Design Thinking in the Elementary School Classroom (2024)

Posted June 16, 2021 by EdTech Classroom9 Comments on Design Thinking in the Elementary SchoolClassroomdesign thinking

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Design Thinking in the Elementary School Classroom (1)

Design thinking is a process for creative problem-solving.

More specifically, design thinking is a problem-solving process that involves five key steps: empathize, define, ideate, prototype, and test. Design thinking at its very core is human-centered.

Design thinking is used to help people innovate. Many organizations around the world use design thinking for that exact reason: to spark innovation.

Most notably, IDEO, a design and consulting firm that has created some of the world’s most revolutionary products, is a pioneer of the design thinking process. IDEO is often credited with inventing the term “design thinking.”

Other organizations, too, use this five-step process as a way to solve problems and create innovative solutions.

You might be familiar with the Stanford d.school – Stanford University’s design institute – which is another example of a leading organization that uses design thinking and provides professional development opportunities.

David Kelley, founder of both IDEO and the Stanford d.school, has summarized design thinking by saying:

“What we, as design thinkers, have, is this creative confidence that, when given a difficult problem, we have a methodology that enables us to come up with a solution that nobody has before.”
One reason I mention the d.school is that they have a K12 Lab, which according to their website, “aims to obliterate opportunity gaps in elementary and secondary education by designing new, more equitable models and sharing design approaches with students + educators.”

How is Design Thinking Used in Education?

Much like how design thinking is used in companies and organizations, design thinking is also used in the classroom. Teachers are so creative – we know this and preach this on my blog – and teachers have noted a number of educational benefits to using the design thinking process in the classroom.

Design Thinking in the Elementary School Classroom (2)

Possible Benefits

Design thinking involves communicating and defining a problem. Oftentimes, design thinking requires students to conduct interviews and practice empathy, skills that can be difficult for young children.

Design thinking, of course, as we have addressed already is a problem-solving approach that helps students practice their creativity.

And, design thinking can teach children how to understand others, the needs of others, and their own place in the world as well.

Possible Drawbacks

Despite these possible benefits, there are a few drawbacks that come to mind when implementing design thinking in the classroom.

First, many teachers – at least in progressive education – often note that they are asked to follow a new perspective, new tool, or new approach every few years. If design thinking is hot right now, it’ll be inquiry-based learning next, and so on.

The reality is that it can be difficult to keep track and keep up. If teachers are not trained or provided proper support, it can be tricky to implement design thinking in the classroom, especially with our youngest learners.

Lastly, for teachers who are excited and eager to explore design thinking, there might be some resistance from schools. Design thinking is sometimes considered “non-traditional,” which provides a setback for teachers who do not have the resources or flexibility.

Design Thinking Project Example

Now that we have discussed design thinking and its role in K-12 education, I’m going to walk us through an example of a design thinking project I recently did with 2nd grade students.

Over the course of 4 weeks, I worked with 2nd grade students on a design thinking project that I adapted from the Stanford d.school. The original project, titled “The Gift-Giving Project,” was designed to last about 90 minutes.

Instead, I extended and deepened this project, as well as embedded 2nd grade standards from a variety of subject areas. During our project unit, I taught these students for 1 hour a day for 4 weeks, meaning that the total project time was around 20 or so hours.

The purpose of this project was to help students understand and practice empathy. Our essential question was: How can we design a useful and meaningful gift for a family member?

Design Thinking in the Elementary School Classroom (3)

Stage 1: Empathize

The first stage of the design thinking process is: Empathy.

In design thinking, empathy is important because it allows designers to develop a deep understanding of the problems that the people you are designing for might face. In order to design a solution, we need to have a deep understanding of not only the problem, but also the people, their environment, and their role within that environment.

Design Thinking in the Elementary School Classroom (4)

Our Project:

Because our project really focused on empathy, this section is longer than the others: we spent an entire week focusing on empathy. On our first day of class, students focused on developing a firm understanding of the first stage of the design thinking process: empathy.

