STAR-POST (Art) January 2019 Jan. 2019 | Page 50

Prime Time for Change Key Learning Points from Priming the Art Classroom Ms. Lim Jia Ning Michelle Art and Literature Teacher Ahmad Ibrahim Secondary School Michelle was one of the participants for the Critical Inquiry Project: Priming the Art Classroom Networked Learning Community (NLC). In this article, she shares her key takeaways from her 10-month-long journey with priming. WHY? WHAT IF…? Question Default States A fter attending the workshop conducted by the Design Incubation Centre (DIC) of the National University of Singapore, I tried my hand at using priming strategies and design thinking to tackle various classroom issues such as improving student safety and student engagement, as well as growing students’ sense of ownership to their learning spaces. Although the problems were unique, the underlying approach to finding solutions turned out to be similar: to question the default states in our classroom. The way that things have always been done may not necessarily be the best or only way to do it. Thus, looking at our familiar environment while asking ourselves, “Why” and “What if” was a way to shake off preconceived notions of how things should be, and start to imagine how things could be. I enjoyed how doing so reframed problems into opportunities for innovation, as it generated excitement for the possibilities that were to be shaped. Yet questioning status quo was only the beginning of the process. The next step was to derive solutions by seeking inspiration from various sources. How I used a priming strategy card as an inspiration for generating student conversations about safety when they step into the Art classroom. DOES THIS APPLY? Ideate Systematically During the workshop with DIC, we were introduced to priming strategy cards. It was a set of 33 cards that contained various angles from which one might approach a problem. Each card contained a generic suggestion, such as “Scatter cues in the environment to reinforce commitment to a specific goal”, “Create the impression of being surveyed on” and “Use colour appropriately as a stimulus”. In considering any given problem, one could cycle through the set of cards and choose strategies that seem related to the problem, and use them as starting points for devising possible solutions. Such a tool was useful as one could focus on adapting strategies to the problem, rather than re-invent the wheel on how to approach a problem. WHAT HAVE OTHERS DONE OR SAID? Read for Inspiration The literature that this NLC exposed us to was also eye- opening. Books such as Nudge by Richard Thaler and Cass Sunstein helped us to understand key concepts behind why 50 51