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Module 4 Design Thinking Activity Instructions _ Lecture (2) 4m 31s - 9m 11s

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    This is sort of a bigger,
    more hairy problem,
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    as you'll see from her TED talk.
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    You're also watching a TED talk
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    from Tyrone Poole;
    he's a PCC alum.
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    He is also currently
    continuing his work
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    that you will see,
    that he launches, um,
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    talks about launching
    in the TED talk,
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    and it is also--
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    it's a very specific part
    of the homelessness problem
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    that he is trying to address.
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    So-- but you don't have to uncover
    some big, hairy problem.
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    So let me give you an example.
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    I had a student last year
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    in this class who was a veteran.
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    He had been on crutches
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    because of multiple surgeries
    on a leg,
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    and he talked about
    all of the different problems
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    he was having with these crutches,
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    how they didn't work
    for them-- him,
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    how they were causing pain,
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    how they weren't
    adequately adjustable,
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    how he couldn't fold them up,
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    how they were too heavy.
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    So, this is-- this--
    you could just be digging
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    into a simple problem
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    with, you know, somebody
    in your life,
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    and, um,
    and it doesn't need to be anything
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    that's super complex, okay?
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    But that is
    what you're going to be using
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    this Design Thinking worksheet
    to do.
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    I'm now going to pop back over
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    to the second set
    of presentation slides
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    that are provided
    for you this week
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    that help walk you
    through these steps,
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    step-by-steps.
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    As you interview someone,
    uncover a problem,
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    and then start to ideate,
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    start to create
    a potential solution.
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    So, as I said before,
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    this is an approach
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    to up-- to figuring out,
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    identifying and figuring out
    human needs and problems, okay?
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    So you're interviewing someone,
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    and you're trying to,
    first of all,
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    spend, probably,
    the majority of your time
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    understanding
    exactly what the problem is
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    that they're experiencing,
    or the unmet need that they have,
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    because until you understand this,
    right,
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    we talked about this last week
    in our discussion,
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    that until you
    really understand a problem,
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    you can't start to figure out how--
    how to address it
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    or how to solve it.
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    So there are five phases
    in the Design Thinking process.
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    What we're going to be doing
    with the worksheet
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    and in this activity this week
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    are-- is just focusing
    on the first three.
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    Now, could you keep going?
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    Say you come up
    with a really awesome problem,
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    a really good problem,
    and you have some amazing ideas
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    about how to address it.
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    Maybe you do want to keep going
    and prototype it, you know,
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    buil-- you know, maybe have
    a product concept, a service concept,
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    and you want to keep going,
    go for it.
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    I absolutely encourage students
    to do that.
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    So again,
    part 1 of this is just talking,
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    having an initial conversation
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    with the person
    that you're interviewing,
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    trying to talk about a problem
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    that they
    have personally experienced,
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    have first hand knowledge of,
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    something that's specific
    and simple, okay?
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    Your job as the interviewee
    is to be asking them
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    as many questions as you can,
    to gain empathy, right?
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    Not just to listen
    to what they are saying,
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    but to listen to how they're saying it,
    to dig into, you know,
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    questions about how did they feel
    when this was happening?
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    Why was this frustrating?
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    What wasn't working,
    what exactly, you know,
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    how is this impacting them, okay?
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    So you're-- you're really trying to
    see the problem
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    through their eyes
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    and with the feelings
    that they have had
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    when they've experienced this,
    okay?
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    So you're going to be filling
    out as much as you can
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    in the-- in step 1
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    of the... worksheet.
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    Then the next step is,
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    how much deeper
    can you dig into this, okay?
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    And also, how can you
    check your assumptions
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    when you're asking questions,
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    when you're trying
    to understand this problem?
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    Also,
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    try to dig into the causes
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    or what exact--
    and what exactly it is
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    that is frustrating about this.
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    Is it the context?
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    Does it have something to do
    with access,
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    or accessibility to something?
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    Does it have to do
    with affordability?
Title:
Module 4 Design Thinking Activity Instructions _ Lecture (2) 4m 31s - 9m 11s
Video Language:
English
Duration:
04:41

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