Within our larger essential question for the entire project, students had an essential question of the day: What is empathy? Why is it important to care about someone else’s point of view?

During their study of empathy, students read You, Me, and Empathy by Jayneen Sanders. We discussed themes like regulating emotions, noticing similarities and differences between people, and bullying.

Students also learned the expression, “Walk a mile in someone else’s shoes,” and then developed their own definition of empathy:

Empathy means we can understand and share the feelings of another person.

Once students had developed a definition of empathy, we were able to begin our project. For our second class, we tried to answer the questions: How do we conduct interviews? How can we be active listeners?

In other words, we chose to hone in on interviewing as a strategy to develop empathy and gain understanding about others. We watched videos about how to conduct an interview – and videos about what NOT to do.

These first two classes were filled with a lot of front-loading. If I were to do this project again next year, I would consider making these first two classes more hands-on.

Next, students were introduced to their Design Journals, a small booklet where they would track and document their design process. Students put together a list of interview questions – some created by me, others created by them – that they would need to ask their family members in order to gain empathy.

We started off by practicing interviewing in partner pairs in class. We practiced being active listeners and taking notes during an interview. Students took turns and conducted about 15min long interviews each.

After students felt prepared, they took their interview questions home and interviewed their family members.

Define

The second stage of the design thinking process is: Define.

The Define stage is crucial. During this stage, students develop a meaningful and actionable problem statement. This problem statement is used to guide students to figure out what problem they are attempting to solve. With elementary students, I’ve found that the Define stage can be tricky at first. This stage requires students to summarize and synthesize their learning from the Empathy stage.

Design Thinking in the Elementary School Classroom (5)

Our Project:

After students conducted their interviews at home, they returned to school with their Design Journals, ready to start building. What students didn’t realize, however, was that they needed to define the problem before they could start designing, much less building.

With 2nd graders, we used a framework to help students write a problem statement. Our framework said:

My family member feels loved when ____. My family member feels appreciated when ____. My family member needs help with ____.

Students who took their time on the Define stage consequently spent more time empathizing and synthesizing their learning from the interviews. Students who rushed through this stage later discovered that they needed to refine their designs to meet the needs of their family members, rather than the needs of themselves. This was a profound realization for students – and one that stands out to me as a highlight of this project.

Once students mastered the Define stage, they were able to truly experience their definition of empathy.

Ideate

The third stage, Ideate, is all about “thinking outside of the box.” During this stage, students will brainstorm solutions to the problem they defined in the previous stage. In many cases, ideating looks like your typical brainstorming session. In fact, this is the stage that is often associated with the sticky note-style brainstorming you see in design thinking.

Design Thinking in the Elementary School Classroom (6)

Our Project

In our project, we created some structure around the ideation process, in an attempt to avoid overwhelming students with too much choice. In students’ Design Journals, they had a piece of paper split into three sections, labeled Gift 1, Gift 2, and Gift 3. Students had about 7 minutes or so to create each gift design.

As students were brainstorming, I noticed a pattern, which I alluded to in the previous stage:

Many students brainstormed designs that didn’t match their problem statements. In fact, many students brainstormed designs that they wanted, rather than what their family members wanted.

With this realization, I decided I needed to re-teach this idea, and help students to shift their mindset to focus on the person who would be receiving the design.

To help with this, we watched a video from other kid inventors who created designs to help other people. Some of their designs included: “shovel shoes” to help their dad shovel snow in the winter, and even a “back washer” to help someone with a broken arm wash their back in the shower.

In watching this video, students began to realize that they could still create exciting and interesting inventions, even if those inventions served other people.

Prototype

During the Prototype stage, students begin building their ideas. This stage focuses on identifying and building the best solution for the problem or need. Oftentimes, engineers and designers use scaled-down versions of a product when creating their prototypes. For example, they might use inexpensive materials, build smaller models, or even create just one specific feature within that product or solution.

Design Thinking in the Elementary School Classroom (7)

Our Project

In our project, students used recyclable materials – from cereal boxes to paper towel tubes to plastic water bottles – to build their prototypes. Before students could begin building, however, they had to get their designs approved by the teacher.

