Showing posts with label design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label design. Show all posts

Thursday, March 3, 2011

The Learning Studio

The School of Medicine at the University of Virginia has created a room called "The Learning Studio."


Photo Credit: Norm Shafer (original source)
[I]t coalesced into an unusual, functionally innovate design, one built around a new pedagogy.
Shades of the Collaboratory at Rutgers. You see, UVA figured something out:
Most universities continue to follow a blueprint introduced in 1910, which called for two years of in-depth study of the basic sciences followed by two years of clinical experience. A cookie-cutter approach, it means that students spend two years sitting through long lectures and regurgitating facts on tests, followed by the shock treatment in their third year of suddenly dealing with patients in a hospital ward.

�It�s become pretty clear in the last couple of decades that this is probably not the best way to learn something as complex as medicine,� says Randolph Canterbury, the medical school�s senior associate dean for education. �The idea that physicians ought to learn the facts of all these various disciplines�anatomy, physiology, biochemistry and so forth�to the depth that we once thought they should doesn�t make much sense.�

About half of all medical knowledge becomes obsolete every five years. Every 15 years, the world�s body of scientific literature doubles. The pace of change has only accelerated. �The half-life of what I learned in medical school was much longer than what it is today,� adds Canterbury, a professor of psychiatric medicine and internal medicine.
Huh. Who knew? Oh yeah.

So what happens in that Learning Studio?
. . . In teams of eight, the students debate a patient case: Walt Z., a 55-year-old chemist, comes into your clinic complaining of intermittent chest pain. As his doctor, you�ve arranged for an exercise stress test. But Walt Z. is an informed consumer of health care, and he has lots of questions about the test�s accuracy in diagnosing blockage in coronary arteries. Five large media screens hanging throughout the room delineate his medical details and a series of multiple choice questions.

Gone is the traditional 50-minute lecture. (Also gone is paper, for the most part.) The students have completed the assigned reading beforehand and, because they�ve absorbed the facts on their own, class time serves another purpose. Self-assessment tests at the start of class measure how well they understand the material. Then it�s time to do a test case, to reinforce their critical thinking and push their knowledge and skills to another level.

. . . In this �flattened classroom,� as it�s been described, the traditional top-down educational approach is reconfigured and the responsibility for learning shifts to the student.
Interesting. What about accountability?
Problem solving by teams mirrors the reality of health care today. �The traditional approach has been one patient, one doctor,� says Waggoner-Fountain. �Now, it�s one patient, one doctor and a team, in part because medicine has gotten more sophisticated and patient expectations are different.�

Studies also show that individual grades improve when working within a team. The first-year students have embraced it. Not isolated in auditorium seats bolted to the floor, they can easily move and mingle because everything is in the round.

�Working in a team reinforces what you learn in class,� says Chelsea Becker (Med �14). �We all have different backgrounds and everyone knows something different.� Science majors don�t hold dominion; the class comprises more than 60 different majors, from astrochemistry to art.

�It allows us to teach each other,� adds Tom Jenkins (Med �14), who estimates he�s collaborated with just about every person in the class at this point. �I think that helps with retention.�
I could go on, but it would be better if you just go read the article. Okay, just one more quote:
Every team experience was singular. �We have the sense that education should be standardized and everyone should have the same experience, but that�s not really the case for us,� says Littlewood. �The new Carnegie report talks about having standardized outcomes for individualized experiences, and I think there�s no better example than over here.�
So, let's sum up. Teaching like it's 1910 doesn't make much sense (teacher-centered, lecture-oriented, fact-recall, paper-based, standardized instruction.) Ahh, so glad all the current education reform in K-12 matches up with this vision. They have to be college-ready, ya know.

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

10 Stunning websites to inspire your webdesign style in 2009

If you are looking for new ideas for the design of your next web project, follow the suggestions of my friend Greg from Submit CSS that this week proposes a collection of 10 stunning websites which can help you to find the right inspiration!

1. Carbonica (http://www.carbonica.org/)
Carbonica helps you combat climate change by reducing your carbon footprint.

2. Matt (http://www.themattinator.com)
The Carsonified team built Matt to see if it was possible to launch a simple web app in four days - everything from design, to development to marketing.

3. Satsu Design (http://www.satsu.co.uk/)
Satsu is a multi-disciplinary design agency based offshore on the Isle of Man.

4. Sawyer Hollenshead (http://sawyerhollenshead.com/)
Here you can find all of his most recent work, which includes web design and photography.

5. We Are Not Freelancers (http://www.wearenotfreelancers.co.za/)
All things web design through the eyes of David and Marc Perel.

6. BootB (http://www.bootb.com/en/)
BootB is an online way to find the best marketing concepts and strategies, graphic design solutions or ideas for advertising campaigns by addressing the unlimited number of creative talents from all over the Planet.

7. Pointless Ramblings (http://pointlessramblings.com/)
Pointless Ramblings is run by Nick Barrett who works as a freelance web design/developer and is also a student.

8. Mel Kadel (http://www.melkadel.com/)
The online professional portfolio of Mel Kadel.

9. Edgepoint Church (http://edgepointchurch.com/)
EdgePoint Church presents themself as an "awesomely different" kind of church in Powell, Tennessee.

10. Jason Julien (http://www.jasonjulien.com/)
Jason Julien is an award winning web designer and interactive creative director who has worked for "small businesses and big businesses and the middlemen in between."

