St. Louis, Missouri
June 18, 2000
June 18, 2000
June 21, 2000
2153-5965
6
5.531.1 - 5.531.6
10.18260/1-2--8670
https://peer.asee.org/8670
486
Session 2225
Reverse Engineering or Design Recovery: Two approaches to uncovering designing
W. Michael McCracken, Wendy Newstetter Georgia Institute of Technology
Abstract Many design problems are evolutionary and the need to uncover an existing design is an important part of the design process. Reverse engineering and design recovery are two terms that are often used to describe this process, but in fact the two have very different intentions. Reverse engineering or as we refer to it in this paper, product dissection, is an activity with the goal of recovering the mechanisms of an existing artifact. Design recovery is an activity with the goal of recovering the design processes that went into creating the artifact. Each of these are important elements of designing but we propose that design recovery is the activity students should engage in when learning to design. In other words, product dissection is one of the skills a designer may use in designing, whereas design recovery is a means of discovering design skills.
I. Introduction
This paper describes the use of design recovery as a vehicle for teaching and learning designing. We use this technique in our introductory design class at Georgia Tech. The technique consists of the deconstruction of artifacts in a manner similar to product dissectiona, courses, but we use the deconstruction as an opportunity to focus the student’s attention on the process of design. Unlike many introductory courses in design that emphasize product dissection, we focus on the process and not the product.
In this paper, we clarify the intentionality of product dissection and design recovery as very different vehicles for learning designing. The clarification goes beyond mere definitions buy
McCracken, M., & Newstetter, W. (2000, June), Reverse Engineering Or Design Recovery: Two Approaches To Uncovering Designing Paper presented at 2000 Annual Conference, St. Louis, Missouri. 10.18260/1-2--8670
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