A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
How to Tackle Crisis in Architectural Education? Truth or Dare
Architectural practice is influenced by all the dynamics of daily life, such as climate change, pandemics, political changes, economic issues, globalization, and social inequalities, so the roles and responsibilities of the architect have also changed. As a result, the practice and architecture discipline have been compressed into a narrow field, and it can be called a crisis. Some educators act more rationally and dynamically, taking structural and spatial initiatives to work out these crises on the spot by overcoming economic, political, or regulatory conjunctures like design-build studios. Nonetheless, in traditional studio practice, professionals produce intellectual content and projects based on architectural knowledge by addressing these issues in a more philosophical or political on paper. By comparing these two design studio modalities through literature and case studies, this paper will explore how an inclusive, socially engaged, anti-crisis design practice in architectural education can be addressed in the curriculum, how it can find an answer in design pedagogy, and how we can make it sustainable in the future of the discipline. This research will take these two avenues of approaching these crises and compile their potential contributions toward developing a responsive, resilient, and inclusive habitus-of-learning approach for architectural education.
How to Tackle Crisis in Architectural Education? Truth or Dare
Architectural practice is influenced by all the dynamics of daily life, such as climate change, pandemics, political changes, economic issues, globalization, and social inequalities, so the roles and responsibilities of the architect have also changed. As a result, the practice and architecture discipline have been compressed into a narrow field, and it can be called a crisis. Some educators act more rationally and dynamically, taking structural and spatial initiatives to work out these crises on the spot by overcoming economic, political, or regulatory conjunctures like design-build studios. Nonetheless, in traditional studio practice, professionals produce intellectual content and projects based on architectural knowledge by addressing these issues in a more philosophical or political on paper. By comparing these two design studio modalities through literature and case studies, this paper will explore how an inclusive, socially engaged, anti-crisis design practice in architectural education can be addressed in the curriculum, how it can find an answer in design pedagogy, and how we can make it sustainable in the future of the discipline. This research will take these two avenues of approaching these crises and compile their potential contributions toward developing a responsive, resilient, and inclusive habitus-of-learning approach for architectural education.
How to Tackle Crisis in Architectural Education? Truth or Dare
Springer ser. in des. and Innovation
Barosio, Michela (editor) / Vigliocco, Elena (editor) / Gomes, Santiago (editor) / Tünür, Hazal Çağlar (author) / İnalhan, Göksenin (author)
Annual Conference of the European Association for Architectural Education ; 2023 ; Turin, Italy
School of Architecture(s) - New Frontiers of Architectural Education ; Chapter: 7 ; 47-55
2024-10-11
9 pages
Article/Chapter (Book)
Electronic Resource
English
British Library Online Contents | 2000
IET Digital Library Archive | 1999
Online Contents | 2009
Joint WHO-UNICEF strategy to tackle water crisis
Online Contents | 1997