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The Design Process

The Design Process. What is SACE going on about? Product and Major Project = same thing. The First Step: Investigating. Design Brief - Statement of intent and justification for your Product: What is your challenge? Or What is the problem? Or what needs to be improved?

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The Design Process

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  1. The Design Process What is SACE going on about? Product and Major Project = same thing

  2. The First Step: Investigating Design Brief - Statement of intent and justification for your Product: What is your challenge? Or What is the problem? Or what needs to be improved? What do you propose to design and make? What is the purpose of it? Resources: What do you need to produce it? Constraints: What obstacles will you experience? Eg: will you have enough time and the right resources to achieve your outcome? How do these products impact on our society/environment?

  3. Investigating: SAMPLES You need to research similar products produced by others , and analyse them. Why? Because you need to find out how others have solved problems and approached challenges before you can go ahead with your ideas. For example, you could find out how a particular stunt is done, an effect you are interested in using, an editing technique that looks effective – all for your own product. You can achieve this by describing the physical characteristics of, the techniques and skills applied, and the material and processes used to produce these samples. 2-3 samples is enough.

  4. Planning = Designing Now you are ready to communicate your design ideas by: Drawings (annotated thumbnail sketches, storyboard, flowcharts, etc.) AND Writing, using technical language appropriate to this subject (ie: the words used in this subject like: composition, depth of field, animation, layout, graphic, frames per second, sound, lighting, etc.) They must clearly communicate your proposed intention from the Investigation. Remember to justify your choices at all times (WHY?) Experiment with your design to test and validate your ideas; to develop your ideas towards refinement.

  5. Producing NOW you are ready to make your product using the techniques, skills, materials and processed you have investigated and planned to use. So……off you go………. Remember to keep a journal of your production. This will need to include any problems you encountered, what new things you learnt, etc. This can be referred to during the writing of your evaluation.

  6. Evaluating After production, you evaluate your work against your design brief that you put together. You can use your journal to assist you. Answer: What are the strengths and weaknesses of your final product? What problems did you experience and how did you solve them? Given more time and better resources, how could you improve your product? If you made changes to your design, what were they and why?

  7. Explain….Explain….Explain At this level, you need to explain your statements by discussing why, how, what, where, when, etc. Giving examples can also boost your discussion. And….include referencing (reference list/bibliography)

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