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Toolkit for awareness in universal design

Olander, Elin LU ; Christoforidou, Despina LU and Sperling, Lena LU (2005) Include 2005 3th International Conference on Inclusive Design
Abstract
In an attempt to make universal design an integral part of industrial design in general, an

experiment was implemented early during the industrial design education. The aim of the

experiment was to increase the awareness of the students regarding the fact that products

may at the same time be attractive and well-functioning for a broad range of users. Five

categories of everyday products were included in the experiment, objects in each category

covering the range from stylish or sporty to products designed especially for disabled

persons. Twenty-five students took part in the experiment in five groups. They tried the

objects in true use situations and were asked to, in... (More)
In an attempt to make universal design an integral part of industrial design in general, an

experiment was implemented early during the industrial design education. The aim of the

experiment was to increase the awareness of the students regarding the fact that products

may at the same time be attractive and well-functioning for a broad range of users. Five

categories of everyday products were included in the experiment, objects in each category

covering the range from stylish or sporty to products designed especially for disabled

persons. Twenty-five students took part in the experiment in five groups. They tried the

objects in true use situations and were asked to, in consensus, evaluate and comment on

three mainly emotional and three mainly functional qualities. After testing, they analysed,

presented and reflected around their results. Finally they were asked to group all objects in

any kind of families. The presentations by the students demonstrated that very lively

discussions had taken place about product qualities. The evaluation method provided rich

information about young persons’ experiences of qualities in products. At the final grouping

of products, the students chose to present objects as being related to different target users.

One interesting finding was that the product family aiming at a very average user included an

angled kitchen knife, product of a kind previously regarded a typical aid for disabled. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
published
subject
keywords
industrial design., design education, Universal design, inclusive design
conference name
Include 2005 3th International Conference on Inclusive Design
conference dates
0001-01-02
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
fc938142-ab9b-4038-81d0-21fd000ef95b (old id 759918)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 13:45:46
date last changed
2018-11-21 21:16:08
@misc{fc938142-ab9b-4038-81d0-21fd000ef95b,
  abstract     = {{In an attempt to make universal design an integral part of industrial design in general, an<br/><br>
experiment was implemented early during the industrial design education. The aim of the<br/><br>
experiment was to increase the awareness of the students regarding the fact that products<br/><br>
may at the same time be attractive and well-functioning for a broad range of users. Five<br/><br>
categories of everyday products were included in the experiment, objects in each category<br/><br>
covering the range from stylish or sporty to products designed especially for disabled<br/><br>
persons. Twenty-five students took part in the experiment in five groups. They tried the<br/><br>
objects in true use situations and were asked to, in consensus, evaluate and comment on<br/><br>
three mainly emotional and three mainly functional qualities. After testing, they analysed,<br/><br>
presented and reflected around their results. Finally they were asked to group all objects in<br/><br>
any kind of families. The presentations by the students demonstrated that very lively<br/><br>
discussions had taken place about product qualities. The evaluation method provided rich<br/><br>
information about young persons’ experiences of qualities in products. At the final grouping<br/><br>
of products, the students chose to present objects as being related to different target users.<br/><br>
One interesting finding was that the product family aiming at a very average user included an<br/><br>
angled kitchen knife, product of a kind previously regarded a typical aid for disabled.}},
  author       = {{Olander, Elin and Christoforidou, Despina and Sperling, Lena}},
  keywords     = {{industrial design.; design education; Universal design; inclusive design}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  title        = {{Toolkit for awareness in universal design}},
  year         = {{2005}},
}