Human-centred collaborative design series - session 3
Course description
Human-centred
design (HCD) is a collaborative approach to problem-solving that puts the
people we are designing for at the heart of the process.
Our Human-centred
design series includes four standalone, ½ day sessions that build on each
other. They are designed for leaders, change practitioners and individual
contributors who wish to develop capability in using human-centred design
methods and mindsets.
- Session 1 –
Invite discovery and explore the system with collaborative design
- Session 2 –
Build empathy and define the opportunity with collaborative design
- Session 3 - Generate
ideas and prototype opportunities with collaborative design
- Session 4 - Test
assumptions and map actions with collaborative design
You are welcome
to attend them all, or dip into the topics that interest you most.
Type of course
Workshop
Presenters

Emma Siegertsz
|

Jarrod Siegertsz
|
Who should attend
This workshop is funded
through the Professional Staff Development Fund and is available to
professional staff members only.
It is recommended that you speak with your manager prior to enrolling in this workshop as there are late cancellation fees.
What you will learn
By the end of session
3, participants will be able to:
- Explain the
ideation and prototyping phase and its significance in collaborative design.
- Describe when
various ideation and prototyping principles and practices can be used to in
collaborative settings.
- Facilitate an
ideation and prototyping process to generate ideas then create a tangible
prototype for feedback.
- Describe how
the outputs of ideation and prototyping can be used in others stages of
collaborative design.
Prerequisites / assumed knowledge
Pre-work
While each
workshop is designed to be available as a standalone experience, each session
has an element of pre-work to ensure that participants are able to:
- Define the
concept of collaborative design and its relevance in your context.
- Describe the
human-centred design mindsets and how to cultivate them within diverse
stakeholder groups.
- Explain the
phases of a collaborative design experience how you might tailor it to the
needs of your context.