On September 8, 2011, Design that Matters Director of Product Development, Elizabeth Johansen, co-facilitated a workshop at SOCAP11 alongside Sami Nerenberg of Design for America and Saul Garlick of Think Impact. The workshop was part of a series of design thinking workshops curated by Sarah Brooks.
In design, after immersing with the stakeholders, one of the most difficult and little-explained next steps is to take all of those observations and turn them into frameworks to guide the design going forward. Design that Matters, Think Impact, and Design for America co-created a workshop to give participants a crash course in framing challenges. Think Impact provided a case study and observations from the field. Then participants were asked to imagine a better future together.
About SOCAP
We are a network of heart-centered investors, entrepreneurs, and social impact leaders who believe in an inclusive and socially responsible economy to address the world’s toughest challenges. Since 2008, SOCAP has created a platform where social impact leaders can connect and present their ideas to a global audience. Our annual flagship event in San Francisco is the largest conference for impact investors and social entrepreneurs and has drawn more than 10,000 people.
Credits:
Co-Presenter: Sami Nerenberg, Director of Operations, Design for America
Co-Presenter: Saul Garlick, CEO, Think Impact
Graphic Design: William Harris, Designer, Design that Matters
Unite for Sight Workshop: Using the Point of View to Bridge Research and ActionSpark Health Design
The document discusses the benefits of meditation for reducing stress and anxiety. Regular meditation practice can help calm the mind and body by lowering heart rate and blood pressure. Making meditation a part of a daily routine, even if just 10-15 minutes per day, can offer improvements to mood, focus, and overall feelings of well-being over time.
A Better World By Design Keynote: The Product Butterfly EffectSpark Health Design
Design that Matters Director of Product Development, Elizabeth Johansen, presented a keynote at the October 1, 2011 A Better World by Design conference. Elizabeth presented her point of view that well-designed product can have a systemic impact. She elaborated on four insights that can yield a high impact medical device to save lives in developing countries.
1. Don't Design for Everyone
2. Think Big, Act Small
3. Mind the Gaps
4. Affordable, Not Cheap
About A Better World By Design
Each year, Better World by Design brings a global community of innovators to Providence, Rhode Island to reach across disciplines and unite under a common goal: building a better world. Presenters share engaging stories, workshops teach creative skills, and discussions re-frame perspectives. Better World is an immersive experience that deepens our understanding of the power of design, technology, and enterprise to engage our communities and sustain our environment.
Libro sobre la historia del teatro en Barinas Venezuela de Junior Palacios Licencia en Teatro mención actuación, egresado del Instituto Universitario de Teatro IUDET Caracas Venezuela en 1996.
This risk assessment form is for a short film production taking place on December 6th, 2014 at 19 Abbots Close in Weston Super-mare. Stacey Boardman and Georgia Neal, the director and editor, identified restricted access and poor lighting/visibility as potential hazards given the location and equipment used. To control restricted access, only necessary people were allowed in the filming room. To control poor lighting, all footage was filmed on the same day and in the same weather conditions, and lighting could be edited if needed.
This document appears to be a survey results report that summarizes answers to 5 questions from an unknown target audience. It lists the questions but does not provide any details on the responses or conclusions drawn from the data collected.
This document contains credits for the photos used in a Haiku Deck presentation, listing 10 different photographers. It concludes by encouraging the reader to get started creating their own Haiku Deck presentation.
On September 8, 2011, Design that Matters Director of Product Development, Elizabeth Johansen, co-facilitated a workshop at SOCAP11 alongside Sami Nerenberg of Design for America and Saul Garlick of Think Impact. The workshop was part of a series of design thinking workshops curated by Sarah Brooks.
In design, after immersing with the stakeholders, one of the most difficult and little-explained next steps is to take all of those observations and turn them into frameworks to guide the design going forward. Design that Matters, Think Impact, and Design for America co-created a workshop to give participants a crash course in framing challenges. Think Impact provided a case study and observations from the field. Then participants were asked to imagine a better future together.
