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Designing a new design PhD?

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Published
Publication date09/2014
Host publicationThe 19th DMI International Design Management Research Conference
Pages3063-3079
Number of pages17
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Abstract

The higher education sector in the UK is currently undergoing rapid change, and design education is no exception. Higher fee levels, limited grants and self-funding PhD study is becoming more common. Furthermore, there is increased demand for non-traditional modes of study such as part-time provision and flexible learning – especially relevant to designer-practitioners. A greater number of mature students are also entering higher education, many of whom will have significant industry experience. But the design student dynamic isn’t the only change we are seeing – the remit of design academics is changing too. There is now an increased emphasis on the economic and social benefits that academia can contribute, and the ‘impact agenda’ requires research councils (and therefore academic researchers) to show that their work has a wider societal impact in order to sustain funding. Furthermore, design is an ever expanding and changing interdiscipline, and so the make up and shape of the Design PhD is frequently in question. But what do all these changes mean for doctoral design education? Is the traditional PhD model still fit for purpose, or are we changing this beyond recognition to accommodate design? Do we need a new Design PhD? In this paper, we examine approaches in both mainstream design research training (adaptations of the traditional model) and more novel PhD programmes, which could form the grounding for curriculum design experts to further question and develop the notion of the new Design PhD.