have-jump-joan-grossman

11/18 Video storyboarding Due 12/2: Completed storyboard for final video

11/25 Thanksgiving Break – No Class12/2 Work time and preparation for final presentation12/9 FINAL PRESENTATION Note: Guests will be

determined by direction of individual projects.

12/16 FINAL DOCUMENTS DUE BY MIDNIGHT

Feedback Students will receive regular and consistent feedback. This feedback will be used to make continued improvements and progress toward the final product. Students are expected to consider all feedback in their efforts to complete the course assignments, make individual and team decisions, and team/whole group discussions. Failure to consider feedback from instructions and classmates will result in deductions on evaluation components of the course assessment.

Honor pledge

The Virginia Tech Honor Code will be strictly enforced for all students. All assignments and course participation shall be considered graded work, unless otherwise noted. All aspects of your coursework are covered by the Honor System. Any suspected violations of the Honor Code will be promptly reported to the Honor System.

According to the Constitution of the Virginia Tech Honor System:"The fundamental beliefs underlying and reflected in the Honor Code are:(1) that trust in a person is a positive force in making that person worthy of trust,(2) that every student has the right to live in an academic environment that is free from the injustices caused by any form of intellectual dishonesty, and

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(3) that the honesty and integrity of all members of the university community contribute to its quest for Truth."

(see http://www.honorsystem.vt.edu/)

Special needs

Reasonable accommodations are available for students who have a disability. We are happy to work with you and the SSD office to accommodate you. Students should contact:

Services for Students with Disabilities (SSD)310 Lavery Hall Mail Code (0185)Blacksburg, VA 24061(540) 231-3788 Voice(540) 231-0853 TTY(540) 231-3232 FAXE-mail: [email protected]

"Students with disabilities are responsible for self identification.... To be eligible for services, documentation of the disability from a qualified professional must be presented to SSD upon request. Academic adjustments may include, but are not limited to: priority registration, auxiliary aids, program and course adjustment, exam modifications, oral or sign language interpreters, cassette taping of text/materials, notetakers/readers, or assistive technology." Please visit the SSD website for additional information.

ManagementPolicies

Final GradeA grade of "I" will only be given for documented medical emergencies or extreme unforeseen emergencies (no exceptions).

AttendanceAttendance at all scheduled meetings is expected. Illnesses (with written verification from the health center or a doctor) and religious holidays shall be considered excused absences. Personal matters may be excused at the instructor's discretion. Any unexcused absences will be considered toward the class participation and attendance portion of the final grade.

Class WorkAll work submitted must be the work of the student and must be unique to this class (not turned in to another class for a grade), unless explicitly approved as otherwise by the instructor before the work is undertaken. There will be exceptions to this policy with some assignments.

Activities & Design ConstraintThe instructor reserves the right to abort any activities or designs that are deemed inappropriate for an educational setting (e.g., sexual or violent content). Using such material in any assignment will result in a zero (0) for that assignment. There are an infinite number of possible designs with appropriate material for a higher education setting, so this should not be an issue.

Studio and Classroom ConductYou must act in a professional and safe manner at all times, without distracting others from their work. This includes any profane language or boisterous behavior.

Mobile & Laptop DevicesMobile technologies, including laptops, tablets, cell phones, and the like, may be used in class for only class-related purposes. Please respect your fellow students and the instructor by silencing cell phones and reducing the volume on other devices before class begins and refrain from using these devices for personal use (checking email, updating status, etc.) until break or after class.