Williams, Dilys (2013) Fashion Education in Sustainability: Change Through Experiential Crossings. In: TEESNET Global Citizenship Sixth Annual Conference, 11 July 2013, London South Bank University.
Untitled (165kB) |
Type of Research: | Conference, Symposium or Workshop Item |
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Creators: | Williams, Dilys |
Description: | Sustainability is distinguished by its multidimensional, messy, big and small transformational change processes that impact the world on all scales and timelines that are both short and long. This is, whilst challenging, full of diverse possibilities. To be path makers and navigators through this complexity requires us to teach and learn skills, knowledge and understanding of our relationships with each other and with our natural world. It requires us to hone our skills of imagination as well as our practical skills of creation and communication. Education for sustainability offers us a means to unlock the current fashion educational paradigm, which has become, in many cases, a service led model of educational provision for current business functions. It offers the means to change towards education that is based on a nurturing of culture, creativity and critical thinking, so that we are capable of responding to global and local contexts to contribute towards thriving societies, cultures and economies. The places, players, and their roles in this process differ substantially from traditional fashion education hierarchical models. This paper explores this changing paradigm through a case study at London College of Fashion, guided by Dilys Williams, Director Centre for Sustainable Fashion. The project worked with thirty undergraduate students across disciplines in fashion design and communication, their tutors, and a world leading sportswear brand’s design, communication and education teams. The author has developed an experiential and reflexive learning process through a number of iterations to explore design for sustainability (DfS) through teaching and learning methods that visualize our interdependence, support a mutual learning environment, and begin to explore cause and effect of our actions and interactions. This project engages this approach to explore ways in which the business could de-couple success from the throughput of material goods through this project based in the UK and the US. |
Official Website: | http://teesnet.ning.com/events/teesnet-conference-2013 |
Keywords/subjects not otherwise listed: | interdependence, resilience, fulfilment, reflexivity, empathy |
Your affiliations with UAL: | Colleges > London College of Fashion Research Centres/Networks > Centre for Sustainable Fashion |
Date: | 11 July 2013 |
Event Location: | London South Bank University |
Date Deposited: | 09 Jan 2014 16:59 |
Last Modified: | 04 Sep 2015 21:25 |
Item ID: | 6305 |
URI: | https://ualresearchonline.arts.ac.uk/id/eprint/6305 |
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