About SOCAP
We are a network of heart-centered investors, entrepreneurs, and social impact leaders who believe in an inclusive and socially responsible economy to address the world’s toughest challenges. Since 2008, SOCAP has created a platform where social impact leaders can connect and present their ideas to a global audience. Our annual flagship event in San Francisco is the largest conference for impact investors and social entrepreneurs and has drawn more than 10,000 people.
Credits:
Co-Presenter: Sami Nerenberg, Director of Operations, Design for America
Co-Presenter: Saul Garlick, CEO, Think Impact
Graphic Design: William Harris, Designer, Design that Matters
Unite for Sight Workshop: Using the Point of View to Bridge Research and ActionSpark Health Design
The document discusses the benefits of meditation for reducing stress and anxiety. Regular meditation practice can help calm the mind and body by lowering heart rate and blood pressure. Making meditation a part of a daily routine, even if just 10-15 minutes per day, can offer improvements to mood, focus, and overall feelings of well-being over time.
A Better World By Design Keynote: The Product Butterfly EffectSpark Health Design
Design that Matters Director of Product Development, Elizabeth Johansen, presented a keynote at the October 1, 2011 A Better World by Design conference. Elizabeth presented her point of view that well-designed product can have a systemic impact. She elaborated on four insights that can yield a high impact medical device to save lives in developing countries.
1. Don't Design for Everyone
2. Think Big, Act Small
3. Mind the Gaps
4. Affordable, Not Cheap
About A Better World By Design
Each year, Better World by Design brings a global community of innovators to Providence, Rhode Island to reach across disciplines and unite under a common goal: building a better world. Presenters share engaging stories, workshops teach creative skills, and discussions re-frame perspectives. Better World is an immersive experience that deepens our understanding of the power of design, technology, and enterprise to engage our communities and sustain our environment.
Libro sobre la historia del teatro en Barinas Venezuela de Junior Palacios Licencia en Teatro mención actuación, egresado del Instituto Universitario de Teatro IUDET Caracas Venezuela en 1996.
This risk assessment form is for a short film production taking place on December 6th, 2014 at 19 Abbots Close in Weston Super-mare. Stacey Boardman and Georgia Neal, the director and editor, identified restricted access and poor lighting/visibility as potential hazards given the location and equipment used. To control restricted access, only necessary people were allowed in the filming room. To control poor lighting, all footage was filmed on the same day and in the same weather conditions, and lighting could be edited if needed.
This document appears to be a survey results report that summarizes answers to 5 questions from an unknown target audience. It lists the questions but does not provide any details on the responses or conclusions drawn from the data collected.
This document contains credits for the photos used in a Haiku Deck presentation, listing 10 different photographers. It concludes by encouraging the reader to get started creating their own Haiku Deck presentation.
The document discusses how the creators of a short film took inspiration from the short film "Plastic" in several ways for their own film. Some of the inspirations taken from "Plastic" include using a hidden message about accepting oneself, opening with a shot of a character looking in a wardrobe, using technology like texting to depict communication, and having the storyline involve two characters going on a date together with a twist. The document also mentions replicating the scrolling titles at the end with the same color scheme for consistency across media products.
The document provides an evaluation of the feedback received throughout a film project. It discusses feedback received from pitching the original idea which led to changing the name and tagline. Surveys of the target audience on the script resulted in script changes. Feedback on the treatment plan from a classmate was also received, but no changes were made as the feedback was positive. In total, the document evaluates how feedback influenced decision making and helped improve the project.
The document appears to be a list of video file names and brief descriptions for footage being used to film a short film. The videos document scenes of the main character Charlotte getting ready, communicating with her friend Olivia, leaving her house with her mother, arriving at the park, and meeting Olivia in the park. The videos will be used for opening credits, establishing shots, and telling the story of the short film.
The risk assessment form summarizes the potential hazards for a short film production shooting on December 6th in Castle Batch Park in Weston Super-mare. It identifies poor lighting/visibility, working near roads/traffic/car parks, and scenery/props that are difficult to carry or grasp as hazards. To control these risks, the filmmakers planned to shoot all park footage by a certain time and from consistent angles to maintain consistent lighting. They avoided filming directly by the road or in traffic areas. And they chose a quiet park location to minimize disruptions from other people or sounds that could impact their specific scenery and footage.
