School/Faculty/Institute | Faculty of Arts, Design and Architecture | ||||
Course Code | ARC 472 | ||||
Course Title in English | Understanding Architecture Through Details | ||||
Course Title in Turkish | Mimarlığı Detay Üzerinden Anlamak | ||||
Language of Instruction | EN | ||||
Type of Course | Flipped Classroom | ||||
Level of Course | Advanced | ||||
Semester | Spring | ||||
Contact Hours per Week |
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Estimated Student Workload | 126 hours per semester | ||||
Number of Credits | 5 ECTS | ||||
Grading Mode | Standard Letter Grade | ||||
Pre-requisites |
ARC 202 - Architectural Design IV | INT 202 - Interior Design II |
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Expected Prior Knowledge | 4 semesters of design studio | ||||
Co-requisites | None | ||||
Registration Restrictions | Only Undergraduate Students | ||||
Overall Educational Objective | To learn to recognize the relationship between design idea and a fine resolved detail development process and the realization. | ||||
Course Description | This elective course aims to encourage students to understand architecture through reading the designed details. Focusing on the translation methodologies and the strategies of a conceptual design to a fine resolved project will be the core of the course. | ||||
Course Description in Turkish | Bu seçmeli ders, öğrencilerin mimarlığı tasarlanmış olan detayları üzerinden okuyarak anlama becerisini hedefler. Tercüme metodolojilerine ve kavramsal bir tasarım fikrinin iyi çözülmüş bir projeye dönüşme stratejilerine odaklanmak dersin ana odağıdır. |
Course Learning Outcomes and CompetencesUpon successful completion of the course, the learner is expected to be able to:1) look for the relationship between a specific detail and the design idea; 2) read the translation methodologies and the strategies of a conceptual design to a fine resolved project; 3) read and analyze a situated and represented detail; 4) discern selection and use of materials for a specific situation in an architectural solution; 5) understand the impact of materials on architectural design and a detail resolution. |
Program Learning Outcomes/Course Learning Outcomes | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1) Thorough knowledge of the major concepts, theoretical perspectives, empirical findings, and historical trends in psychology. | |||||
2) Understanding of and ability to apply essential research methods in psychology, including research design, data analysis, and data interpretation. | |||||
3) Competence to use critical and creative thinking, skeptical inquiry and a scientific approach to solving problems related to behavior and mental processes. | |||||
4) Understanding and ability to apply psychological principles, skills and values in personal, social, and organizational contexts. | |||||
5) Ability to weigh evidence, to tolerate ambiguity, and to reflect other values that underpin psychology as a discipline. | |||||
6) Internalization and dissemination of professional ethical standards. | |||||
7) Demonstration of competence in information technologies, and the ability to use computer and other technologies for purposes related to the pursuit of knowledge in psychology and the broader social sciences. | |||||
8) Skills to communicate the knowledge of psychological science effectively, in a variety of formats, in both Turkish and in English (in English, at least CEFR B2 level). | |||||
9) Recognition, understanding, and respect for the complexity of sociocultural and international diversity. | |||||
10) Recognition for the need for, and the skills to pursue, lifelong learning, inquiry, and self-improvement. | |||||
11) Ability to formulate critical hypotheses based on psychological theory and literature, and design studies to test those hypotheses. | |||||
12) Ability to acquire knowledge independently, and to plan one’s own learning. | |||||
13) Demonstration of advanced competence in the clarity and composition of written work and presentations. |
N None | S Supportive | H Highly Related |
Program Outcomes and Competences | Level | Assessed by | |
1) | Thorough knowledge of the major concepts, theoretical perspectives, empirical findings, and historical trends in psychology. | N | |
2) | Understanding of and ability to apply essential research methods in psychology, including research design, data analysis, and data interpretation. | N | |
3) | Competence to use critical and creative thinking, skeptical inquiry and a scientific approach to solving problems related to behavior and mental processes. | H | Exam,HW,Participation |
4) | Understanding and ability to apply psychological principles, skills and values in personal, social, and organizational contexts. | N | |
5) | Ability to weigh evidence, to tolerate ambiguity, and to reflect other values that underpin psychology as a discipline. | N | |
6) | Internalization and dissemination of professional ethical standards. | N | |
7) | Demonstration of competence in information technologies, and the ability to use computer and other technologies for purposes related to the pursuit of knowledge in psychology and the broader social sciences. | N | |
8) | Skills to communicate the knowledge of psychological science effectively, in a variety of formats, in both Turkish and in English (in English, at least CEFR B2 level). | N | |
9) | Recognition, understanding, and respect for the complexity of sociocultural and international diversity. | S | Participation |
10) | Recognition for the need for, and the skills to pursue, lifelong learning, inquiry, and self-improvement. | S | HW,Participation |
11) | Ability to formulate critical hypotheses based on psychological theory and literature, and design studies to test those hypotheses. | N | |
12) | Ability to acquire knowledge independently, and to plan one’s own learning. | S | Exam,HW |
13) | Demonstration of advanced competence in the clarity and composition of written work and presentations. | H | Exam,HW |
Prepared by and Date | , June 2022 |
Course Coordinator | AKTS1 |
Semester | Spring |
Name of Instructor | Öğr. Gör. ASLI ŞENER |
Week | Subject |
1) | Introduction to the course and the content The design idea and the formation of details |
2) | Representation of the design idea and the details |
3) | Materiality, technical and formal Issues |
4) | How to read a project, an example |
5) | Reading and analyzing two specific projects |
6) | Reading and analyzing two specific projects |
7) | Workshop |
8) | Reading and analyzing two specific projects |
9) | Reading and analyzing two specific projects |
10) | Reading and analyzing two specific projects |
11) | Reading and analyzing two specific projects |
12) | Reading and analyzing two specific projects |
13) | Reading and analyzing two specific projects |
14) | Reading and analyzing two specific projects / Conclusions |
15) | Final Assessment Period |
16) | Final Assessment Period |
Required/Recommended Readings | Recommended Reading: Weber, D.M. (1991) Beyond Bolts: Architectural Details, Construction, Meaning. Thesis M. Arch, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dept. of Architecture. Other readings correspondent to weekly works will be published via Blackboard. | ||||||||||||
Teaching Methods | After the introduction and general discussions on the generation of the detail and the ways to understand the architecture through details in four weeks, by the investigation of the chosen projects students are expected to search the relation between the design idea and the designed / constructed details and make a critical interpretation on this relationship every week for ten weeks. At the end of the semester each student is expected to submit a self-chosen project and make the same research and interpretation with the same methodology made through the semester. | ||||||||||||
Homework and Projects | 14 weeks of pre-class work, 1 presentation, 1 submission | ||||||||||||
Laboratory Work | no | ||||||||||||
Computer Use | yes | ||||||||||||
Other Activities | - | ||||||||||||
Assessment Methods |
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Course Administration |
koknarb@mef.edu.tr 514 Office: Burcu Serdar Köknar. Block A, Floor5, 514 Email: koknarb@mef.edu.tr Students are expected to attend %80 of the classes and should submit the works on time. Third party submissions are not accepted. Academic Dishonesty and Plagiarism: YÖK Disciplinary Regulation. |
Activity | No/Weeks | Hours | Calculation | ||||
No/Weeks per Semester | Preparing for the Activity | Spent in the Activity Itself | Completing the Activity Requirements | ||||
Course Hours | 14 | 1 | 3 | 1 | 70 | ||
Homework Assignments | 14 | 4 | 56 | ||||
Total Workload | 126 | ||||||
Total Workload/25 | 5.0 | ||||||
ECTS | 5 |