current consumerist binge cannot be sustained, we need to create academic programs that are
focused on helping students see
what can be, instead of leading
them to be dependent on what
has been.
In order to move forward it is
time to clearly communicate and
leverage the imperatives facing
humankind and to frame solutions to these problems through
a new way of thinking about
designed interactions. Some may
offer that technology will provide the answers needed to buy
ourselves out of this situation.
But to those who look to (or hope
for) technology that evolves out
of our continued exploitation to
solve the problems inherent in
our current consumerist model,
I’d offer that our most serious
environmental challenges are
the direct result of the technologies that created the model
in the first place. As only one
example, new technology in the
form of biofuels has been proposed to maintain the continued
use of the internal combustion
engine. But in so doing, there are
troublesome issues surrounding
availability of other resources,
including land, food, and most
concerning, water.
Technologies that create new
problems that displace the old
problems should not be considered. We should not be robbing
Peter to pay Paul. Furthermore,
technology as a panacea for
every problem also ignores
our own need for humanity as
a component of the solution.
Heidegger’s post–World War II
observations about technology
being a means to an end were
never more timely than now.
His essay “On the Question of
Technology” and his prescient
observations on the threat of
consumerism resonate even
more powerfully today than
they did more than 50 years
ago, especially as we give up on
the idea that technology should
serve only as a means to an end.
We’ve instead embraced the
notion of technology as an end
in itself by grossly accelerating
both obsolescence and depreciation in exchange for instant
gratification.
As Heidegger put it, in “our
sheer preoccupation with technology we do not yet experience
the coming to presence of technology.” Such a thought does not
bode well and warns us of the
risk that technology for its own
sake will consume us before we
know it has happened. Indeed,
the current path is without end
until there is nothing left to consume but ourselves. There are
those who might argue that it’s
already happened. If so, we will
need to back ourselves out of a
very deep hole.
Without sounding apocalyptic,
the sooner we can push away
from the notion that happiness
or peace of mind can be bought
in the objects that we consume
and surround ourselves with,
the less painful the transition
will be to a more sustainable
model. We need to be much
more brutally honest with each
other about how we, as members
of a global community, must
shape our future and our lives at
all levels, including those most
intimate—those that shape our
most human and humane interactions.
New Interaction Imperatives
What can be done to transition interaction design to the
academic model we need for
the future? In order to be deliberate about how we do such a
thing, we need to clearly communicate the aforementioned
environmental a priori imperatives. Certainly with increasing
focus on the problem it will
become evident that new models are needed quickly. To that
end, those interested in finding
solutions must find venues to
collaborate for the purpose of
fomenting a consistent dialogue
that reaches a broad constituency of stakeholders. Providing
the places for collaboration and
leadership has always been the
responsibility of the world’s
educational systems; having
long abdicated that responsibility to the very interests that
have perpetuated the current
dying model, collaboration and
leadership are a responsibility
that education needs to take up
again.
In order to progress, academics need to further insist on the
right to establish new curricular and assessment paradigms
rather than blindly follow existing ones. And institutions need
to allow these new models the
opportunity to develop assessment schema in an independent fashion that encourages
innovation and ideation, not
dutiful subscription to predetermined outcomes that will
only constrain the process. With
interaction design, as with most
programs that touch on issues
associated with old consumer
models, the conversation is one
that should purposely develop
a more thoughtful and strategic
use of curriculum to support
programs whose students will
be able to synthesize solutions
in ways that can be measured
not only academically and pro-