08.09.13
William Drenttel and Michael Mossoba | Event-Education

Winterhouse Fourth Symposium on Design Education and Social Innovation: Participants

Scott Boylston
Program Coordinator, Design for Sustainability, Savannah College of Art Design President, Emergent Structures
[email protected]
Scott is Program Coordinator and co-author of the Masters in Design for Sustainability at SCAD, and professor in Design for Sustainability. He’s the author of 3 books, and has published over a dozen short stories in respected literary journals. Scott is co-founder and president of Emergent Structures, a non-profit organization dedicated to innovative, community-based material reclamation and re-use. Scott also founded SCAD’s Design Ethos conference and ‘DO-ference,’ a workshop-based conference that brings together design practitioners with community leaders in order to address pressing social and economic concerns within the local community. He speaks internationally on design and sustainability, and holds a masters from Pratt Institute. 

Rodrigo Canales
Associate Professor of Organizational Behavior
Yale School of Management
[email protected]
Rodrigo Canales researches the role of institutions in entrepreneurship and economic development. Specifically, Rodrigo’s work seeks to understand how individuals purposefully enact organizational and institutional change. Rodrigo has done work in entrepreneurial finance and microfinance. As he continues his work on microfinance he is also conducting research in the institutional complexities of renewable energy and the institutional implications of the Mexican war on drugs. Rodrigo teaches the Innovator Perspective at Yale SOM; he sits in the steering committee of the Dalai Lama Center for Ethics and Transformative Values at MIT; and he advises startups in Mexico that seek to improve the financing environment for small firms. 

Charlie Cannon
Associate Professor, Industrial Design, RISD
Chief Design Officer, EPIC Decade 
[email protected]
Charlie Cannon co-founded the Innovation Studio at RISD to confront pressing issues of our day through interdisciplinary collaboration, social entrepreneurship and design research. The studio’s projects have been supported by the National Endowment for the Arts, the Rhode Island Renewable Energy Fund, the RISD Research Foundation and the City of Denver. Cannon is also Chief Design Officer for the EPIC Decade, a purpose-driven, strategy and innovation, design studio.

Lee Davis 
Scholar-in-Residence, Center for Social Design
Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA) 
Lee Davis is currently Scholar-in-Residence in the Center for Social Design at Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA). He is co-Founder and former co-CEO of NESsT, an incubator of social businesses in emerging markets, and a winner of the Skoll Award for Social Entrepreneurship. Lee started his career as a graphic designer and was the first in-house designer for international relief and development agency CARE. He holds an MA from Johns Hopkins University, a BA from Connecticut College, and was a recipient of the Thomas J. Watson Fellowship to undertake a yearlong, comparative ethnology of design in Japan and Switzerland. He is a Board member of the Winterhouse Institute. 

William Drenttel
Editorial Director and Publisher, Design Observer Group
Director, Winterhouse Institute
[email protected]
William Drenttel is a partner at Winterhouse, a design practice in New Haven, Connecticut, focused on social innovation, online media, and educational institutions. He is also V.P. Marketing and Communications for Teach For All, an international education network, and a advisory board member of the Mayo Clinic Center for Innovation and ideo.org. Through the Winterhouse Institute, he is leading a series of initiatives (funded by the Rockefeller Foundation 2009-2011) to develop models for design and social innovation. Drenttel is president emeritus of AIGA and a senior faculty fellow at the Yale School of Management. He is the editorial director of Design Observer, a leading website focused on design, social innovation, urbanism and cultural commentary.

Liz Gerber
Assistant Professor, Segal Design Institute
Northwestern University
[email protected]
In 2008, Liz co-founded Design for America, a new and rapidly growing organization for college campuses that inspires students to use design to create local and social impact. In the process, students prepare to drive human centered innovation throughout their careers. Previously, Liz taught at Stanford’s Hasso Plattner Institute of Design (aka the d.school). In 2008 she completed a PhD at the Center for Work, Technology, and Organization and a MS in Product Design at Stanford University. She researches how work practices and technology influences innovation.

Phil Hamlett
Graduate Director, School of Graphic Design
Academy of Art University
[email protected]
Phil is the graduate director of the School of Graphic Design at the Academy of Art University in San Francisco, the largest private art and design school in the country. Prior to the Academy, Phil was communications director at Turner & Associates, and director of creative services for EAI/Atlanta (now known as “Unboundary”). Phil also works at setting the agenda for sustainable business practice within the design community. He founded Compostmodern, a design conference devoted to sustainability, and is a co-author of the Living Principles for Design, a comprehensive framework to guide the development of sustainable design solutions. Phil also serves as a national board member for AIGA.

Cheryl Heller 
Chair, Design for Social Innovation
School of Visual Arts
[email protected]
Cheryl Heller has founded two companies and taught creativity to leaders and organizations around the world. In addition to her work with corporations, she is the Founding Chair of the first MFA program in Design for Social Innovation, at SVA. She is an Advisor to PopTech, a laboratory for disruptive innovation focused on technology, a Senior Fellow at the Babson Social Innovation Lab, and the Lewis Institute, on the Innovation Advisory Board for the Lumina Foundation, and an advisor to DataKind, an organization dedicated to putting big data to use in service to humanity. She is the National Director of Leadership Education for AIGA, the professional association for design, and is a writer for the Unreasonable Institute, Good.is and NextBillion.

Jennifer Hughes 
Design Specialist, National Endowment for the Arts
[email protected]
Jennifer Hughes is a Design Specialist at the National Endowment for the Arts, overseeing design grants for Art Works. Previously, she worked at the Washington, DC Office of Planning and Department of Small Business Development on creative sector projects that support local entrepreneurial development. Jennifer holds an undergraduate degree in business from the University of Pennsylvania and a Master of City Planning from the University of California, Berkeley with a focus on community development and design.

