Design For Learning: New Book

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27th October 2009, 09:30am - Views: 1107





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MEDIA RELEASE 

Tuesday 27 October 2009


Designing for learning: new book


Hot on the heels of the federal government’s $16 billion commitment to

national education infrastructure over the next three years, a new book reports

on how design is transforming schools and learning experiences in the 21st

century.


Architect/education academics Clare Newton and Kenn Fisher are the editors of the nation’s

latest word on education design, Learning Spaces, being launched in Melbourne this week.


Designing for education is a specialised business and requires expertise in contemporary

educational models about how design influences and enhances learning, and can benefit the

development of school and university communities and local neighbourhoods.

 

Intended as an aid for better communication between designers and educators, Learning

Spaces explores the links between learning and design in its combination of journal articles

and papers, case studies, interviews and advice from practitioners, professionals and

academics. 


Schools and curricula are changing. Young people today are natives in the world of

information technology, and adept at learning using digital media. This increased connectivity

between students and their local and global environments is transforming school

environments from teaching institutions to learning organisations. 


Other factors are also at play. Schools are becoming stronger assets for their local

communities, with facilities used after hours and as a setting for lifelong learning. And briefs to

architects are increasingly seeking design responses which address issues of sustainability.


“Space is irrevocably linked to teaching strategies. Elements such as the shape and size of

the spaces, the furniture and finishes are silently influencing how teachers and students

behave,” said Ms Newton.


In tracking recent transformations in the planning and design of formal education settings and

their impacts on learning, Learning Spaces uncovers how the most innovative learning

environments often evolve as a design response to strong educational direction in schools.  


Newton with Fisher joins a long line of successful Australian architectural researchers to

publish books in the Australian Institute of Architects Take series after winning the Institute’s

2008 Sisalation Prize. They are the first interdisciplinary team to win the award, whose

previous recipients include Geoffrey London, Keith Cottier, Noel Robinson, Ken Woolley and

Philip Cox.


The Sisalation Prize is the longest-standing prize offered by the Australian Institute of

Architects and has been sponsored since its inception in 1956 by Fletcher Insulation (formally

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Insulation Solutions). The company has had a long and distinguished history in the building

industry and has manufactured SISALATIONTM reflective foil sarking for more than 50 years.  


Details

Take 8: Learning Spaces – the transformation of learning spaces for the 21st century

eds. Clare Newton and Kenn Fisher 

Available from Architext bookshops (Melbourne and Sydney), architext.com.au or download

an order form at architecture.com.au 


Launch event

Thursday 29 October, 2009

4.45pm for a 5pm start

Architecture Building, University of Melbourne


About the editors


Ms Clare Newton (Senior Lecturer - Faculty of Architecture, University of Melbourne)


Clare Newton’s research is inter-disciplinary. While her focus is on architectural practice and

the translation gaps which occur between architectural ideas and their built form, she has

other research strengths in pedagogy and the use of innovative IT within educational

environments. 


Clare’s research, practice and teaching overlap. Clare is first named Chief Investigator on two

Australian Research Council Linkage grants worth over $1 million in research funding and has

led a range of studio classes on innovative learning spaces. She coordinated design

competitions on new school buildings for the Victorian Dept of Education and Early Childhood

Development. Clare is also researching and teaching in the area of sustainability and initiated

a Masters level subject in conjunction with the Faculty of Engineering called Sustainable

Buildings.


Clare has strong ties with practice through her association with the Australian Institute of

Architects: as Victorian convener of continuing education, an Institute-nominated competition

advisor and chair of the national and state education committees. For six years Clare was a

member of the Institute’s Victorian Chapter Council. She recently advised on competitions for

new schools for DEECD and a $150million Australian Centre for Neuroscience. In October,

Clare was a jury member with the Government Architect and DEECD for the inaugural

Minister’s Awards for Innovation in Victorian School Buildings.


Prior to working at The University of Melbourne, Clare was a director of the architectural firm

Newton Hutson Pty Ltd and taught part-time in RMIT University’s architecture and interior

design courses. In 1998, Clare received the Victorian NAWIC Award of Excellence for

Innovation in Construction. In 2003, Clare was one of 19 Melbourne architects asked to

debate the best Victorian architecture from the past 75 years for the 2003 book titled Judging

Architecture. She has been an examiner for the Architects Registration Board of Victoria and

an academic member for a government committee focussed on Design Support for Schools.


Dr Kenn Fisher (Director, Learning Futures, Woods Bagot Architects)


Dr Kenn Fisher is recognised internationally as one of the leading educational facility

specialists. Throughout his thirty year career he has worked in a range of disciplines in all

education sectors as a teacher and academic, a structural engineer, a strategic planner, a

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campus planner, a project manager, a facility manager and, more recently, as an educational

researcher. Now operating exclusively as a specialist in campus master planning and

educational facility strategic consulting and architectural briefing, Dr Fisher acts as the prime

interface between designers, teachers and students to create environments for new teaching,

learning and research trends. He has been engaged by more than 30 universities in Australia

and overseas, numerous vocational training and community college clients, a number of state

and national government ministries of education and many school organisations, and has

directed numerous consulting and master planning studies. 


From 1997 until 1998 Dr Fisher was the head of the OECD Program on Educational 

Building (now the Centre for Effective Learning Environments – CELE) in Paris and was

responsible for overseeing twelve activities related to educational building planning, design

and management for 25 countries in all sectors of education. Kenn Fisher, Clare Newton,

three other chief investigators and nine industry partners were recently awarded an ARC

Linkage Research Grant of $340,000 to investigate Smart Green Schools. Kenn is Associate

Professor for Learning Environments in the Faculty of Architecture, Building and Planning at

the University of Melbourne.


In addition to Kenn’s PhD, he was awarded an honorary Doctor of Science (honoris causa),

Deakin University In recognition of his outstanding contribution to the fields of campus master

planning and educational facility strategic planning, both within Australia and internationally.


ENDS


Australian Institute of Architects | Media Unit

Ms Trish Croaker 

mobile - 0408 756 163

trish.croaker@raia.com.au

Ms Kirsten Trengove

mobile - 0439 555 427

kirsten.trengove@raia.com.au


The Australian Institute of Architects is the peak body for the architectural profession, representing more than 9500

members across Australia and overseas.  The Institute actively works to improve the quality of our built environment

by promoting quality, responsible and sustainable design. Visit the Institute at architecture.com.au .








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