A survey was conducted to gather results for script research. The survey looked at how people use scripts in their daily lives and work. The results will help provide insights into common script usage and behaviors.
Healthcare's Grand Hackfest Keynote - HOWTO: Project ScopingSpark Health Design
On March 14, 2014, Design that Matters Director of Product Development, Elizabeth Johansen, delivered a keynote to kick off over 300 participants as part of Healthcare's Grand Hackfest. The presentation gave insight into Design that Matters' process creating a point of view for your project. The point of view has three elements:
1. The Need (why) - going beyond desires, to real needs
2. The Users (who) - all the stakeholders who will make your project successful
3. The Context (where, when, what) - the context for which you will design.
About Healthcare's Grand Hackfest
Focused on pioneering healthcare's greatest innovations, this hackathon will be unlike any other in the past. For the first time ever, we will be partnering with industry's leading organizations to accelerate breakthrough ideas developed over the course of one weekend. Healthcare professionals will pitch real world problems they face to enable sustainable solutions to be created and piloted following the hackathon.
Unite for Sight Keynote: Three Insights from DtM's Project FireflySpark Health Design
On April 16, 2011, Design that Matters Director of Product Development, Elizabeth Johansen, delivered a keynote at the Unite for Sight conference. Elizabeth delivered three key insights to successfully design a medical device for low resource contexts.
1. Unburden the System
2. Engender Trust
3. Affordable, Not Cheap
About Unite for Sight
The Unite for Sight Global Health & Innovation Conference (#GHIC) is the world's leading and largest global health conference as well as the largest social entrepreneurship conference, with 2,200 professionals and students from all 50 states and more than 55 countries.
Tufts Symposium Speaker - Breaking Cultural Barriers: Design with EmpathySpark Health Design
On April 21, 2013, Design that Matters Designer William Harris and Director of Product Development Elizabeth Johansen presented at the Tufts Institute for Global Leadership Symposium.
Designer William Harris provided six tips to bridge the cultural divide when designing medical device for developing countries.
1. Find a Local Partner
2. Identify the Problem
3. Embrace The Culture
4. Watch and Learn
5. Synthesize Your Research
6. Engage Your Users
About Tufts Institute for Global Leadership
The Institute for Global Leadership at Tufts University is an incubator of innovative ways to educate learners at all levels to understand and engage with difficult global issues. We develop new generations of effective and ethical leaders who are able and driven to comprehend complexity, reflect cultural and political nuance, and engage as responsible global citizens in anticipating and confronting the world's most pressing problems.
Credits:
William Harris, graphic design, Designer, Design that Matters
Speaker: The Cost of Saving Babies from Jaundice in Developing CountriesSpark Health Design
This document discusses the design of technologies for improving healthcare in developing countries. It describes several projects including a portable phototherapy device called Firefly that treats newborn jaundice. Field research found Firefly reduced treatment time by 40% compared to overhead phototherapy and helped avoid 3 risky exchange blood transfusions. Stakeholder interviews found Firefly was easy to use and preferred over other options for treating jaundice in resource-limited settings. The document emphasizes the importance of considering factors like local needs, costs, and sustainability when designing technologies for social impact.
This document provides a home-school connection pack with materials on various topics like school, places, activities, food, describing people, jobs, homes and furniture, and technology. The materials are from the Quest 4 Tests and Photocopiable Resources CD and Activity Book, including vocabulary, grammar, and activities. It notes that the Quest 4 Activity Book can be purchased for additional English practice.
On February 14, 2012, Design that Matters Director of Product Development and Designer William Harris gave a guest lecture at Lesley University for their Humans and the Environment course. Together, they presented DtM's point of view that well-designed product can have a systemic impact. In particular, they presented four insights that can yield a high impact medical device to save lives in developing countries.
1. Don't Design for Everyone
2. Think Big, Act Small
3. Mind the Gaps
4. Affordable, Not Cheap
Credits
William Harris, graphic design, Designer, Design that Matters
This document provides a home-school connection pack with materials on various topics like school, places, activities, food, describing people, jobs, homes and furniture, and technology. The materials are from the Quest 4 Tests and Photocopiable Resources CD and Activity Book, including vocabulary, grammar, and activity sections. It notes that the Quest 4 Activity Book can be purchased for additional English practice.
