Design for reading: an issue of conduct
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.51358/id.v3i1/2.21Keywords:
design for reading, education, didactic and para-didactic materialAbstract
Design, as a field with inter-disciplinary vocation, appraises both the existence of knowledge formative unitsand the assessment of different performance areas. From this perspective, before executing job interventions,
a designer should undertake a responsibility higher than merely knowing his specific instruction guidelines,
i.e., observe, get acquainted to, and participate of knowledge fields which may be different from his own.
However, sometimes market’s structure turns a consistent intervention unattainable, i.e., an intervention
grounded both on his instruction specific guidelines and on the field’s reality, for which his performance is
being needed. At other moments, the designer has a limited knowledge of the field in which he will perform the
intervention, and this may cause the intervention to be impossible and/or contribute to generate social
prejudice. This paper aims to discuss the designer performance in the educational field, analysing its
contribution to the development of didactic and para-didactic material related to reading. We emphasize the
double role of the designer’s skills and information which, sometimes due to an impossibility otherwise to
unawareness, may lead him to the generation of social prejudice and to the lack of informative content.
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Published
2010-09-17
How to Cite
Farbiarz, J. L., & Farbiarz, A. (2010). Design for reading: an issue of conduct. InfoDesign - Journal of Information Design, 3(1/2), 10–15. https://doi.org/10.51358/id.v3i1/2.21
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Articles
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Attribution 3.0 Unported (CC BY 3.0)