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The Phyllis M. Taylor Center for Social Innovation and Design Thinking seeks qualified candidates to apply to become our next Professor of Practice and the Associate Director of Design Thinking for Social Impact

The Phyllis M. Taylor Center for Social Innovation and Design Thinking is launching a global search to select our next Associate Director of Design Thinking for Social Impact. This position will include opportunities to teach students at Tulane University in New Orleans, Louisiana and build capacity and skills on campus and in the community. Details about the position are listed below.

The application is now available

The Professor of Practice and Associate Director for Design Thinking will ...

  • Design, facilitate, and support design thinking for social impact (DTSI) programming and learning opportunities (e.g., courses, workshops, materials) for diverse audiences, to include capacity-building that supports the integration of DTSI mindsets throughout the Taylor Center, Tulane’s campus, and with community partners
  • Engage in scholarship and field leadership in design thinking for social impact and related fields
  • Contribute to the programming strategy co-created by the Taylor Team that aligns with the center’s mission and values: work collaboratively with students, staff, and faculty to implement the strategy; and manage administrative task as required.

Qualifications

Required Education and Experience: 

  • Master’s degree in design or a related/relevant field
  • Experience in applying design thinking for social impact (DTSI)
  • Experience facilitating learning activities in an educational setting

Required Knowledge, skills, abilities/competencies typically needed to perform this job successfully:  

  • Familiarity with common design and/or design thinking schools of thought, models, training formats, materials, and curricula
  • Ability to communicate effectively to diverse audiences in community-based organizations and higher education settings
  • Experience with equity, diversity, and inclusion theory and practice
  • Ability to take direction, manage projects, manage others, and participate on diverse cross-functional teams as needed

Preferred Qualifications: 

  • Doctoral degree in a relevant academic discipline (e.g., anthropology, architecture, business, design, education, engineering, organizational studies, management, planning, sociology, urban studies, social work, and others), especially with a strong focus on human-centered design, design thinking, or other design approaches within the doctoral training and/or research
  • Teaching experience in higher education institutions (undergraduate or graduate student).
  • Involvement in design work and practice (academic, professional, or other)
  • Familiarity with social innovation, systems change, or other social impact fields.
  • Proficiency in collaborative, creative problem-solving techniques
  • Ability to integrate design thinking methodology with other methodologies used in mission-driven work (dialogue processes, participatory engagement, systems practice, etc.)

About Taylor

Founded in 2014, The Taylor Center for Social Innovation and Design Thinking provides resources and facilitation in human-centered, systems-minded design for social impact. Through innovative approaches, collaborative projects, and immersive training, The Taylor Center partners with organizations dedicated to making a meaningful impact in their communities and beyond.

Offerings include:

TEACHING: Taylor faculty and staff teach or support courses in social innovation, design thinking, changemaking, and life design for undergraduate and graduate students across a variety of academic disciplines/programs. Taylor also offers training and coaching for staff and faculty outside the center looking to integrate social innovation approaches and human-centered design into their courses.

RESEARCH: Taylor supports research and scholarship on social innovation topics and issues through programs and funding opportunities. Taylor faculty and staff also develop original research and scholarship in the field.

PRACTICE: Taylor offers a variety of programs open to students, staff, faculty, and community members in social innovation, human-centered design, and changemaking. Taylor also offers funding for undergraduate and graduate students to develop skills in these areas.

About Design Thinking

One way of engaging and promoting systems change is through design thinking (DT): a creative, collaborative approach to addressing complex societal problems that is sometimes referred to as human-centered design (IDEO.orgStanford d.school). Related schools of thought and design practices we embrace include participatory design, co-design, equity-centered community design (Creative Reaction Lab), emancipatory design (Noel, 2016), and design justice. Social impact is a priority in all approaches to design thinking used by the Taylor Center, and design thinking for social impact (DTSI) is seen as an essential part of any changemaker’s toolkit.

Taylor Center faculty have integrated “DTSI” approaches into courses, workshops, trainings, conference panels, and other community-building activities since 2013. There has been steady interest on campus and in the center’s local and global communities of alumni, faculty, staff, and community partners. The Taylor Center will continue to apply and extend design-led approaches to understand and contribute to addressing complex societal problems.

About Social Innovation

Although social innovation is not a historically new phenomenon and faces many relevant critiques and challenges, changemakers will continue to generate novel and relevant new ideas to generate social value. While Taylor acknowledges classic definitions of the field (e.g. Phills, Miller, and Deiglemeier, 2008; Mulgan, 2019), the center identifies with scholars that define social innovation as a process that draws on the social capacity of interconnected networks to produce innovations that further results in a stronger social capacity to act (e.g., Manzini, 2014; Moulaert and MacCallum, 2019).
Taylor Center scholars have identified a variety of approaches to social innovation that draw from different traditions, including classic western liberal philosophies of social entrepreneurship, critical theories of social change, and newer ecological paradigms to suit the the nature of challenges in the 21st century (Murphy, Schoop, Faughnan, and Flattley, 2021). The Taylor Center aims to practice critical and ecological approaches that acknowledge complexity and foster empowerment.
Since 2009, social innovation programming at Tulane University has supported dozens of student-led social ventures, explored a range of changemaking learning pathways, offered public lectures by leading social innovators, expanded knowledge production and dissemination, and forged unique community partnerships. This work continues to evolve at the Taylor Center.

Questions?

For more information contact us at taylor@tulane.edu.

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