A technique for teaching interior design lighting at the introductory level is described including the development of instructional objectives, a student project, and the analysis of the assigned course project. The objective of this teaching method was to focus on coordinating aesthetic and environment/behavior criteria, using an architectural programming technique.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
References
1.
BerneckerC.A. (1983. November). Instructional objectives for lighting education within an architectural engineering curriculum Lighting Design & Application, 23–32.
2.
EaganM.D. (1983). Concepts in architectural lighting. New York : McGraw Hill.
3.
HarrisonJ. & SarreP. (1975). Personal construct theory in the measurement of environmental images: Applications. Environment and Behavior, 7, 3–58.
4.
HarrisonJ. & SarreP. (1976). Personal construct theory, the repertory grid, and environmental cognition. In MooreG.T. and GolledgeR.G. (Eds.), Environmental Knowing: Theories, Research, and Methods, (pp. 375–84). Stroudsburg, PA : Dowden. Hutchinson and Ross.
5.
KaufmanJ.E. & HaynesH. (Eds). (1981). lES lighting handbook: Student reference. New York : The Illuminating Engineering Society of North America.
6.
MooreG.T. (1979). Knowing about environmental knowing: The current state of theory and research on environmental cognition. Environment and Behavior, 11(1). 33–70.
7.
PenaW. (1977) Problem seeking: An architectural programming primer. Boston, MA : Cahners Books International, Inc.
8.
Rey–BarreauJ.A. (1983). A methodology for teaching interior illumination. Journal of Interior Design Education and Research, 9(1), 43–45.
9.
ZeiselJ. (1984). Inquiry by design: Tools for environment–behavior research. New York : Cambridge University Press.