Design Joy + Design Education + Design Justice with Jennifer Rittner — DT101 E84

Jennifer Rittner is a design educator and writer. We talk about design, education, ethics, social justice, system design, and design joy.

Listen to learn about:

  • The current state of design education
  •  Human-centered design methodology
  • Important designers working at design’s cutting edge
  • Designing with and for marginalized populations
  •  Smaller scale design
  •  The empathy problem
  • The power-design ecosystem

 

Our Guest

Jennifer is a writer, educator and communications strategist who has taught at Parsons School of Design, the School Visual Arts, and SUNY FIT. In Fall 2021, she was a visiting lecturer at the California College of Art. She has been published in The New York Times, Eye on Design, DMI: Journal, and Core77; and recently guest edited a special issue on Policing & Design for the Design Museum Everywhere. She frequently writes and lectures about design and social justice.

 

Show Highlights

[01:00] Jennifer talks about starting her career as a museum educator before finding her way into design.

[01:56] Jennifer’s career teaching design, and some of the courses she taught.

[03:26] How design shows up in the world and how it shapes our reality.

[04:22] An important a-ha moment some of Jennifer’s students had about design.

[08:52] Human- and community-centered design.

[09:29] Dawan and Jennifer talk about design education and learning design as a never-ending process.

[10:44] Technical skills versus soft skills in design.

[11:50] Jennifer’s thoughts about human-centered design as a methodology.

[13:15] The need for a more critical thinking approach to how we teach design.

[14:06] Designers who are doing the work of critiquing current methodologies and offering alternatives.

[16:08] Something Jennifer would like to see design schools teach about methodology.

[17:45] Jennifer talks about her background and some of her current struggles in the design space.

[21:43] The concept of “inappropriateness” and design.

[24:51] Design on a smaller scale and designers whose work Jennifer admires.

[25:03] Design and technology.

[25:33] How design often marginalizes disabled people.

[27:09] The importance of design in helping the people being served find their own voices to speak on their own behalf.

[28:37] Advice for designers who are looking to move into work that is more socially impactful.

[32:41] Jennifer talks about the problematic nature of workplace culture.

[35:18] Dawan and Jennifer talk about empathy and how it is often misunderstood and misused in design work.

[40:30] Empathy and how it relates to people and organizations that hold power.

[43:29] The importance of knowing the history of a problem if you intend to design in that space.

[44:15] Making the case for systems design.

[45:51] Design and the institutions of power.

[51:29] Jennifer’s hopes for design as it begins to grapple with system design challenges.

[55:53] Where to find out more about Jennifer and her work and writing.

 

Links

Jennifer on Twitter

Jennifer on LinkedIn

Jennifer on Instagram

Jennifer on Medium

Content Matters NY – Ideas

Design for Social Justice

Equity Representation Art

The Latinx Project interview with Jennifer

Jennifer at Montclair Art Museum

Core77’s interview with Jennifer

Sloan Leo

Liz Agbu

Annika Hansteen-Izora

Antoinette Carroll

Ari Melenciano

Liz Jackson

Alex Haagaard

The Disabled List

Marc Dones at King County Regional Homelessness Authority

George Aye

Sabiha Basrai

 

Book Recommendation:

The Black Experience in Design: Identity, Expression & Reflection, by Anne Berry, Kareem Collie, Penina Acayo Laker, Lesly-Ann Noel, Jennifer Rittner, and Kelly Waters

 

Other Design Thinking 101 Episodes You Might Like

How to Learn Design Thinking + Design Thinking Pedagogy with Julie Schell — DT101 E15

Critical and Emancipatory Design Thinking with Lesley-Ann Noel — DT101 E57

Trauma-Informed Design + Participatory Design Perils + Research with Vulnerable Populations with Sarah Fathallah — DT101 E72

2356 232