Digital Design Studio (DDS) Faculty Collaborations

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Our approach

The DDS teaches critical visual and media literacy skills through creative assignments in disciplines outside traditional art/studio courses.  We help students navigate the intersections of media, design, creative technology and social justice through process-based learning in order to open new lines of inquiry, spark curiosity and enable connections across disciplines. When partnering with courses we strive to implement Design Justice principles to help reframe problems, work collaboratively and empower those most impacted by how we design projects, research and technologies. 

Inside the classroom

The DDS offers support to faculty interested in integrating projects and assignments that engage with creative methods into their courses.  Our collaboration can range from a consultation to help with brainstorming a new assignment to semester-long embedded support. 

Examples of support we offer to faculty include:

  • Consultations for brainstorming and problem-solving for new creative projects, includes thinking through lesson places, goals, and assessments
  • Tour of the DDS and our services
  • Online support guide with resources and workflows
  • Assignment specific course canvas modules 
  • Workshop to introduce assignment, tools and methods
  • Scaffolded workshops to introduce new tools, methods and hands-on activities throughout the semester

To connect with us about your course at any stage in the process, email us at tischdds@tufts.edu. 

Example course collaborations
Photo of three people bending down in wooded area with text box superimposed with indecipherable text

Environmental Storytelling 

Course: BIO7 Global Change Biology

Brief Description: In teams of four, students create a StoryMap on an environmental biology topic.  The story must engage in the science of the topic and find ways to make complex ideas accessible. 

Learn more about the Environmental Storytelling assignment

Illustration of DNA, Chromosomes and Gene components.

Social Media-Style Biology Journal Reviews

Course: Bio 243: Topics In Molecular And Cellular Biology

Brief Description: Increasingly, short videos on social media are used by scholars to share articles and contribute to discourse, in communication both with other experts in their field and with the general public. For this assignment, each student will pick a recent biology journal article. Using the graphs from the article, each student will create two one-minute videos of themselves explaining the article and its significance, one for a scientific-peer audience and one for an audience of their family and friends. Videos should be captioned.

Split screen of Elsa and Sven from Disney's Frozen

Video Remix in Children and Media Studies

Course: CSHD167 Children and Mass Media

Brief Description: In groups of 3 or 4 students make 5 minute video remixes using a excerpt provided. The goals for the video remix are: 1) To show how race/ethnicity/gender/age have been used to portray otherness, but how they might be portrayed more equitably in children’s media 2)To find visual/aural ways of teaching children about stereotyping in media, 3) To demonstrate how shifts in editing can affect storytelling

Learn more about the Video Remix assignment

Traces of plant life in a rock

Earth and Climate Science Podcast

Course: ECS-15 Mass Extinction

Brief description: In groups of 3-4 students make a 10 minute podcast as a final project. The podcasts are written for a general/non-scientific audience, but they are an in-depth exploration of a technical scientific paper on one of the mass extinctions. The goals for producing podcasts are to research a narrow mass extinction related topic in detail, practice science communication, and have fun.

Learn more about the Mass Extinction podcast assignment

Advice from our collaborators 

My first piece of advice is that it's likely to take a lot longer than you think it will! There are a lot of issues to consider, and many facets to coordinate. Many of the traditional types of assessment methods you've used in the past just won't transfer well to assessing a piece of creative media. That being said, partnering with the DDS in hugely helpful not only with teaching the "technical stuff," but also more broadly in thinking about learning objectives and assessments. - Julie Dobrow, Distinguished Senior Lecturer, Eliot-Pearson Department of Child Study & Human Development

Start planning early. Give students plenty of time in class to get support learning planning their creative project. I don't think the podcasts in my class would have worked if students had to learn how to make a podcast outside of class time. This reduces "content" time, but leads to much better final projects! - Noel Heim, Lecturer, Earth and Climate Sciences

Outside the classroom

We can support faculty outside the classroom to build skills in creative methods for use in their courses or individual research projects. 

Example projects

Inaugural RCD Faculty Workshop Series

The DDS helped Race, Colonialism and Diaspora (RCD) faculty kickoff a new faculty workshop series with a series of short, creative activities to help build community while learning new methods they could take into the classroom.

Half the History

The DDS worked with faculty Senior Lecturer Julie Dobrow and Professor of the Practice Jenn Burton on training graduate students in podcast production and video editing for the Half the History project .

World Peace Foundation podcast series: Disrupting Peace

The DDS supported Research Director and Associate Professor Bridget Conley with the technical resources and space to create her podcast Disrupting Peace.