Michael Mose Biskjær has included companies as partners in his teaching on the second semester of the Master’s degree programme in digital design on several occasions. He was the primus motor behind the first of these initiatives (known as design challenges); and the same concept is now used on the information studies degree programme as well. Design challenges are anchored in design courses, and the other courses during the same semester support the process – ensuring that the issues dealt with are covered by all the courses in the semester in question.
An external partner (normally a private company) presents three issues of current concern which are developed and defined in close collaboration with the teachers so they can be resolved in a way that ensures compliance with the learning outcomes of the course concerned. These issues normally consist of themes or cases which the students work on during the teaching. The students choose one of these issues (or sometimes a combination of them), and then work on this project throughout the semester. Each group also meets the company involved to gain feedback and discuss and ask questions about the issue concerned. This normally happens when they present their projects halfway through the semester. The students are also taught how to pitch a creative concept, equipping them to present a brief and interesting pitch at their final presentation, which is held in the form of an exhibition attended by the companies, the teachers, the other project groups and any other interested students and teachers. It’s normally great fun!
The first design challenge
The first design challenge at the Department of Digital Design and Information Studies was held in 2015 with a partner called Designit – one of the largest design agencies in Europe (it actually started life in Aarhus). The three issues presented by Designit were: “future mobility,” “empowering minorities” and “supporting patients.” The partnership with Designit was based on a personal network. Since then, companies such as Almindelig Brand and Danske Bank have also been partners, and other companies often ask to join in. The companies taking part gain a perspective on relevant themes and issues of current concern on a larger scale than they are used to. This is because the students can approach the task in the kind of detailed, challenging and exploratory manner that the companies don’t normally have time for. Evaluations of these partnerships prove that the companies involved regard the innovative and often challenging concepts and ideas contributed by the students as extremely useful. For instance, Danske Bank were inspired to reconsider the established ritual associated with payments in the retail trade – including socio-cultural norms and understandings, which are rarely challenged as thoroughly as they can be in a design challenge.
Michael Mose Biskjær’s reasons for including a business partner in the teaching:
Michael Mose Birkjær’s good advice and points of focus:
The teachers can include a company or organisation as an active partner in their teaching, with the company being responsible for presenting one or more specific issues of current concern. This makes it possible to use the challenges facing the company as an empirical point of departure for the way in which the students apply the theories and methods presented during the teaching. The way the students deal with these issues can also be used as the basis of their exam, adding a practical dimension to the teaching. The students gain experience of using their academic competences to provide solutions to problems of current concern which are relevant for the company in question.
The company can also be included as an active source of feedback on the work done by the students during the semester and in the final evaluation of the end product, which normally consists of a proposed solution to the challenge concerned. This type of partnership demands considerable commitment on the part of the company. But it also means that the students gain more inspiration, knowledge and contact with the company.
The students learn by studying issues of current and/or future concern for a company or organisation, as well as learning to collaborate with multiple stakeholders in a complex and relevant area close to the world of practice. Contact with a company can also give them insight into the labour market as well as experience of using their expertise to perform various types of academic task.