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A group of faculty at Penn State's Department of Landscape Architecture observed that the traditional master/apprentice
model of studio instruction fosters greater student dependence on faculty for decision-making guidance than the
faculty considers desirable. They contend that this traditional model promotes a studio dynamic that encourages students
to look to the professor for design ideas and wait for faculty approval before making design decisions. The faculty
considered this decision-making dependency to be in conflict with the need for students to develop the critical-thinking
skills required to address the complex and ill-structured problems that are common in architecture and landscape
architecture. In response to their concern this faculty team developed a studio teaching method they termed "independent
design decision-making." They speculated that by transferring the responsibility for design decisions from professor
to the student, students could improve their critical thinking and gain confidence in design decision-making. The
faculty conceived a set of strategies to implement in a 3rd year team-taught site planning and design studio that presents
a range of complex design issues and scales. In collaboration with Penn State's Schreyer Institute for Teaching
Excellence, the faculty researchers developed a 2-year comparative study to test this new teaching method in the same
design studio with two consecutive student groups-evaluating the strategies implemented in the first year, refining methods,
then applying and re-evaluating the results in the next year's class. These new strategies included ways students
receive information to inspire their designs ("input strategies") and ways to receive critique on their design ideas ("feedback
strategies"). Two evaluation instruments were chosen to assess this method of studio teaching: 1) the Group
Embedded Figures Test (GEFT), and 2) Student Assessment of Learning Gains (SALG). This paper presents this teaching/
learning method and reports on the results of the comparative study.
Keywords : Critical Thinking, Studio Pedagogy, Evaluation Of Student Learning, Case Study This is
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