User:FLEM/thesisoutline

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What do I want to write about?

Last year I started questioning my notebook's practice and tried to build a new paper device that would satisfy better the needs of my brain in that moment. To get there I asked myself what were the problems in the device I was using and how changing something small could already improve my use of the notebook. I then wondered: "Why are we all using a device with the same structure? And what impact does it have on our learning, thinking and living, as well as on the imaginary of self? And how creating our personal tools would help users to understand better themselves and their needs?".

I believe this is really a personal matter and that every individual should or could find their personal answers to this. How can I, through research and explorative sessions, discover more about the topic and create a generative structure that can be interpreted by every person in their own way to promote creativity and self-expression?

Table of contents

Introduction: History on the use of notebooks

In the introduction, I will give an overview on notebooks' history and evolution, how they changed through time when standards have been included through the arrival of automation and industries.

Questions: How and why has it been created? How did it evolved till the most common structures we use nowadays?


Chapter 1. Industrial revolution and consumerism

[section A: Why are we all using the same structures?]

The first chapter will focus on an historical context: the arrival of the industrial revolution and how it changed humans' approach to making the objects we use, how capitalism and consumerism changed our vision of objects's use and more specifically, notebooks' use (touching the explosion of already made bullet journals for example).

Questions: How has the value of the process of creation modified after industrialisation / in consumerism? What is standardisation? Why do we create standardised objects? What is their impact on humans' existence and the creation of personal imaginary?

“In our society people make little of what we use but consume it as presented by the media” (Dissanayake E.,1995)



Chapter 2. The importance of creativity and expression of self

[section B: What impact does standardisation have on learning thinking and living, as well as on the imaginary of self?]

The second chapter will analyse, in the first section, how the brain works (learning types) and what is creativity about as well as giving an overview on the process of creation. The second part will discuss what is the impact of the use of standardised objects in humans and the importance of self-expression and creativity.

Questions: How does the brain work? How does the hand work? How does the brain create the imaginary of self? How ideas are created? What is the creativity about? How is knowledge created? How do we learn?

What is the impact of standardization/already made objects in the brain? and on the way of living? What happens when we don’t use our intrinsic creativity? Why is it important to express ourselves?

[If possible, in this section I'd like to add interviews with psychologists/sociologists?]


Chapter 3. Building your own tool: how making becomes a process of self-discovery

[section C: What does happen when the user become the creator of their own tools? How the act of making help them understanding themselves and their needs better?]

The final chapter will talk about the value of the process of making things ourselves and making as an act of subversion: how we can create our own narrative and our personal perception of the world through the act of making our own tool.

Questions: Why do we have the biological need of leaving traces in the world? What is the impact of creativity/making on the development of personhood? How by creating our own tools we are claiming our space in the world, expressing who we are by not submitting to standards as definitions of who we are?


[Primary research method, qualitative research, action research]

The CES (Collaborative Explorative Sessions): an overview based on observation

What is this process of self-discovery? The process for others (analysis of texts that my case studies will write to analyse their personal process towards a notebook that works for them)


→ keep it separate

Final instructional piece: How to create your notebook. → the outcome of the thesis and the graduation project together.

Why?

One of the main urgency I have to talk about this topic is that both from my personal experience and the experiences of others during growth, standardised learning types are a big problem in education. We are supposed to satisfy standards and generalisations throughout our entire lives, in which someone is able to stay on their track, some others are instead more fragile, especially if we talk about young humans that are still building up on their personality and still discovering their abilities and strategies.

I don't like that we are all the same, that expressing who we are is not part of daily life but it's a shaming process that has a lot of impact on growth.

I would like this research to be a sort of manifesto for a general context but using the notebook as a  "metaphor": who are you? how does your brain work? how do your ideas come along? what are your needs from a tool that society provided in a standardised form?

It is not only about making a notebook, is how making a notebook will put us in the position of questioning who we are and the objects we use, why we use them and how something made for us from us could look like.

How?

The thesis will follow the graduation project alongside: it will research theoretical studies to create a context and answer my questions. Then, I will analyse the results and documentation that will follow the CES (Collaborative Explorative Sessions) that are part of my graduation project.

As this process is really personal, I will not be able to produce charts or standardised results; instead, I will be working on observational essays that will try to create a more general overview of the outcomes of the processes of the sessions.

3 key issues/research questions?

  1. Why are we all using a device (a notebook) with the same structure?
  2. What impact does it have on our learning, thinking and living, as well as on the imaginary of self?
  3. What does happen when the user become the creator of their own tools? How does the act of making help them to understand themselves and their needs better?

Method

[Primary research method, qualitative research, action research]

3.2 The CES (Collaborative Explorative Sessions): an overview based on observation

3.3 What is this process of self-discovery? The process for others (analysis of texts that my case studies will write to analyse their personal process towards a notebook that works for them)

Timeline

Deadline dates:

Bibliography

Blair, A. (2004). Note Taking as an Art of Transmission. Critical Inquiry, 31(1), pp.85–107.

Dissanayake, E. (1995). The Pleasure and Meaning of Making. American Craft 55(2): 40-45

Gibson, M. (2019). Crafting communities of practice: the relationship between making and learning. Int J Technol Des Educ 29, 25–35

Hamzah, F., Sharifudin, S., Kamarudin, A. and Azlan, M. (2016). The use of personalized notebook among first semester students of UiTM. National Conference of Research on Language Education 2016.

Illich, I.D. (1985). Tools for conviviality. London: Marion Boyars.

‌Kealy-Morris, E. (2015). The bookbinding workshop: Making as collaborative pedagogic practice. Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education, [online] 14(2), p.119.

Korn, P. (2015). Why We Make Things and Why It Matters. David R. Godine Publisher.

Saner, B. (2014) “Handwriting is physical visual thinking,” Visual Arts Research, 40(1), pp. 118–120.

Sanders E. B.-N. and Stappers P. J. (2014). Convivial design toolbox: generative research for the front end of design. Amsterdam: Bis.

Sennett, R. (2009). The Craftsman. Penguin UK.


https://www.thecollector.com/industrial-revolution-arts-and-crafts/