System Design As A Three-Phase Dual-loop (TPDL) Process: Types of knowledge-applied sources of feedback, and student development as independent learners

Authors

  • Moshe Barak Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Israel

Keywords:

system design, information system, conceptual and procedural knowledge

Abstract

This study aimed at exploring how high school students deal with designing an information system, for example, for a small business or a medical clinic, the extent to which students develop as independent learners while working on their projects, and the factors that help or hinder fostering students’ design skills. The three-phase dual-loop (TPDL) model for system design is proposed, according to which design consists of conceptual design, structural design and detailed design, and includes a human-driven feedback loop and an instrumentationdriven feedback loop. It was found that the design of a real-life system is a complicated task for high school students because it requires the integration of conceptual knowledge, primarily in the phase of defining a system’s objectives and planning its general structure, and procedural knowledge, for example, in the phase of handling the detailed design, implementation and testing. The common situation in schools is that students learn and practice using procedural knowledge, whereas
achieving conceptual knowledge is a long-term process. Therefore, it is essential to engage students in design tasks of increasing complexity from early stages in school in order to enable them to accumulate experience and construct their own knowledge about all phases of system design.

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Published

2010-07-28

How to Cite

BARAK, M. System Design As A Three-Phase Dual-loop (TPDL) Process: Types of knowledge-applied sources of feedback, and student development as independent learners. Design and Technology Education: An International Journal, [S. l.], v. 15, n. 2, p. 32–43, 2010. Disponível em: https://openjournals.ljmu.ac.uk/DATE/article/view/2258. Acesso em: 18 may. 2024.