I teach both in the bachelor Industrial Design Engineering and the master programme Design for Interaction. Next to this, I supervise various graduation students in close relation to my research. Most of the times, these students use the design method I am developing within my research.
Graduation projects
2015 Joep Serrarens: Sustainable Sustainability – Managing concerns to influence behaviour through service design.
2015 Kaila Vreeken: Design for Asylum Seekers
2014 Fleur Derks: Social design as a means to persuade consumers to change their behaviour and opt for plant-based protein instead of animal protein, at Ministerie van Infrastructuur & Milieu
2014 Vahit Guzel: The Design of a Cordless Kitchen Appliance for The European Kitchen of 2020, at Philips
2014 Anna Louisa Peeters: Design for Inconsistency Between Consumer Values and Behaviour – A study on sustainable meat consumption, at Wageningen UR & Delft University of Technology
2012 Lysanne van der Voort: The Power of Design in Changing Behaviour, at Delft University of Technology
2012 Aurora Rapalino: Blove – The shared library of the TU Delft, at Delft University of Technology
2011 Annet Bruil: Implication Design; design for changing behavior and emotional well being for people who are diagnosed with disruptive behavior disorders, at Lucertis, part of Parnassia Bavo Groep.
2011 Sacha van Ginhoven: The design of social-cultural integration, at Stichting Boog.
2011 Maarten Heijltjes: Product Design for Social Impact – Designing social bridges at the schoolgate, at Estrade.
2011 Amine Rhrord: Designing for Self Regulation of a Neighborhood, at Estrade.
2010 Inga Villerius: Design for Social Impact in the Afrikaanderwijk – Welding your way into neighbourhood attachment, at Estrade.
2010 Femke Heikamp: Research on implicative social design, at Wijk Laak-Noord.
2009 Floor Borgonjen: Label – A product-service to improve women’s position in the Dutch labour market, at Delft University of Technology.
2009 Jelte Bijkerk: State of agitation – Expansion families with stress, at Matone
Courses
ID5161 ViP Vision in Product design
Involvement: course coordinator, teacher and coach.
This course further builds on the method Vision in Product design (ViP). After a short summary of the basics, a more advanced application of the method will be explained and experienced by applying the ViP approach to dominant issues in society, like for instance immigration, democracy, social responsibility, education and cultural heritage.
IO2031 PO3, Fuzzy Front End
Involvement: course coordinator, ViP expert and coach.
This design course consists of 3 major parts, a strategic part in which students develop a strategic company vision and a new product development plan for that company, a second part in which they develop a vision or motto for the interaction between the user and a new product, in a certain context, and a third part in which a product concept is developed and then presented to the client together with a market introduction plan.
ID4216 Context & Conceptualisation
Involvement: ViP teacher and coach.
The Master’s course ‘Context and Conceptualisation’ deals with the various contexts surrounding the product and the users’ interaction with the product. Examples of such contexts are the situation in which the product is used, the people that are involved and the role of the product in the user’s life, even when the user is not physically using it.