MDC4216 - Interaction design lab 2 - 2019

6 points, SCA Band 1, 0.125 EFTSL

Postgraduate - Unit

Refer to the specific census and withdrawal dates for the semester(s) in which this unit is offered.

Faculty

Art, Design and Architecture

Organisational Unit

Department of Design

Chief examiner(s)

Dr In Dae Hwang

Coordinator(s)

Dr In Dae Hwang

Unit guides

Offered

Caulfield

  • First semester 2019 (On-campus)

Prerequisites

MDC4215 or permission from the Course Coordinator

Co-requisites

MDC4202

Synopsis

This unit focuses on the technical and practical capabilities required by creation of Tangible Interaction Design (TID) prototypes. Students will be introduced to the interdisciplinary nature of physical computing with an emphasis on tangibility, and focus on design implementation using an integrated prototyping skill-set. Students will develop a repertoire of knowledge through the exploration of the concepts, methodology and vocabulary of physical computing enabled prototyping techniques. Skills developed in this unit will be used to support the major studio project to bring abstract concepts into the real world.

Outcomes

Upon successful completion of this unit students will be able to:

  1. Critically analyse established methods and techniques used in the development and implementation of physical computing technologies, to draw links between interactive behaviours, functionalities, physical components, and interface elements;
  2. Apply technical skills in Tangible Interaction Design system structure design, coding and tech-fabrication of open source technologies to own interaction design practice;
  3. Use skills in programming, physical-computing and prototyping methods and conventions, to design and build functional Tangible Interaction Design projects;
  4. Integrate problem-solving methodologies and prototype design processes to produce Tangible Interaction Design prototypes with functionality to browse, explore, analyse and manipulate;
  5. Communicate and justify concepts and methodology used in designing for physical computing enabled technologies;
  6. Understand and apply the rules of occupational health and safety appropriate to the discipline practice.

Assessment

100% in-semester assessment

Workload requirements

12 hours per week including 4 contact hours plus 8 hours of independent study.

See also Unit timetable information