A Ocupação Pré-Histórica do Estado de Santa CatarinaRose vargas
1) O documento descreve a ocupação pré-histórica do estado de Santa Catarina pelo povo indígena. 2) Havia dois grupos iniciais: caçadores que viviam nas florestas há mais de 8.000 anos e pescadores/coletores que viviam no litoral até o primeiro milênio d.C. 3) Dois grupos mais recentes foram identificados: um povo de origem Jê que chegou há 3.000 anos e os Guarani que chegaram no segundo milênio d.C.
Este documento descreve a macrocompartimentação da região sul do litoral brasileiro, dividindo-a em dois macrocompartimentos: 1) o litoral retificado do norte, estendendo-se de Santa Catarina a Torres, com uma linha de costa contínua interrompida por canais e lagunas atrás; 2) o litoral do Rio Grande do Sul, caracterizado por sucessivos cordões litorâneos retendo lagos atrás, como a Lagoa dos Patos.
O trigo teve origem na antiga Mesopotâmia há cerca de 6.700 a.C. e foi cultivado pelos povos da região a partir de 4000 a.C. Atualmente, o Brasil produz em média 5-6 milhões de toneladas de trigo por ano, concentradas principalmente no Sul do país. A safra recorde foi em 1986/87 com uma produção de 6,12 milhões de toneladas.
1) O documento descreve uma pesquisa arqueológica realizada no município de Santana do Matos, Rio Grande do Norte, que identificou 20 sítios arqueológicos com vestígios líticos, um cemitério e 17 registros rupestres.
2) A pesquisa foi dividida em duas etapas: levantamento documental e de campo para localizar e descrever os sítios.
3) O objetivo da pesquisa era mapear os sítios arqueológicos da região para avaliar seu estado de conserv
O documento apresenta uma breve introdução sobre o Egito pré-dinástico, discutindo hipóteses sobre os primórdios da civilização egípcia e as escavações realizadas no sítio de Hierakonpolis, que fornecem evidências sobre as raízes africanas do Egito antigo.
O documento discute como o espaço geográfico influencia a vida das pessoas e como elas interagem com o meio ambiente. Ele explora como fatores naturais e humanos moldam as paisagens e afetam as comunidades locais.
O documento descreve a expansão do Islã após o profeta Maomé unificar as tribos árabes sob uma nova fé monoteísta no século VII. O califado islâmico conquistou rapidamente vastos territórios no Oriente Médio, Norte da África e Península Ibérica, espalhando a cultura e língua árabe. No entanto, disputas internas e invasões externas enfraqueceram o califado ao longo dos séculos seguintes.
É uma das mais importantes florestas tropicais do mundo, apresentando uma rica biodiversidade.
A Mata Atlântica encontra-se, infelizmente, em processo de extinção.
O documento classifica as áreas de acordo com a altitude em três categorias: planícies até 200m, planaltos entre 200m e 1000m, e depressões acima de 1000m.
The document discusses how the creators of a short film took inspiration from the short film "Plastic" in several ways for their own film. Some of the inspirations taken from "Plastic" include using a hidden message about accepting oneself, opening with a shot of a character looking in a wardrobe, using technology like texting to depict communication, and having the storyline involve two characters going on a date together with a twist. The document also mentions replicating the scrolling titles at the end with the same color scheme for consistency across media products.
The document provides an evaluation of the feedback received throughout a film project. It discusses feedback received from pitching the original idea which led to changing the name and tagline. Surveys of the target audience on the script resulted in script changes. Feedback on the treatment plan from a classmate was also received, but no changes were made as the feedback was positive. In total, the document evaluates how feedback influenced decision making and helped improve the project.
The document appears to be a list of video file names and brief descriptions for footage being used to film a short film. The videos document scenes of the main character Charlotte getting ready, communicating with her friend Olivia, leaving her house with her mother, arriving at the park, and meeting Olivia in the park. The videos will be used for opening credits, establishing shots, and telling the story of the short film.
