General
Elective course, prerequisite courses INDUSTRIAL DESIGN (DESIGN) I and II.
Course content
Creative and comprehensive theory and practice of planning collective objects or of commercial feasibility compositions.
Programme aims
Search, analyze and compose data and information using necessary technologies. Teamwork with promotion of creative and interdisciplinary thinking aiming at the integrated (overall) practice in industrial design of commercial feasibility.
Learning Outcomes: Knowledge and Understanding
TEACHING METHOD
Teaching areas and workshops. Use of ICT in teaching, laboratory training, communication with students
TEACHING ORGANIZATION
Activity-Semester workload
Lectures 25
Writing a job 25
Study Preparation 25
Total Course 75
EVALUATION STUDENTS
Multiple choice test (written test and study preparation)
Evaluation criteria: Universal assimilation of theory and know-how
and excellent development of scientific reference in the areas of principles and methods of integrated industrial design (design).
The criteria are accessible through the website of the course.
Bibliography
Argan, G. C., & Oliva, A. B. (2002). L’arte moderna 1770-1970—L’arte oltre il Duemila (Nuova ed). Sansoni.
Ashby, M. F., & Johnson, K. (2014). Materials and design: The art and science of material selection in product design (3rd edition). Butterworth-Heinemann.
Chapman, J. (Eds.). (2017). Routledge handbook of sustainable product design. Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
Flusser, V. (1999). The shape of things: A philosophy of design. Reaktion.
Giudice, F., La Rosa, G., & Risitano, A. (2006). Product design for the environment: A life cycle approach. CRC/Taylor & Francis.
Hellström, D., & Olsson, A. (Eds.). (2017). Managing packaging design for sustainable development: A compass for strategic directions. John Wiley & Sons.
Kolko, J. (2014). Well-designed: How to use empathy to create products people love. Harvard Business Review Press.
Lawson, B. (2010). How designers think: The design process demystified (Reprint). Elsevier Architectural Press.
Margolin, V., & Buchanan, R. (1995). The idea of design. MIT Press.
Norman, D. A. (2005). Emotional design: Why we love (or hate) everyday things (Paperback ed., [repr). Basic Books.
Norman, D. A. (2013). The design of everyday things (Revised and expanded edition). Basic Books.
Parsons, T. (2009). Thinking, objects: Contemporary approaches to product design. AVA Academia.
Seitz, T. (2020). Design Thinking and the New Spirit of Capitalism: Sociological reflections on innovation culture. Palgrave Pivot.
Ulrich, K. T., Eppinger, S. D., & Yang, M. C. (2020). Product design and development (Seventh edition). McGraw-Hill Education.
Vogel, C. M., Cagan, J., & Boatwright, P. (2005). The design of things to come: How ordinary people create extraordinary products. Wharton School Pub.