Design activity #1: preliminary reflection The preliminary reflection is an opportunity to articulate the goals, assumptions, and feelings that you bring to the beginning of a project and to begin thinking about how these might help or hinder your process. You can also use the preliminary reflection to consider strategies for transcending potential barriers to continued innovation. Your preliminary reflection should be a written document that considers these questions: What do I think I’m doing? How do I currently conceptualize goals for this project? What do I think I’m creating? What are its components? Do these ideas seem adequate? Would I rather be doing something else? What? Why? What are my fundamental assumptions? What values am I bringing to this project, and how do I see those values affecting my ideas? Is that a problem? What are my feelings toward this project? Is it cool? Challenging? Kind of stupid? Why? What do I think I know? What’s my current plan? (For example, have I defined sustainability and my position on it? Have I already gotten a sense of what types of videos I would select for my collection? How I would describe and arrange them? What my audience thinks and wants, and how I respond to that?) What has led me to this point? What would change my mind? What do I think I don’t know? Where am I totally confused? What do I need to learn to proceed? (For example, do I need to do some subject research? Do I need to think more about how collections communicate?) What would I rather not think about? Would I be happy to ignore the audience? Would I rather have my audience tell me what to do? What seems like a black hole? Why? Where would clarity come from? What seems like a barrier? What are project constraints? Are they really constraints? Am I secretly glad of certain limitations? What kinds of questions should I keep asking myself each week as I work on this? Where do I go next? Yes, the course has a structure. But what do I think I should be doing next? What am I aiming for? What would a successful project look like? What would a failed project look like? While these will not be graded, write out your reflection as a professional document of about 500750 words. Bring one printout to class on February 4; we will discuss the process in groups, and I will make copies of the documents and distribute to everyone. INF 385 U, Digital Media Collections Spring 2010