The reason I wanted students to have their designs approved is because I wanted to make sure they fully grasped the concept of identifying and building a solution to a need expressed by their family members.

Students spent about 3 class periods building their prototypes. Early finishers worked with other students in the class to help them build their designs. I loved seeing students collaborate, especially during this school year in which collaboration was made difficult.

Test

The final stage of the design thinking process is: Test.

And while this is technically the final stage, it is important to note that design thinking is iterative, meaning that the process is never really over. Designers can continue to redefine, recreate, rebuild, redesign, and refine their work.

Design Thinking in the Elementary School Classroom (8)

Our Project

For our project, testing took form in a few different ways.

First, students tested their own designs by writing about them. 2nd graders practiced their writing skills by writing about their inventions. In doing so, students also practiced reflection.

Students were tasked with: (1) coming up with a name for their invention, (2) addressing who their gift was created for, (3) answering the question: how does your gift help them?, and (4) answering the question: how does your gift work?

In this writing assignment, students were able to meet 2nd grade writing standards, as well as reflect on their work over the past 3 weeks.

Once students finished their writing, they then used what they wrote as a script for our class video. Students took turns filming themselves talking about their inventions, defining the needs of their family members, and sharing how their invention solves that problem. In doing so, students practiced their presentation skills.

This video, however, didn’t stop there.

We also had students talk about the process because as a teacher, I try to emphasize the importance of process over product. Although design thinking in the classroom typically leads to the creation of a final product, I wanted students to understand and value the process that led them there.

Students wrote their own script to talk about the design thinking process, including all five stages, and some of their key learnings about empathy and reflection.

Fast forward to the end of our project, students took home their creations to share with their family members and receive feedback for the Test stage.

Student Project Examples

Now that we have covered the stages of the design thinking process, I wanted to share a few student projects with you. I wish I had time to share each and every project because they are all truly unique and stand out in their own ways:

  • The Encourage-O-Meter: This 2nd grader noticed her grown-up needs an extra boost and some words of encouragement when she feels down. The Encourage-O-Meter is a robot that spits out compliments on small slips of paper when her mom needs a hand.
  • The Time Saver: This 2nd grader learned that her grown-up struggles with finding enough time in the day to get all their tasks done. She created The Time Saver as a solution: a clock with arms that go back in time when you need an extra hour.
  • The Phone Chamber: This 2nd grader learned that his grown-up has a hard time putting their phone down, when there are too many notifications and items to keep track of throughout the day. The Phone Chamber is almost like mousetrap for the phone. When they need a screen break, they can put the phone inside, and of course, there is a peep hole to check in case of emergencies.

Thank You

I really loved seeing these project ideas. I loved seeing how students developed a greater understanding of empathy and how they were able to shift their thinking from me to you. Above all, I enjoyed seeing students sparkle and light up when they created inventions they felt truly proud of.

While this project specifically might not work for your students, I hope it gives you a better idea on how to implement design thinking in your classroom. In today’s post we covered: what design thinking is, how design thinking is used in education, and some examples of what design thinking can look like at all five project stages.

If you end up trying out design thinking in your classroom, let me know how it goes! You can email me at myedtechclassroom@gmail.com, DM me on Instagram @edtechclass, or leave a comment down below.

Additional Resources

In doing research for this blog post / podcast, I found inspiration from the following resources:

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Design Thinking in the Elementary School Classroom (9)

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Design Thinking in the Elementary School Classroom (2024)

FAQs

What is design thinking for elementary students? ›

Design thinking is an approach to learning that includes considering real-world problems, research, analysis, conceiving original ideas, lots of experimentation, and sometimes building things by hand.

How would you apply design thinking for your students to solve a particular problem? ›

The first step of design thinking is establishing the problem. It can be a small problem that applies only to your students, or a large-scale problem like immigration or the environment. Students can get involved in determining the problem they will solve. For example, maybe the problem will be related to the school.

