This lesson contains 10 slides, with interactive quiz and text slides.
Lesson duration is: 15 min
Items in this lesson
From research to specification
Slide 1 - Slide
Analyse activity
A designer undertook research for a project to design a new device for displaying a tablet computer while the user is in the kitchen cooking.
Slide 2 - Slide
Analyse activity
anthropometric data on hands and fingers. Average sizes of hands of people.
people have been asked for their favorite recipes
research has shown that teenagers game 20 hours per week (average)
in the kitchen people cut and chop vegetables, clean, do the dishes
some materials are very scratch resistant (e.g. glass)
Which information is useful for the designer?
Slide 3 - Slide
Useful for designer
Not useful for designer
Size of a hand
Favorite recipes
20 hours online gaming per week
Activities done in kitchen
Scratch resistant materials
Slide 4 - Drag question
Product analysis
A product analysis shows very clear the results of the research. So everything you have found during your investigation
(it's a kind of a summary).
Slide 5 - Slide
Slide 6 - Slide
Slide 7 - Slide
Specification
In the product analysis, you made a summary of all the info you had gathered during the research. The next step is making a specification: what do you want to have in your design?
Not all info is useful for you (or you don't want to have it in your product).
Slide 8 - Slide
Specification
Function:
Materials:
Customer:
Size: 3 x 4 m (student room) or 10 x 6 m (tiny house) or... 2.5 m high
Anthropometric data:
Aesthetics:
Slide 9 - Slide
Do task 3 and 4:
- make a product analysis (check Lesson Up Task 3 for examples) (A3, in Word or PowerPoint)
- make a specification (A4)
Upload the results in Teams (each student does this, even when you work together). Remember: it's for a grade.