Terry Irwin 
Professor and Head, School of Design
Carnegie Mellon University
Terry is the head of the School of Design at Carnegie Mellon University and has been teaching at the university level since 1986. Terry was a founding partner of the San Francisco office of the international design firm MetaDesign, where she served as creative director from 1992 to 2001. Her research explores how living systems principles can inform a more appropriate and responsible way to design. Terry holds an MFA in design from the Allgemeine Kunstgewerbeschule in Basel, Switzerland. 

Chris Kasabach 
Director, The Watson Foundation
Chris Kasabach is the Director of The Watson Foundation. Trained as a designer, he has co-founded several non-profit and for-profit organizations including BodyMedia Inc., an international healthcare company evolved from his team's ethnographic, design and computing research at Carnegie Mellon in the 1990s. BodyMedia continues to help shape the field of self-care health in 30 countries and was acquired in the summer of 2013. Chris has taught, lectured and held workshops at the undergraduate and graduate levels in research methods, social innovation and new product and service design, in the United States, Europe, Africa and Asia. He is a trustee of Winterhouse Institute and on the 2013 President's Advisory Board of Carnegie Mellon's School of Design. Chris holds an MPA from Harvard Kennedy School.
   
David Mohney
Dean Emeritus and Professor of Architecture
University of Kentucky College of Design
[email protected]
David Mohney is the co-author of three books: Seaside: Making a Town in America, The Houses of Philip Johnson, and The Louisville Architecture Guide; he is working on a book about contemporary design In Rotterdam. David has taught at the Institute for Architecture and Urban Studies, Harvard Graduate School of Design, and SCI-Arc. He was educated at Cranbrook School, Harvard College and Princeton’s School of Architecture. David was the Founding Secretary of the Curry Stone Design Prize, a global award for design ideas that promote a better world, and he is presently forming a consortium of international design schools focused on Social Urbanism.

Lara Penin
Assistant Professor and Co-founder, Parsons DESIS Lab
Parsons The New School for Design
[email protected]
At Parsons, Lara Penin coordinates the Area of Study of Service Design and through Parsons DESIS Lab she promotes Design and Social Innovation within curriculum and lead projects such as ‘Amplifying Creative Communities’ awarded with a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation. She holds a PhD in Industrial Design and Multimedia Communication from Milan Polytechnic University in Italy and a BA in Architecture and Urbanism from the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil.

Natacha Poggio
Assistant Professor, Visual Communication Design
Hartford Art School, 
University of Hartford
[email protected]
Since 2007, Natacha Poggio has been developing strategic design projects that promote sustainable development and awareness of global issues. Her research fosters interdisciplinary partnerships that bring positive social change at local, national, and international levels. She is the founder of Design Global Change, a collaborative of students and alumni helping local and international communities through service-learning projects. As the 2010 recipient of a Sappi Ideas that Matter grant, she spearheads a project promoting gender equality in India. A native of Buenos Aires, she holds an MFA in Design from the University of Texas at Austin.

Anthony Sheldon
Lecturer in Economic Development & Executive Director of the Program on Social Enterprise, Yale School of Management
Tony Sheldon has been executive director of Yale School of Management's Program on Social Enterprise since 2008, and lecturer in economic development since 2007. He teaches practicum courses on social entrepreneurship, as well as a course on microfinance. He is also the founder and principal of Bering Consulting, which works with microfinance institutions in Africa, Asia, Latin America, and Eastern Europe, primarily in the areas of financial management and business planning. Tony has also worked with several development finance networks and funders, including the Ford Foundation, the World Bank, the Consultative Group to Assist the Poor (CGAP), ShoreBank International, and Women's World Banking.  

Cameron Tonkinwise
Associate Professor, School of Design
Carnegie Mellon University
[email protected]
Tonkinwise is an Associate Professor, director of Design Studies and chair of the Doctoral Design Program Committee at Carnegie Mellon University. Formerly the chair of Design Thinking and Sustainability for the School of Design Strategies at Parsons The New School for Design, Tonkinwise was responsible for developing offerings in the areas of strategy, sustainability and service design. He was also the Co-Chair of the Tishman Environment Design Center, managing the New School's university-wide degree programs in Environmental Studies, and was a founding member of the Parsons DESIS Lab (Design for Social Innovation and Sustainability). Cameron's current research concerns lowering societal materials intensity by decoupling use and ownership — in short, sharing.

Mike Weikert 
Director of the Social Design (MA) and Center for Design Practice
Maryland Institute College of Art 
[email protected]
Mike is founding director of the Social Design (MA) and Center for Design Practice at Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA). Previously, he served as co-chair of the graphic design department at MICA, partner/creative director at Atlanta-based Iconologic, and as a design consultant to the International Olympic Committee. He also worked as a designer with Pentagram and taught at the Portfolio Center. His work has been recognized in various books and publications and supported by grants from Sappi Ideas That Matter, the National Science Foundation, and the National Endowment for the Arts. In 2011, he was nominated for the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Award.

Joseph P. Zinter
Assistant Director, Center for Engineering Innovation and Design
Yale University
Joseph is the Assistant Director of the new Yale Center for Engineering Innovation and Design (CEID), a 10,000 sq. ft. facility aimed at encouraging and supporting cross-disciplinary collaboration, idea generation, and realization of technologies to improve the human experience. He also lectures and conducts workshops on design thinking, engineering design, prototyping, and design and commercialization of technology in developing world contexts. Prior to joining Yale he acted as Design Preceptor at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences. He holds a BS (Columbia University) and MS (Cornell University) in Applied Physics, and a PhD in Biomedical Engineering (Yale University).






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