What are the 5 tools to help you implement design thinking in education? ›

Rinse, repeat. One of the most accepted Design Thinking models is that of the Stanford d. school, and its five steps of empathy, define, ideate, prototype, and test.

What is design thinking process with example? ›

Design thinking is a non-linear, iterative process that teams use to understand users, challenge assumptions, redefine problems and create innovative solutions to prototype and test. Involving five phases—Empathize, Define, Ideate, Prototype and Test—it is most useful to tackle problems that are ill-defined or unknown.

How do you introduce design thinking to a child? ›

The Design Process, for Kids
  1. Empathize. For many 8-year-olds, empathy is a difficult concept. ...
  2. Define. This is by far the most difficult step to implement with kids. ...
  3. Ideate. Brainstorming! ...
  4. Prototype & Test. Now comes the really fun part! ...
  5. Sharing. The final step in the d.
15 Jul 2013

Why is it important to plan the process of designing a classroom? ›

If the classroom is not well planned and set up for student success, it can be very difficult to determine the use of different areas. This not only can cause confusion for students, substitutes, and visitors, but it also makes it harder for students to learn and teachers to teach.

What are the teachers questions or comments about design thinking? ›

Frequently Asked Questions About Design Thinking
  • What is design thinking? ...
  • How do you find time in your schedule to use design thinking? ...
  • What do I do if I don't have the technology? ...
  • How do I tie the standards into a design thinking project? ...
  • Is design thinking something you use all the time?
30 Mar 2016

How design thinking can benefit to you in teaching and learning? ›

Design thinking helps you in defining problems and constructing actionable questions and answers.It gives you the opportunity to generate and visualize ideas using creative processes. It also stresses imagination, meaning it helps you in generating a lot of ideas.

How design thinking plays an important role in education sector? ›

In education, design thinking helps the students to understand that they can create their own future by borrowing frameworks from other areas. This enables them to design their own experiences and participation. Design thinking also helps in pedagogy.

What is the educational value of the design thinking skills? ›

At the core of design thinking is empathy, getting to know and understand the user. Empathy is something that everyone should have, and by teaching it through design thinking, we can develop empathy while not even realizing it. Design thinking encourages us to be creative and solve problems in new ways!

What is the goal of design thinking? ›

Design thinking is a process for solving problems by prioritizing the consumer's needs above all else. It relies on observing, with empathy, how people interact with their environments, and employs an iterative, hands-on approach to creating innovative solutions.

What are the limitations of design thinking strategy? ›

If you are thinking of adopting Design Thinking for a project within your company, you should consider some of its limitations first: Design Thinking projects usually have a medium-long duration (generally 7/8 months), a lighter version can be adopted for limited purposes (such as the generation of ideas only)

What is design thinking in one word? ›

Design thinking is a “human-centered approach to innovation that puts the observation and discovery of often highly nuanced, even tacit, human needs right at the forefront of the innovation process.” (Managing By Design) In other words, it's a process that's all about the customer or user experience.

What are the key characteristics of design thinking? ›

Some of the essential characteristics of design thinking include empathy, collaboration, questioning, creativity, exploration, experimentation, and continuous improvement.

What are design thinking skills? ›

What Is Design Thinking? Design thinking is an approach to problem-solving in which the practitioner seeks to understand a potential product or service's end user, including their goals, challenges, and aspirations. They then use that knowledge to conceive solutions.

What are the 3 most important elements of design thinking? ›

The next time you need to solve a problem, you can grow your team's creative capacity by focusing on three core design thinking principles, or the 3 E's: empathy, expansive thinking, and experimentation.

What are some common ways design thinking is used? ›

5 ways to use Design Thinking in your daily routine
  • Visualize Your Problem. Whether you're solving critical global problems or tackling micro-level projects, visualization reveals key themes and patterns. ...
  • Challenge Common Assumptions. ...
  • Reverse Your Thinking. ...
  • Empathize With Your Audience. ...
  • Embrace Risk and Failure.
19 Nov 2015

What is the starting point of design thinking? ›

The first step in design thinking is to understand the problem you are trying to solve before searching for solutions. Sometimes, the problem you need to address is not the one you originally set out to tackle.

