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1. #29539 Making the Strange Familiar: A Pedagogical Exploration of Visual Thinking Scholarly conversation within the field of professional communication increasingly has focused on the practice, research, and pedagogy of visual rhetoric. Yet, visual thinking has received relatively little attention within the field. If our programs produce students who can think verbally but not visually, they risk producing writers who are visual technicians but are unable to move fluidly between and within modes of communication. This article examines the literature and pedagogical practices of visually oriented disciplines to identify strategies for helping students develop the ambidexterity of thought needed for the communication tasks of today's workplace. Brumberger, Eva R. Journal of Business and Technical Communication (2007). Articles>Education>Graphic Design>Visual Rhetoric 2. #22494 Up goes that hand and out pops that dreaded can-opener of a question: 'Why aren't we learning programming in this class?' A litany of responses begins to unfold in my now Prozac-pleading brain: Because it's not graphic design; because it's too specialized; because graphic designers won't be doing it or shouldn't be doing it because they'll end up as hacks if they do it and the profession will go to hell; or because it's another program - maybe even a department-unto itself. I'm feeling queasy. It used to be so simple, so clear: We knew what graphic design was and what it wasn't. Sandhaus, Louise. AIGA (2004). Articles>Education>Graphic Design 3. #21833 How do you educate graphic designers in today's complex world? Teach them sociology, psychology, business - and yes, some composition and color theory. McCarron, Carolyn. Adobe Magazine (2000). Articles>Education>Graphic Design 4. #21297 Teaching Information Architecture to the Design Student What the design student needs is a design course that stresses usability, human factors, and clarity, instead of the typical branding and interpretation problems they usually encounter in their other design classes. James Spahr recounts a year of teaching at Pratt Institute that attempts to cross those boundaries. Spahr, James. Boxes and Arrows (2002). Articles>Education>Human Computer Interaction>Graphic Design
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