Feeling inspired with CIID and their partnership with the UN and their Sustainable Development Goals. 😍 First day of class was 👌🏼#ciidsummerschool #uncitycph #machinelearning #copenhagen (at UN City)

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Feeling inspired with CIID and their partnership with the UN and their Sustainable Development Goals. 😍 First day of class was 👌🏼#ciidsummerschool #uncitycph #machinelearning #copenhagen (at UN City)
Bye bye, amazing Summer Schoolers of 2015!
It was a pleasure to have all of your talents in Copenhagen this July. Take care, have fun with your new skills and keep in touch!
Love, CIID
The amazing Applied Service Design Techniques week 2 crew.
Prototyping with littleBits and Arduino, learning the basics of 3d printing, laser cutting, electronics and making dummy apps - what a hands on week!
The Design For Connected Devices workshop was taught by CIID’s Interaction Design Programme Alumni Ruben and Andrew from the Frolic studio.
Learning how to conceptualise and prototype new products or services that will create meaningful change at Design For Social Impact. Its participants got the chance to work on a real brief with real clients - and presented their projects with big success.
We hope you will make some great use of your new design learnings in your careers, dearest summer schoolers!
Design for Social Impact
Faculty: Adam Little, Priyanka Pathak, Claudia Bernett
Keywords: human centered design, social impact design, codesign, inclusive design, international development, information communication technology for development (ICT4D)
A one week workshop that gave hands on lessons in designing appropriate technology driven solutions that address social needs in resource poor parts of the world.
Students have worked in groups to conceptualize and prototype new products or services that address real world needs experienced by people who generally lack access to well designed technology. Throughout the workshop, individual students have participated in mini exercises and lectures related to design for social impact. A “real world brief” has been generated and students were put in touch with remote collaborators.
The workshop was led by the Little Cloud Collective (LCC), a group of technologists and designers that have collaborated on workshops and projects internationally including Design for UNICEF at Parson’s graduate program in Design & Technology and Urban Collab Lab: Kampala at Women in Technology Uganda (WITU).