What makes a good classroom design? ›

There are many elements to consider when designing a classroom, but three very important ones are the effects of furniture arrangement, the opportunities activity centers bring, and the importance of a literature center. Furniture arrangement in the classroom has a great effect on student behavior.

How does classroom design affect student learning? ›

Flexible classroom designs allow learners to make choices, experiment with learning techniques, and ultimately discover how they learn best. A flexible classroom layout also supplies teachers with a greater capacity to effectively respond to different students' learning needs.

How will you design your classroom to create an appropriate and effective learning environment? ›

Here are 10 specific strategies for developing the optimal classroom climate and culture.
  1. Address Student Needs. ...
  2. Create a Sense of Order. ...
  3. Greet Students at the Door Every Day. ...
  4. Let Students Get to Know You. ...
  5. Get to Know Your Students. ...
  6. Avoid Rewarding to Control. ...
  7. Avoid Judging. ...
  8. Employ Class-Building Games and Activities.
29 Nov 2016

What questions should I ask for design thinking? ›

Here are some questions IT leaders should ask before pursuing design thinking:
  • What's the impetus for exploring design thinking? ...
  • How will we define design thinking? ...
  • Can our organization embrace rapid testing, failure, and course correction? ...
  • Will your IT culture support the design thinking mindset?
11 Oct 2018

What are the challenges of design thinking? ›

Design Thinking challenges
  • Failure to master the Design Thinking process. Businesses have a low success rate with implementing new processes, often because people are resistant to change. ...
  • Getting discouraged by ideation and experimentation. ...
  • Seeing Design Thinking as a linear process. ...
  • Becoming too attached to your prototype.

What happens when students embrace design thinking? ›

In design thinking, students might be hacking a system, solving a problem, engineering a solution, tinkering, tweaking a process, testing ideas, gathering data or dreaming up new ideas. In the process, they learn to value the creative mindsets of everyone around them. They learn the power of creative constraint.

What are the advantages of using design thinking? ›

What Are the Benefits of Design Thinking?
  • Creates innovative solutions. ...
  • Expands design thinkers' knowledge. ...
  • Foresees new problems. ...
  • Prioritizes the clients' needs.
2 Nov 2021

What is the outcome of design thinking? ›

Design thinking, when done well, yields actionable results, no matter the industry. By enlisting design thinking, organizations can not only address everyday business challenges but also gain a measurable edge in today's competitive market.

What are the importance of learning design? ›

Using a learning design model is crucial because it keeps you focused, and it provides the necessary steps to provide good quality instruction from the beginning of the process, through the development, design, implementation, and finally when you evaluate the project overall.

What is thinking process in education? ›

Thinking validates existing knowledge and enables individuals to create new knowledge and to build ideas and make connections between them. It entails reasoning and inquiry together with processing and evaluating information. It enables the exploration of perceptions and possibilities.

What is the most important skill of a design thinking leader? ›

One of the most important attributes of a Design Thinking Leader is inventiveness. The more imaginative the leader, the more intrigued the group is in creating new products.

Why is design thinking a good approach to social problems? ›

By working closely with the clients and consumers, design thinking allows high-impact solutions to social problems to bubble up from below rather than being imposed from the top.

How can design thinking be implemented in classroom? ›

Empathize: Give students an opportunity to design for each other. Empathy is a key part of design thinking, but cultivating this skill in children can be challenging. It's important to give students a mixture of opportunities allowing them to create for themselves and for others.

What are the 5 stages of design thinking? ›

The short form of the design thinking process can be articulated in five steps or phases: empathize, define, ideate, prototype and test. Let's briefly explore each of these phases in relation to a practical design process.

What is brainstorming in design thinking? ›

Brainstorming is a method design teams use to generate ideas to solve clearly defined design problems. In controlled conditions and a free-thinking environment, teams approach a problem by such means as “How Might We” questions. They produce a vast array of ideas and draw links between them to find potential solutions.

