Curriculum for the Master's Programme in Sustainable Design - 2017 - Copenhagen

1: Preface

Pursuant to Act 261 of March 18, 2015 on Universities (the University Act) with subsequent changes, the following curriculum is established. The programme also follows the Joint Programme Regulations and the Examination Policies and Procedures for The Faculty.

2: Basis in Ministerial Orders

The Master’s programme is organised in accordance with the Ministry of Higher Education and Science’s Order no. 1061 of June 30, 2016 on Bachelor’s and Master’s Programmes at Universities (the Ministerial Order of the Study Programmes) and Ministerial Order no. 1062 of June 30, 2016 on University Examinations (the Examination Order). Further reference is made to Ministerial Order no. 258 of March 18, 2015 (the Admission Order) and Ministerial Order no. 114 of February 3, 2015 (the Grading Scale Order) with subsequent changes.

3: Campus

The programme is offered in Copenhagen.

4: Faculty affiliation

The Master’s programme falls under The Technical Faculty of IT and Design, Aalborg University.

5: Study board affiliation

The Master’s programme falls under Study Board of Techno-Anthropology and Sustainable Design

6: Affiliation to corps of external examiners

The Master’s programme is associated with the external examiners corps on Nationwide engineering examiners/Design

7: Admission requirements

Applicants with a legal right of admission (retskrav)

  • Bachelor of Science in Sustainable Design (AAU)

Applicants with one of the following degrees are entitled to admission:

  • Design and Innovation (DTU)
  • Integrated Design (SDU)
  • Architecture and Design, specialisation in Industrial Design (AAU)

Applicants without legal right of admission

Students with another Bachelor’s degree may, upon application to the Board of Studies, be admitted after a specific academic assessment if the applicant is deemed to have comparable educational prerequisites. The University can stipulate requirements concerning conducting additional exams prior to the start of study.

8: The programme title in Danish and English

The Master’s programme entitles the graduate to the Danish designation Civilingeniør, cand.polyt. i bæredygtigt design. The English designation is: Master of Science (MSc) in Engineering (Sustainable Design).

9: Programme specifications in ECTS credits

The Master’s programme is a 2-year, research-based, full-time study programme. The programme is set to 120 ECTS credits.

10: Rules concerning credit transfer (merit), including the possibility for choice of modules that are part of another programme at a university in Denmark or abroad

The Study Board can approve that passed programme elements from other educational programmes at the same level replaces programme elements within this programme (credit transfer).

Furthermore, the Study Board can, upon application, approve that parts of this programme is completed at another university or a further education institution in Denmark or abroad (pre-approval of credit transfer).

The Study Board’s decisions regarding credit transfer are based on an academic assessment.

11: Exemptions

The Study Board’s possibilities to grant exemption, including exemption to further examination attempts and special examination conditions, are stated in the Examination Policies and Procedures published at this website: https://www.studyservice.aau.dk/rules

12: Rules for examinations

The rules for examinations are stated in the Examination Policies and Procedures published at this website: https://www.studyservice.aau.dk/rules

13: Rules concerning written work, including the Master’s Thesis

In the assessment of all written work, regardless of the language it is written in, weight is also given to the student's formulation and spelling ability, in addition to the academic content. Orthographic and grammatical correctness as well as stylistic proficiency are taken as a basis for the evaluation of language performance. Language performance must always be included as an independent dimension of the total evaluation. However, no examination can be assessed as ‘Pass’ on the basis of good language performance alone; similarly, an examination normally cannot be assessed as ‘Fail’ on the basis of poor language performance alone.

The Study Board can grant exemption from this in special cases (e.g., dyslexia or a native language other than Danish).

The Master’s Thesis must include an English summary. If the project is written in English, the summary can be in Danish. The summary is included in the evaluation of the project as a whole.

14: Requirements regarding the reading of texts in a foreign language

At programmes taught in Danish, it is assumed that the student can read academic texts in modern Danish, Norwegian, Swedish and English and use reference works, etc., in other European languages. At programmes taught in English, it is assumed that the student can read academic text and use reference works, etc., in English.

15: Competence profile on the diploma

The following competence profile will appear on the diploma:

A Candidatus graduate has the following competency profile:

A Candidatus graduate has competencies that have been acquired via a course of study that has taken place in a research environment.

