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Pedagogy as Creative Practice in Architecture: Inspiration and Resistance During Change
Coles
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Pedagogy as Creative Practice in Architecture: Inspiration and Resistance During Change in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $296.50

Coles
Pedagogy as Creative Practice in Architecture: Inspiration and Resistance During Change in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $296.50
Loading Inventory...
Size: Hardcover
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
Architectural education in the United Kingdom performs a difficult balancing act: meeting the requirements of professional accreditation bodies and preparing students for practice, while also offering a meaningful education for those who do not intend to become architects. Increasingly, professional pressures frame architectural education as training rather than as an exploratory, experimental process - one that equips students to face unpredictable future challenges in the profession and beyond.In response, many educators develop ahidden curriculum: an implicit set of values, methods, and priorities that sit alongside formal learning outcomes. This hidden curriculum tends to privilege curiosity, criticality, and open-ended inquiry, often through interdisciplinary and art-based approaches. Working in the gaps between what can be specified and what must be discovered, they complicate the "university-to-practice conveyor belt" narrative and widen what architectural education can be.This book shines a light on those creative pedagogical practices-working within, and often despite, systemic pressures - and shows why they matter for the vitality of architectural education at a time of deep uncertainty across higher education. It is organised into two parts:Discussions , which offer in-depth explorations of current challenges, andInsights , which present a selection of case studies. Together, they argue for architectural education as a space that cultivates imagination, agency, and adaptive ways of thinking - qualities essential for shaping futures that are not yet known.The book provides essential reading for educators and advanced students of architecture.
Architectural education in the United Kingdom performs a difficult balancing act: meeting the requirements of professional accreditation bodies and preparing students for practice, while also offering a meaningful education for those who do not intend to become architects. Increasingly, professional pressures frame architectural education as training rather than as an exploratory, experimental process - one that equips students to face unpredictable future challenges in the profession and beyond.In response, many educators develop ahidden curriculum: an implicit set of values, methods, and priorities that sit alongside formal learning outcomes. This hidden curriculum tends to privilege curiosity, criticality, and open-ended inquiry, often through interdisciplinary and art-based approaches. Working in the gaps between what can be specified and what must be discovered, they complicate the "university-to-practice conveyor belt" narrative and widen what architectural education can be.This book shines a light on those creative pedagogical practices-working within, and often despite, systemic pressures - and shows why they matter for the vitality of architectural education at a time of deep uncertainty across higher education. It is organised into two parts:Discussions , which offer in-depth explorations of current challenges, andInsights , which present a selection of case studies. Together, they argue for architectural education as a space that cultivates imagination, agency, and adaptive ways of thinking - qualities essential for shaping futures that are not yet known.The book provides essential reading for educators and advanced students of architecture.


