10 Stunning websites to inspire your webdesign style in 2009

If you are looking for new ideas for the design of your next web project, follow the suggestions of my friend Greg from Submit CSS that this week proposes a collection of 10 stunning websites which can help you to find the right inspiration!

1. Carbonica (http://www.carbonica.org/)
Carbonica helps you combat climate change by reducing your carbon footprint.

2. Matt (http://www.themattinator.com)
The Carsonified team built Matt to see if it was possible to launch a simple web app in four days - everything from design, to development to marketing.

3. Satsu Design (http://www.satsu.co.uk/)
Satsu is a multi-disciplinary design agency based offshore on the Isle of Man.

4. Sawyer Hollenshead (http://sawyerhollenshead.com/)
Here you can find all of his most recent work, which includes web design and photography.

5. We Are Not Freelancers (http://www.wearenotfreelancers.co.za/)
All things web design through the eyes of David and Marc Perel.

6. BootB (http://www.bootb.com/en/)
BootB is an online way to find the best marketing concepts and strategies, graphic design solutions or ideas for advertising campaigns by addressing the unlimited number of creative talents from all over the Planet.

7. Pointless Ramblings (http://pointlessramblings.com/)
Pointless Ramblings is run by Nick Barrett who works as a freelance web design/developer and is also a student.

8. Mel Kadel (http://www.melkadel.com/)
The online professional portfolio of Mel Kadel.

9. Edgepoint Church (http://edgepointchurch.com/)
EdgePoint Church presents themself as an "awesomely different" kind of church in Powell, Tennessee.

10. Jason Julien (http://www.jasonjulien.com/)
Jason Julien is an award winning web designer and interactive creative director who has worked for "small businesses and big businesses and the middlemen in between."

Thursday, September 18, 2008

10 Beautiful icons set for web developers and designers

This post contains a collection of 10 beautiful and very popular icons set useful to be used in your web applications or your websites.

1. Web development icons Download
Web development icons is a set with 60 free icons in web 2.0 style (24x24). These icons are free to use in any kind of project unlimited times.




2. Function free icon set Download
A great collection designed by Liam McKay. All icons are free for personal non-commercial use:




3. Pixelicious Download
150 beautiful pixel icons designed by PixelResort:




4. Social Web Button Download
Another great collection of social icons set provided from WebFruits:





5. Sweetie Pack Download
Sweetie Pack is a popular clean and beautiful icons set with other 100 icons. I suggest you to read this post. CSS Message Box collection with sweetie pack:




6. FeedIcons Download
This is a beautiful icon set feed




7. Mini Icons Download
Super mini icons set for web applications designed by FamFamFam:




8. Tango Icons Set Download
The Tango icon library contains a basic set of icons for the most common usage. To make it easier for a developer to find an appropriate icon for their application a number of aids are there to help.




9. Monofactor Download
Monofactor is a beautifu set contains 25 scalable Illustrator format icons:





10. Aquaticus Social Icons Download
Aquaticus is a beautiful social icons set designed by Jwoloh (60x60, 48x48, 24x24, 16x16):



If you have other icons set to suggest add a comment with the related link!

10 Beautiful icons set for web developers and designers

This post contains a collection of 10 beautiful and very popular icons set useful to be used in your web applications or your websites.

1. Web development icons Download
Web development icons is a set with 60 free icons in web 2.0 style (24x24). These icons are free to use in any kind of project unlimited times.




2. Function free icon set Download
A great collection designed by Liam McKay. All icons are free for personal non-commercial use:




3. Pixelicious Download
150 beautiful pixel icons designed by PixelResort:




4. Social Web Button Download
Another great collection of social icons set provided from WebFruits:





5. Sweetie Pack Download
Sweetie Pack is a popular clean and beautiful icons set with other 100 icons. I suggest you to read this post. CSS Message Box collection with sweetie pack:




6. FeedIcons Download
This is a beautiful icon set feed




7. Mini Icons Download
Super mini icons set for web applications designed by FamFamFam:




8. Tango Icons Set Download
The Tango icon library contains a basic set of icons for the most common usage. To make it easier for a developer to find an appropriate icon for their application a number of aids are there to help.




9. Monofactor Download
Monofactor is a beautifu set contains 25 scalable Illustrator format icons:





10. Aquaticus Social Icons Download
Aquaticus is a beautiful social icons set designed by Jwoloh (60x60, 48x48, 24x24, 16x16):



If you have other icons set to suggest add a comment with the related link!

Friday, August 29, 2008

5 Photoshop and Illustrator brushes set for web designer

This collection includes over 60 brushes: pencil lines, grunge Polaroid photos, diagonal lines for webpages background, safety pins and shape tags.


1. Lineart Brush (Download)
This brush for Illustrator will make your strokes look like they were drawn with a pencil. Thin were the stroke begins, wider in the middle, and back to thin were the stroke ends.



Each size comes in two variations - one with the stroke getting wider to the left and one with the stroke getting wider to the right. If you need other sizes just copy one of the sizes and modify it.


2. Polaroid Brushes (Download)
A nice collection of Polaroid brushes, for Photoshop useful to be used in grunge or vintage website style:





3. Diagonal Lines (Download)
This set of 17 diagonal lines brushes useful to design quickly background pattern for your websites.




4. Safety Pin (Download)
This is a set with six nice pin brushes for Photoshop.




5. Shape Tags (Download)
This is another brushes set of 23 shape tag very useful to design original tags in your websites.



If you have an interesting brushes set and you want to share it please add a comment!