The paper presents the current picture of the introduction of EDI (Equality, Diversity, Inclusion) into design education curricula in Poland. We focused on design programs taught at eight public art universities. Desk research confirmed EDI-related topics in 51 modules taught on undergraduate first-cycle, postgraduate second-cycle, and unified master’s long-cycle programs. Further interviews with educators allowed us to identify best practices, activities, and challenges in EDI education across various design disciplines. The findings reveal the specifics and outcomes of EDI in the Polish context. We outline a comprehensive overview of educational practices developed by teachers, revealing diverse, multi-level, and often innovative approaches to EDI-related education. It provides rich data and a detailed picture of the characteristics of Polish design education, which could serve as a foundation for developing more systematic national regulations. These regulations could promote the EDI approach more broadly within society and among institutions, enabling more effective collaboration with Academies.
Research and analysis of teaching contents on Design and EDI in the Italian system of Design Education
Raffaella Massacesi;Alessio D'Onofrio;
2025-01-01
Abstract
The paper presents the current picture of the introduction of EDI (Equality, Diversity, Inclusion) into design education curricula in Poland. We focused on design programs taught at eight public art universities. Desk research confirmed EDI-related topics in 51 modules taught on undergraduate first-cycle, postgraduate second-cycle, and unified master’s long-cycle programs. Further interviews with educators allowed us to identify best practices, activities, and challenges in EDI education across various design disciplines. The findings reveal the specifics and outcomes of EDI in the Polish context. We outline a comprehensive overview of educational practices developed by teachers, revealing diverse, multi-level, and often innovative approaches to EDI-related education. It provides rich data and a detailed picture of the characteristics of Polish design education, which could serve as a foundation for developing more systematic national regulations. These regulations could promote the EDI approach more broadly within society and among institutions, enabling more effective collaboration with Academies.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


