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Lushington, Nolan – 1976
Economical design and smooth functioning of libraries require detailed preplanning before the architect begins to draw. This preplanning and coordination can be facilitated by an interior designer deft in communication skills and willing to become acquainted with library functions. Flow charts, spatial analysis, and layouts are useful tools to…
Descriptors: Architects, Building Design, Guidelines, Interior Design
Babey, Evelyn R. – 1990
When planning an office renovation, a manager should design an office layout that is efficient and should consider the psychological aspects of office design, including sound level, color harmony, and lighting. The manager must also have a good understanding of all phases of the project plan and the timing involved. There are basically five phases…
Descriptors: Design Requirements, Facility Improvement, Facility Planning, Interior Design
Gommel, Jacqueline – 1995
This paper, a summary of a document created for a Master of Arts degree in Interior Design at Northern Illinois University, Dekalb, Illinois, discusses research on "wayfinding" and the need for designers and planners to recognize its importance in order to provide more user-friendly environments. Orientation is the first step in…
Descriptors: Building Plans, Cognitive Mapping, Design Requirements, Environment
Zalesny, Mary D.; And Others – 1983
Both the social and physical aspects of the environment have been examined as causes of work behaviors and attitudes, but recent studies concerning the effect of open plan offices have shown inconsistent results. To assess the relative contributions of organizational level and the social and physical work environment in explaining employee…
Descriptors: Employee Attitudes, Employees, Employment Level, Interior Design
Wynn, Ruth L.; And Others – 1991
This study was a joint undertaking of interior environmental designers and a child developmentalist. The goal of the study was to increase peer interation between children in two classes held in one classroom. Children were observed for 7 weeks, in three periods: weeks 2 and 3 (time 1); weeks 4 and 5 (time 2); and weeks 6 and 7 (time 3). Observers…
Descriptors: Classroom Design, Classroom Environment, Classroom Research, Interior Design
Davis, Diane M.; And Others – 1990
One hundred ninety-three interior design college students were administered the Group Embedded Figures Test, a measure of field dependence, in order to evaluate two of Witkin's hypotheses regarding career choice. The career-differentiation hypothesis predicted that students electing to major in interior design would be field independent because…
Descriptors: Career Choice, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, College Programs
Adams, Polly K.; Taylor, Michaell K. – 1984
Following a prefatory description of infant development and high-quality infant day care centers, this paper focuses on the construction of learning centers for infants and toddlers in day care. Issues for consideration are specified, and 18 different care/learning centers and 6 work sstations for parents/staff are briefly described. In addition…
Descriptors: Day Care Centers, Early Childhood Education, Educational Facilities Planning, Guidelines
Strand, Bradford N. – 1990
This study compared both physical education "Type A" (activity) space and ancillary space at the Big Ten Universities with the physical education space guidelines established in 1967 by the National Facilities Conference and the assigned guidelines for the seven ancillary space types. The data were obtained through the use of a…
Descriptors: Athletic Fields, College Buildings, Facility Planning, Field Houses
Smith, Kemper D., III – 1982
Student affairs professionals have recognized the importance of physical environment to students' total development and have implemented strategies to enhance the territorial behavior of dormitory residents. However, little research has been done to assess the effectiveness of residence hall personalization programs which allow students to paint…
Descriptors: College Housing, College Students, Dormitories, Group Unity
Sitz, Robert C. – 1995
This document presents a definition and brief background of graphic design and visual education. It outlines a journalism and mass media course lecture which introduces students to the commercial scope of visual communications and the potentials of design. The script along with appropriate slide titles and descriptions, are provided to recreate…
Descriptors: Architecture, Building Design, Commercial Art, Course Descriptions
Winchip, Susan – 1990
Computer Assisted Design (CAD) and Computer Assisted Manufacturing (CAM) are emerging technologies now being used in home economics and interior design applications. A microcomputer in a computer network system is capable of executing computer graphic functions such as three-dimensional modeling, as well as utilizing office automation packages to…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Design, Computer Graphics, Computer Networks, Facilities Management
Lamm, Zvi – 1986
Changes in instructional methods and ideologies depend on simultaneous changes in the physical environment for the practice of those methods. School architecture results from the type of activity dictated by educational theories. One of the principal ideologies of education is socialization, which perceives education as a process of preparing…
Descriptors: Architecture, Building Design, Educational Change, Educational Development
Fredrickson, John H. – 1976
The findings of two studies establish some deleterious effects of unsatisfactory physical environment on school children. However, modern technology enables the exercise of total environmental control in new and existing facilities. Between the realities of today and the exceptations of tomorrow we have a transitional model--the open plan concept.…
Descriptors: Acoustical Environment, Educational Environment, Educational Specifications, Elementary Secondary Education
Ross, Rhonda P. – 1982
Research findings demonstrate that the way the classroom environment is arranged can have important consequences on the attitudes, behavior, and achievement of students. The concept of "synomorphy" is used to examine some of the research literature available on classroom design. Synomorphy refers to the similarity of structure or shape…
Descriptors: Behavioral Objectives, Classroom Design, Classroom Environment, Design Requirements
Lilley, H. Edward – 1986
Appropriate school facility design promotes a balance between student freedom and control. This report evaluates research on architectural approaches affecting student control and offers design recommendations. Since 1960, school discipline and vandalism problems have exploded. Senator Birch Bayh's committee reported that certain crimes are…
Descriptors: Architectural Programing, Discipline, Educational Environment, Educational Facilities Planning
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