Rosenverse

Log in or create a free Rosenverse account to watch this video.

Log in Create free account

100s of community videos are available to free members. Conference talks are generally available to Gold members.

How Will Design be Taught When the Schools Shut Down?

Friday, May 8, 2026 • Rosenfeld Community

This video is featured in the Future of Design playlist.

Share the love for this talk
How Will Design be Taught When the Schools Shut Down?
Speakers: Nathan Shedroff , Hugh Dubberly and Thomas J. McLeish
Link:

Summary

Design schools are collapsing—literally. When institutions like California College of the Arts close after more than a century, it’s clear our old model of design education can’t survive economic pressure, tech disruption, or outdated ideas about what “training” should be. So what comes next? Nathan Shedroff, Thomas J. McLeish, and Hugh Dubberly will lead an exploration of what might replace the design school as we know it: apprenticeships, corporate academies, AI mentors, decentralized credentialing—and models no one’s tried (yet). It’s not just about how designers will learn, but who gets to define what education means in the future.

Key Insights

  • Design and higher education face severe economic and enrollment crises exacerbated by demographic shifts and political pressures, threatening many independent colleges.

  • Traditional admission processes may be replaced by universal acceptance combined with personalized learning journeys guided by free and validated educational content.

  • AI is not only a disruptive tool but a new medium and material for creative design practice and education requiring novel pedagogical approaches.

  • Critical thinking combined with critical making underpins design education, but both theorizing and making can serve as entry points in a recursive learning loop.

  • Changing communication technologies have historically reshaped knowledge transmission, and AI may fundamentally transform how collective knowledge is built and shared.

  • Measurement and assessment in design education are challenging due to multiple valid answers and the subjective nature of critique, risking oversimplified scoring metrics.

  • Blending apprenticeship/internship models with classroom co-learning may better prepare students for real-world design practice than traditional academic structures.

  • Lifelong learning should be central to education, enabling returning alumni to teach and share knowledge continuously, not just one-off credentialing.

  • Play and experimentation are essential in engaging learners with AI and complex systems, helping avoid black-box dependence and promoting creativity.

  • Design education lags industry needs partly due to conservative academic culture and governance often by non-designers, necessitating stronger integration and innovation.

Notable Quotes

"What if everyone was accepted? We could rise almost anyone to proficiency if the curriculum and pedagogy are strong enough."

"I believe that 50% of white-collar jobs are just going away in the next 5 to 10 years."

"The current wave of AI has disrupted practice so much, so quickly, that it's difficult to tell what practice is or what it will be in three years."

"Critical making requires critique, theory, activity, reflection, leading back to theory, but it doesn't have to start with theory. It can start anywhere."

"Reading books and articles is no longer central for many young people. What will replace books and articles for collective knowledge building?"

"We need to figure out how to assess design projects and designers better because employers need to make choices, but design resists simple scoring."

"What if learning was always mobile, decentralized, distributed among people and institutions, with new ways to acknowledge learning beyond grades?"

"Kids love to play. They challenge the world through games and simulation, so the things we create need to support play and experimentation."

"Universities are fairly recent inventions; knowledge transfer happened for thousands of years by learning in communities before formal institutions."

"Design schools are often governed by non-designers and are surprisingly conservative, slow to change, and sometimes exploit precarious gig workers."

Ask the Rosenbot
Joshua Noble
Casual Inference
2023 • QuantQual Interest Group
Edgar Anzaldua Moreno
Using Research to Determine Unique Value Proposition
2021 • Advancing Research 2021
Gold
Victor Udoewa
Research in the Pluriverse
2023 • Advancing Research 2023
Gold
Max Gadney
Assessing UX jobs for impact in climate
2024 • Climate UX Interest Group
Marjorie Stainback
Transforming Strategic Research Capacity through Democratization
2019 • DesignOps Summit 2019
Gold
Kristin Skinner
Five Years of DesignOps
2021 • DesignOps Summit 2021
Gold
Melinda Belcher
Bridging the Gap: Making the Most of the Differences Between Agency and Enterprise
2024 • Enterprise Experience 2020
Gold
Rachael Dietkus, LCSW
Everything You Need to Know about the Civic Design 2022 Call for Presentations
2022 • Civic Design Community
Niko Laitinen
Adaptable Org Design for Resilient Times
2021 • Design at Scale 2021
Gold
Fisayo Osilaja
[Demo] The AI edge: From researcher to strategist
2024 • Designing with AI 2024
Gold
Bria Alexander
Day 1 Panel: Up to the Minute: The latest in AI’s impact on UX
2025 • Designing with AI 2025
Gold
Clara Kliman-Silver
UX Futures: The Role of Artificial Intelligence in Design
2023 • Enterprise UX 2023
Gold
Bria Alexander
Theme Two Intro
2023 • DesignOps Summit 2023
Gold
Kate Kalcevich
Designing inclusively with AI
2024 • Designing with AI 2024
Gold
Robert Fabricant
Shifting dynamics: The evolving relationship between researchers, participants, and organizational systems
2025 • Advancing Research 2025
Gold
Luca Rager
Empowering Gaming at Scale: How Xbox Builds Powerful, Automated, and Distributed Design Systems with Sketch
2021 • DesignOps Summit 2021
Gold

More Videos

Bilan Hashi

"Whose story gets told, the participant or the researcher, is also a question of knowledge production."

Bilan Hashi

The Tension Between Story Collecting and Story Telling in Research

March 10, 2021

Julie Baher

"Peter Conner, our lawyer, redesigned compliance training so people took fewer courses but more relevant ones."

Julie Baher

Culture Change—My Journey

May 14, 2015

Iulia Cornigeanu

"Vanity metrics paint a nice picture, but they don’t give you the full story or context behind the numbers."

Iulia Cornigeanu

QuantQual Book Club: Small Data

March 8, 2024

Jemma Ahmed

"If you miss any one of these—access to data, insight generation, accuracy, engagement—it’s not truly democratization."

Jemma Ahmed Steve Carrod Chris Geison Dr. Shadi Janansefat Christopher Nash

Democratization: Working with it, not against it [Advancing Research Community Workshop Series]

July 24, 2024

Liza Pemstein

"Research is a group project and learning is a group project—you don’t have to be an expert but find those who are."

Liza Pemstein Jane Davis

Scaling Research Via an Ops First Model at Clever

March 27, 2023

Bria Alexander

"This day is focused on me, my job and my specific day-to-day challenges, not on some invisible finish line or senior title."

Bria Alexander

Theme Two Intro

October 3, 2023

Rachael Dietkus, LCSW

"Trauma is not so much an external event as it is the way that event embeds in individual bodies."

Rachael Dietkus, LCSW Uday Gajendar Dr. Dawn Emerick Dawn E. Shedrick, LCSW

Leading through the long tail of trauma

July 7, 2022

Louis Rosenfeld

"Sponsor sessions are free, not sales pitches, and do not overlap with the main program so anyone can attend."

Louis Rosenfeld Bria Alexander

Opening Remarks

November 16, 2022

Joshua Noble

"If you cannot remove a treatment, it may not be a true cause."

Joshua Noble

Casual Inference

October 6, 2023