The risk assessment form summarizes the potential hazards for a short film production shooting on December 6th in Castle Batch Park in Weston Super-mare. It identifies poor lighting/visibility, working near roads/traffic/car parks, and scenery/props that are difficult to carry or grasp as hazards. To control these risks, the filmmakers planned to shoot all park footage by a certain time and from consistent angles to maintain consistent lighting. They avoided filming directly by the road or in traffic areas. And they chose a quiet park location to minimize disruptions from other people or sounds that could impact their specific scenery and footage.
A survey was conducted to gather results for script research. The survey looked at how people use scripts in their daily lives and work. The results will help provide insights into common script usage and behaviors.
Healthcare's Grand Hackfest Keynote - HOWTO: Project ScopingSpark Health Design
On March 14, 2014, Design that Matters Director of Product Development, Elizabeth Johansen, delivered a keynote to kick off over 300 participants as part of Healthcare's Grand Hackfest. The presentation gave insight into Design that Matters' process creating a point of view for your project. The point of view has three elements:
1. The Need (why) - going beyond desires, to real needs
2. The Users (who) - all the stakeholders who will make your project successful
3. The Context (where, when, what) - the context for which you will design.
About Healthcare's Grand Hackfest
Focused on pioneering healthcare's greatest innovations, this hackathon will be unlike any other in the past. For the first time ever, we will be partnering with industry's leading organizations to accelerate breakthrough ideas developed over the course of one weekend. Healthcare professionals will pitch real world problems they face to enable sustainable solutions to be created and piloted following the hackathon.
Unite for Sight Keynote: Three Insights from DtM's Project FireflySpark Health Design
On April 16, 2011, Design that Matters Director of Product Development, Elizabeth Johansen, delivered a keynote at the Unite for Sight conference. Elizabeth delivered three key insights to successfully design a medical device for low resource contexts.
1. Unburden the System
2. Engender Trust
3. Affordable, Not Cheap
About Unite for Sight
The Unite for Sight Global Health & Innovation Conference (#GHIC) is the world's leading and largest global health conference as well as the largest social entrepreneurship conference, with 2,200 professionals and students from all 50 states and more than 55 countries.
Tufts Symposium Speaker - Breaking Cultural Barriers: Design with EmpathySpark Health Design
On April 21, 2013, Design that Matters Designer William Harris and Director of Product Development Elizabeth Johansen presented at the Tufts Institute for Global Leadership Symposium.
Designer William Harris provided six tips to bridge the cultural divide when designing medical device for developing countries.
1. Find a Local Partner
2. Identify the Problem
3. Embrace The Culture
4. Watch and Learn
5. Synthesize Your Research
6. Engage Your Users
About Tufts Institute for Global Leadership
The Institute for Global Leadership at Tufts University is an incubator of innovative ways to educate learners at all levels to understand and engage with difficult global issues. We develop new generations of effective and ethical leaders who are able and driven to comprehend complexity, reflect cultural and political nuance, and engage as responsible global citizens in anticipating and confronting the world's most pressing problems.
Credits:
William Harris, graphic design, Designer, Design that Matters
Speaker: The Cost of Saving Babies from Jaundice in Developing CountriesSpark Health Design
This document discusses the design of technologies for improving healthcare in developing countries. It describes several projects including a portable phototherapy device called Firefly that treats newborn jaundice. Field research found Firefly reduced treatment time by 40% compared to overhead phototherapy and helped avoid 3 risky exchange blood transfusions. Stakeholder interviews found Firefly was easy to use and preferred over other options for treating jaundice in resource-limited settings. The document emphasizes the importance of considering factors like local needs, costs, and sustainability when designing technologies for social impact.
This document provides a home-school connection pack with materials on various topics like school, places, activities, food, describing people, jobs, homes and furniture, and technology. The materials are from the Quest 4 Tests and Photocopiable Resources CD and Activity Book, including vocabulary, grammar, and activities. It notes that the Quest 4 Activity Book can be purchased for additional English practice.
On February 14, 2012, Design that Matters Director of Product Development and Designer William Harris gave a guest lecture at Lesley University for their Humans and the Environment course. Together, they presented DtM's point of view that well-designed product can have a systemic impact. In particular, they presented four insights that can yield a high impact medical device to save lives in developing countries.
