Hope you’re excited for the start of Spring Quarter! I wanted to share some important information to help you get ready for our first class session on Monday, April 1st at 1:30 PM.
The class will be meeting in room 264 of the Yang & Yamazaki Environment & Energy Building (Y2E2) — in the Science & Engineering Quad — on Monday and Wednesdat afternoons from 1:30 to 2:50 PM Pacific.
Class Sessions
These class sessions will include a combination of discussions, case study presentations, interactive team exercises, and design studio working sessions. And, as a member of our design studio, you are expected to attend all class sessions in person. So, while much of your project work will be completed outside of class time, you are expected to attend ALL class sessions in person at the scheduled class times.
If you ever cannot attend the live class session, please notify the teaching team IN ADVANCE. Then, join us online using the Zoom link in Canvas or review the recorded class session.
Design Projects
The class is organized into several small design projects — each of which will give you an opportunity to exercise and apply your design thinking skills to a design and propose a solution that promotes sustainable behaviors and practices.
Each design project will each require about 8-9 hours of work per week outside of the class sessions.
You’ll be creating and sharing proposed design ideas that:
- meet the needs that you or your team identifies
- illustrate your strategy for approaching the challenges and opportunities you uncover
- demonstrate your application of the design thinking process
- make a measurable impact on improving sustainable behaviors and practices
Login to Canvas and Join our Slack Workspace
We’ll be using Slack as the primary method for quickly messaging each other in this studio.
So, please login to Canvas (https://canvas.stanford.edu), then join our class Slack workspace by clicking the Slack link in the left toolbar in Canvas. This will get you set up to receive all the course messages and announcements in the Slack application or web interface.
Think of Slack as an open channel for sharing your questions, insights, and inspirations with the entire studio. If you have a question that you think any of the other studio members might also have, please post it to one of the open Slack channels.