Presented at AERA'18.
Abstract: There is growing interest in reflection and the value of reflection activities in enhancing students’ metacognitive abilities. Reflection effectively connects thinking and doing, building students’ understanding both of what they know, and how to activate that knowledge in their future work. In this study, we explore the formation of students’ design identity as scaffolded by a reflection blog in a graduate human-computer interaction program. Data include 1619 posts and 2019 comments posted by 144 students across three consecutive semesters of an introductory graduate interaction design course. Our analysis demonstrates how designerly talk among students may influence understanding and performance in their future practitioner roles. Implications for professional identity formation, and the role of reflection in this process, are considered.
Forming A Design Identity in Computing Education Through Reflection and Peer Interaction
1. COLIN M. GRAY & AUSTIN L. TOOMBS
PURDUE UNIVERSITY
THROUGH REFLECTION & PEER INTERACTION
FORMING A DESIGN IDENTITY
IN COMPUTING EDUCATION
2. GROUNDING THIS WORK
• Reflection as a tool to externalize how a student is thinking
about design
(Gray, 2014; Gray & Siegel, 2013; Siegel & Stolterman, 2008)
• Reflection as a means of stimulating metacognition and
engaging learners’ agency (Allie et al., 2009; Turns et al., 2015)
• Making identity formation explicit as a goal of reflection
(Tracey & Hutchinson, 2013; Tracey, Hutchinson, & Grzebyk, 2014)
• Taking on multiple views of identity
(Gee, 2000; Tonso, 2006a; Pierrakos et al., 2009)
• Designerly talk as constitutive of identity
(Gray & Howard, 2014)
3. What topics do students discuss when commenting on
their peers’ reflections in an introductory graduate
interaction design course?
How do these comments relate to the students’
assessment of their own design ability at the conclusion
of the semester?
1
2
8. END OF SEMESTER
REFLECTION
FALL ’14: perception of design
errors students experienced or embodied
FALL ’15: reflection about students’
metamorphosis as a designer
n=55
n=31
11. FINDINGS
AFFIRMATION
“You were a great facilitator and
probably one of the hardest workers
during project 2.”
Identity elements that were already well-developed
and explicitly acknowledged
12. FINDINGS
“the design and the core are
inextricably, fundamentally connected,
if not the same thing.”
Identity elements that were formative to the
students’ practice and view of design
REINFORCEMENT OF DESIGN CONCEPTS
13. FINDINGS
COMMISERATION
“I am all for the fire under your ass.”
Positive identity elements that were produced through
challenging, yet shared experiences
14. FINDINGS
“I’m thinking if should I become a visual
designer that excels in user experience?
Or should it be the other way around?”
Identity elements that are future-oriented and
linked with the practice of design
IDENTITY PROJECTION
15. FINDINGS
REFLECTION VALUE
“I asked a question to some of the professors and
mentors on orientation day and it was, “if there’s
something a budding designer should do more of, on a
regular basis (other than sketching or reading literature),
what is it?” and one of them said “to reflect”. I didn’t
get it then, but I do now.”
Identity formation realized through reflection & metacognition