1. Don't Design for Everyone
2. Think Big, Act Small
3. Mind the Gaps
4. Affordable, Not Cheap
Credits
William Harris, graphic design, Designer, Design that Matters
This document provides a home-school connection pack with materials on various topics like school, places, activities, food, describing people, jobs, homes and furniture, and technology. The materials are from the Quest 4 Tests and Photocopiable Resources CD and Activity Book, including vocabulary, grammar, and activity sections. It notes that the Quest 4 Activity Book can be purchased for additional English practice.
A Ocupação Pré-Histórica do Estado de Santa CatarinaRose vargas
1) O documento descreve a ocupação pré-histórica do estado de Santa Catarina pelo povo indígena. 2) Havia dois grupos iniciais: caçadores que viviam nas florestas há mais de 8.000 anos e pescadores/coletores que viviam no litoral até o primeiro milênio d.C. 3) Dois grupos mais recentes foram identificados: um povo de origem Jê que chegou há 3.000 anos e os Guarani que chegaram no segundo milênio d.C.
Este documento descreve a macrocompartimentação da região sul do litoral brasileiro, dividindo-a em dois macrocompartimentos: 1) o litoral retificado do norte, estendendo-se de Santa Catarina a Torres, com uma linha de costa contínua interrompida por canais e lagunas atrás; 2) o litoral do Rio Grande do Sul, caracterizado por sucessivos cordões litorâneos retendo lagos atrás, como a Lagoa dos Patos.
O trigo teve origem na antiga Mesopotâmia há cerca de 6.700 a.C. e foi cultivado pelos povos da região a partir de 4000 a.C. Atualmente, o Brasil produz em média 5-6 milhões de toneladas de trigo por ano, concentradas principalmente no Sul do país. A safra recorde foi em 1986/87 com uma produção de 6,12 milhões de toneladas.
1) O documento descreve uma pesquisa arqueológica realizada no município de Santana do Matos, Rio Grande do Norte, que identificou 20 sítios arqueológicos com vestígios líticos, um cemitério e 17 registros rupestres.
2) A pesquisa foi dividida em duas etapas: levantamento documental e de campo para localizar e descrever os sítios.
3) O objetivo da pesquisa era mapear os sítios arqueológicos da região para avaliar seu estado de conserv
O documento apresenta uma breve introdução sobre o Egito pré-dinástico, discutindo hipóteses sobre os primórdios da civilização egípcia e as escavações realizadas no sítio de Hierakonpolis, que fornecem evidências sobre as raízes africanas do Egito antigo.
O documento discute como o espaço geográfico influencia a vida das pessoas e como elas interagem com o meio ambiente. Ele explora como fatores naturais e humanos moldam as paisagens e afetam as comunidades locais.
O documento descreve a expansão do Islã após o profeta Maomé unificar as tribos árabes sob uma nova fé monoteísta no século VII. O califado islâmico conquistou rapidamente vastos territórios no Oriente Médio, Norte da África e Península Ibérica, espalhando a cultura e língua árabe. No entanto, disputas internas e invasões externas enfraqueceram o califado ao longo dos séculos seguintes.
É uma das mais importantes florestas tropicais do mundo, apresentando uma rica biodiversidade.
A Mata Atlântica encontra-se, infelizmente, em processo de extinção.
O documento classifica as áreas de acordo com a altitude em três categorias: planícies até 200m, planaltos entre 200m e 1000m, e depressões acima de 1000m.
História e Geografia de Santa Catarina Rose vargas
1) O documento apresenta a história de Santa Catarina desde os primeiros habitantes indígenas até o século XX. 2) Aborda os primeiros povoadores europeus como náufragos, desterrados e sacerdotes, além do povoamento vicentista no século XVII. 3) Discutem a criação da Capitania de Santa Catarina em 1738 para proteger os territórios de São Paulo e Rio Grande do Sul.
O documento descreve as civilizações Astecas, Maias e Incas da América pré-colombiana, abordando aspectos como:
1) População, localização geográfica e principais cidades de cada civilização;
2) Organização política, social e religiosa dos Astecas, Maias e Incas;
3) Conquista européia e queda demográfica após a chegada dos espanhóis.