Why does design thinking fail? ›

Most corporate-level design initiatives fail because they are so process-driven. They teach their organizations how to follow steps and how to complete tasks in certain order. Eager to show they're learning, employees pursue successful completion of these new steps and tasks as evidence of their progress.

Does design thinking actually work? ›

Design Thinking is a method to help accelerate innovation. There is a clear indication that it impacts revenue and success of organisations that implement it internally. Design Thinking does actually work but for an organisation to be truly innovative it is only one piece of the corporate innovation puzzle.

What is the opposite of design thinking? ›

Design thinking is the opposite of inclusive design.

What is design thinking in early childhood education? ›

Design thinking generally refers to a “solution-based” technique used to solve problems. A design process puts design thinking into action, as preschoolers develop into deeper thinkers and doers (Wise 2016), learning to generate and develop their own ideas in meaningful, purposeful ways.

What is design thinking for students? ›

Design Thinking is part of the broader project-based learning educational model. It uses a creative, systematic approach to teach problem-solving. Students progress through the stages of Discovery, Ideation, Experimentation, and Evolution in search of innovative solutions to vexing problems.

How do you introduce design thinking to a child? ›

The Design Process, for Kids
  1. Empathize. For many 8-year-olds, empathy is a difficult concept. ...
  2. Define. This is by far the most difficult step to implement with kids. ...
  3. Ideate. Brainstorming! ...
  4. Prototype & Test. Now comes the really fun part! ...
  5. Sharing. The final step in the d.
15 Jul 2013

Why is it important to study design thinking in education? ›

Students acquiring design thinking skills are able to identify and develop innovative and creative solutions to problems as and when they face them. Students transform as optimistic, empathetic, and smart working members of the society who can solve complex challenges of the coming future.

What is the significance of design thinking in teaching? ›

In a nutshell, design thinking is a way to define and solve tough challenges. It focuses heavily on rapid prototype solutions and learning from mistakes. In education, a design thinking curriculum immerses students and teachers (i.e., the designers) in real-world problem solving.

Who designed instructional thinking of teaching? ›

Robert Gagné's work has been the foundation of instructional design since the beginning of the 1960s when he conducted research and developed training materials for the military. Among the first to coin the term "instructional design", Gagné developed some of the earliest instructional design models and ideas.

What is the benefit of design thinking? ›

With design thinking skills comes the ability to develop product innovations that add value to customers' lives and drive revenue for your firm. Because design thinking is so user-centric, innovative products, by definition, add value to customers' lives.

What is design thinking and why is it important? ›

Design Thinking is a strategy for creative problem solving by prioritizing customers' requirements above everything else. It helps to engage a person in several opportunities like experimenting and creating a prototype model, gathering feedback from customers and redesigning the product using innovative solutions.

How do you use design thinking in everyday life? ›

5 ways to use Design Thinking in your daily routine
  1. Visualize Your Problem. Whether you're solving critical global problems or tackling micro-level projects, visualization reveals key themes and patterns. ...
  2. Challenge Common Assumptions. ...
  3. Reverse Your Thinking. ...
  4. Empathize With Your Audience. ...
  5. Embrace Risk and Failure.
19 Nov 2015

What can a teacher do to support children's creativity? ›

Develop your students' creativity in the classroom
  • Create a compassionate, accepting environment. ...
  • Be present with students' ideas. ...
  • Encourage autonomy. ...
  • Re-word assignments to promote creative thinking. ...
  • Give students direct feedback on their creativity. ...
  • Help students know when it's appropriate to be creative.
17 Dec 2018

How can I improve my child's thinking skills? ›

5 easy ways to increase your child's critical thinking skills
  1. Inculcate reading habits. Reading is one of teh best ways to develop critical thinking skills. ...
  2. Encourage questions. If your child loves asking questions, you should encourage it. ...
  3. Solving problems. ...
  4. Give responsibility. ...
  5. Playing is the best learning.
22 Mar 2020

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