Book Chapters (Built Environment)
Permanent URI for this collectionhttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12280/260
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Browsing Book Chapters (Built Environment) by Author "Olweny, Mark"
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Item Learning from Corona: learning design principles for connected co-learning and co-teaching in online and blended global architecture studios(Vermon Press, 2021-01-01) Morkel, Jolanda; Burton, Lindy Osborne; Olweny, Mark; Feast, StevenIn this chapter we formulate four learning design principles for connected co-learning and co-teaching in online and blended global architecture studios. The Coronavirus pandemic not only amplified the current challenges in Higher Education (HE) generally, and in architectural education specifically, but it revealed the potential for globally connected practices in learning, teaching and research. We were interested to understand how future connected co-learning and co-teaching in online and blended global architecture studios can be designed and which principles should guide the process. Drawing on the respective HE contexts of the authors, namely four Schools of Architecture—two situated in Africa, and two in Australia, representing both the global South and the global North, we employed a collaborative auto ethnographic research methodology. The principles that we identified recognise distinct differences in these contexts, that are visible in the composition of student bodies, staffing and resources, but with a shared aim to address social justice, inequality, student access and inclusion. Through an in-depth reflection on our respective learning contexts, and educational and professional practices, we identified seven themes for connected co-learning and co-teaching, namely connecting: 1) online and on-ground spaces, 2) the university and the profession, 3) digital learning and teaching tools, 4) students and educators, 5) educators locally and globally, 6) students and international experts, and 7) students through peer-to-peer learning. For each theme we derived five observations, that were synthesised to formulate four overarching design principles for cross-cultural and inter-institutional collaboration. These are: 1) employ relevant technologies and techniques through learning design; 2) acknowledge students-as-partners to promote student agency and well-being 3) consider flexibility through multiple interlinked learning settings and modes; and 4) recognise humanity, humour, culture, and community. The proposed design principles address current critiques on architectural studio education globally, related to socialisation, asymmetrical power relations, the mental health of students, and, in online spaces specifically, aspects of social presence, authenticity and embodiment.Item Necessary transgressions in Architectural Education in Uganda(Routledge, 2022-10-28) Olweny, MarkAcknowledging that architectural education in many parts of the world is built on specific traditions, there is little argument about its embedded epistemologies. The strong adherence to tenants of the past is regarded as the success of architectural education. However, it is here, beyond its evident virtues that the limitations become apparent, more so when considered in the context of the global south, particularly sub-Saharan Africa. Here, historicized perspectives compel instructors to buy into pedagogical approaches that often sideline indigenous built environments, an act that serves to alienate local traditions and exacerbates the challenge of seeking contextually appropriate and sustainable architectural solutions. Through the transformation of an architecture program in an architectural school in Uganda, I challenge norms related to what constituted an appropriate architectural educational approach often applied without question. Through examples derived from transformational activities, the chapter suggests how architectural education in Uganda and sub-Saharan Africa can be revised regardless of ever-present professional and bureaucratic constraints. Building on the lessons derived from these experiences, the chapter concludes with a call to architectural educators to explore possibilities that will define the decolonizing processes in architectural education.