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Establishing my Learning Contract in Fig.1
through the use of a radiant map, I have clarified the key areas I want
to change and which are most important in my design practice. After
exploration by using further maps I have drawn an integrated map shown
in Fig.2. This shows the inter-relationship between the sub-issues and
is more concerned with specifics within the areas.
From these two maps it is clear that I have
five major themes that all my objectives for this course can be
categorised within. Five colours symbolise them and their meanings are
below:
Red – Passion and
motivation
Blue – Increasing scope of my design
practice
Orange – Practical applications
Green – Reflection on my professional
self
Purple – Corporate design development
All five areas are extremely important to my
design practice and have to be considered as part of the whole and not
in isolation. They constitute the direction I am heading in my career
in the company, and more importantly my personal professional
development.
Each area of the map has a key relationship
that largely summarises it. By looking at these relationships I have
distilled the connected elements into statements describing my problem
space. These are my universals listed below. Their colour indicates the
initial area of the integrated map from where they came and are not
just about business project outcomes but also about personal
capabilities and are definitions of intended outcomes.
Coach, inspire,
empowerment, motivation, satisfying enjoyable results, greater design
standards ambition
Cross-discipline design
practitioner, networker, asset to any business
Design evaluator, quality
control, efficient working practice, web standards, educating business
Reflective practice knowledge,
open-minded, conscientious, professional attitude, enjoys improved
working method
Educate clients, tailored
solutions, challenge preconceptions of online products, influences key
decision makers.
Mental Models
From the five universals I have created three
mental models. The universals and the mental models only deal with the
direction that we are developing in and not the processes we use. The
mental models enable us to see the problem space described by the
universals.
Mental Model 1. Illustrating
corporate design development
Educate clients, tailored
solutions, challenge preconceptions of online products, influences key
decision makers.

This mental model is the embodiment of
what many people do not think about when talking about online design
(here a web page displayed on a mobile phone).
Therefore this model presents the
notion that preconceptions can be seen as a hindrance to the
development of potential ideas.
Mental Model 2. Illustrating
reflection on professional self
Reflective practice knowledge,
open-minded, conscientious, professional attitude, enjoys improved
working method
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