Carousel: A study on collaboration within a small international design community of practice and its impact on delivering 'one week' exchange experiences
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2017Metadata
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Stoltenberg E, Firth R, Taks: Carousel: A study on collaboration within a small international design community of practice and its impact on delivering 'one week' exchange experiences. In: Berg A, Bohemia E, Buck L, Gulden T, Kovacevic A, Pavel N. Proceedings of E&PDE 2017 - International Conference on Engineering and Product Design Education. Building Community: Design Education for a Sustainable Future, 2017. The Design Society p. 266-271Abstract
To prepare students for their future careers in a globalizing society,
several
large-scale
higher
education student and staff exchange programmes
focus
on
international collaboration. The
organisation and duration of such programmes can
often
be a barrier
for
students and staff hoping
to
engage
in global educational
opportunities.
This
case study of Carousel, a recurring one-week
exchange workshop, explores the potential and benefits
of this shorter, international collaboration
programme
as compared to the
longer-term
Erasmus programme. The study shows that small-scale, repeated cooperation between a
limited
number
of partner
institutes can
have
a large impact on
international and cross-cultural awareness and professional
competence
for both students and staff.
Short communication lines between
teaching staff
from each
Carousel partner makes the organisation
of visits and workshops flexible, easy, and fully adaptable to the educational needs of students.
As a
result, students become much more internationally engaged
and
are introduced to different design
cultures and methodologies.
In some cases,
participation in a
Carousel workshop has led to a
subsequent
longer period of
institutional
exchange. Carousel also offers an opportunity
for academic
staff
to
collaborate
in the workshop
with
their
students and host
an
academic team and to
experience
different approaches toward design practice and educational delivery
. Due to the informal character of
Carousel, working re
lations between staff
have tended to be of
a much more personal
nature. This
had
lead, in some cases,
to a collaborative ‘ongoing’ research culture between participating academic staff
and has generated
new teaching and learning methodologies.