Review: Design Epistemology and Curriculum Planning.
Abstract
This fascinating book sets out to explore design epistemology in the context of curriculum
planning and is a response to the Expert Panel which considered the future of Design and
Technology (D&T) in the English National Curriculum. Ever since Aristotle proposed his
intellectual virtues of epistêmê, technê and phronêsis, the concept of epistemology in
education has invoked substantial philosophical debate. Much discourse pertains to the
validity of knowledge types such as ‘knowing that’ and ‘knowing how’ (Hetherington, 2011;
Stanley & Williamson, 2001) with further debate focussing on the role of knowledge in
education relative to what are often described as transferable or 21st century skills or
competencies. Part 1, the introduction to this book, eloquently frames design epistemology
as “what designers know and how they know it” (p.6) and although not yet well understood
relative to other ways of knowing, positions designerly ways of knowing as a critical
construct in contemporary education.
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