A Candidatus graduate is qualified for employment on the labour market based on his or her academic discipline as well as for further research (PhD programmes). A Candidatus graduate has, compared to a Bachelor, developed his or her academic knowledge and independence so as to be able to apply scientific theory and method on an independent basis within both an academic and a professional context.

16: Competence profile of the programme

The following competence profile on the diploma:

A Candidatus graduate has the following competency profile:

A Candidatus graduate has competencies that have been acquired via a course of study that has taken place in a research environment.

A Candidatus graduate is qualified for employment on the labour market on the basis of his or her academic discipline as well as for further research (PhD programmes). A Candidatus graduate has, compared to a Bachelor, developed his or her academic knowledge and independence so as to be able to apply scientific theory and method on an independent basis within both an academic and a professional context.

The graduate of the Master’s programme will aquire the following competencies: 

Knowledge

  • Has knowledge, which in chosen areas, is based on the highest international level of research, within the following areas: 
    • Sustainable design
    • Innovation and organizational change processes
    • Staging participatory design
    • Entrepreneurship and market creation
    • Can understand and critically respond to these knowledge fields and their methodologies, as well as identify scientific problem areas within and across them

Skills

  • Master engineering and science related methods, methods from innovation studies and methods from network-based analysis of organizations, institutional and interest related context and can with these analyze sustainable technological innovation
  • Can critically consider above-mentioned theories and methods, develop new models for sustainable technological innovation and in collaboration with networks of different actors transform these into strategic plans of action
  • Can discuss and communicate professional and scientific issues regarding sustainable innovation with technical experts, decision-makers, senior executives, government officers, NGO’s and various users

Competencies

  • Can manage work- and development situations that are complex, unpredictable and require new solutions
  • Can independently initiate and complete professional and cross-disciplinary collaboration and take a professional responsibility within design- and transition processes
  • Can independently take responsibility for own professional and cross-disciplinary development within the scientific fields of design, technology and sustainability

17: Structure and Contents of the programme

The programme is structured in modules and organised as a problem-based study. A module is a program element or a group of program elements, which aims to give students a set of professional skills within a fixed time frame specified in ECTS credits, and concluding with one or more examinations within specific exam periods. Examinations are defined in the curriculum.

Teaching methods and exams

The programme is based on a combination of academic, problem-oriented and interdisciplinary approaches and organised based on the following work and evaluation methods that combine skills and reflection:

  • lectures
  • instructions
  • project work
  • work in laboratories and workshops
  • experimentations
  • workshops
  • exercises (individually and in groups)
  • teacher feedback
  • reflections
  • portfolio work
  • external activities
  • case work
  • peer assessment
  • study groups

All modules are assessed through individual grading according to the 7-point scale or Pass/Fail. All modules are assessed by external examination (external grading) or internal examination (internal grading).

Curriculum content

The Master’s program is an engineering education with special emphasis on design and development and innovation of sustainable solutions. The program includes interdisciplinary components to satisfy the need for combining methods from social science and technology studies with technical subjects and design practices.

The education will provide the student with the ability to understand, stage and carry out innovative processes leading to design and the implementation of sustainable products, services and socio-material system solutions through involving relevant actors.

The programs’ focus on sustainability is reflecting the challenges that development, production, consumption and dismantling of technologies poses for resource utilization and climate. It builds on the broad notion of sustainability that includes the environment, the social and the economy. The realization of these societal goals implies a focus on sustainable transitions in a design perspective as the core to the program’s activities.

Completion of the Master's programme

The Master’s programme must be completed no later than four years after it was begun.

18: Overview of the programme

The tabel below shows all project and course modules on the master program, the amount of ECTS’s and the assessment for each.

Offered as: 1-professional
Study programme: Sustainable Design
Module name Course type ECTS Applied grading scale Evaluation method Assessment method Language
1 Semester
Conceptualisation of Sustainable Value Chains
(TBISDK17101)
Project 15 7-point grading scaleInternal examinationWritten and oral exam English
Design in Organisations
(TBISDK17102)
Course 5 7-point grading scaleInternal examinationWritten or oral exam English
Market Creation
(TBISDK17103)
Course 5 7-point grading scaleInternal examinationWritten or oral exam English
Electives 1. sem Course 5
2 Semester
Design Strategies as Responses to Wicked Problems
(TBISDK17201)
Project 20 7-point grading scaleExternal examinationWritten and oral exam English
Sustainable Transition
(TBISDK17202)
Course 5 7-point grading scaleInternal examinationWritten or oral exam English
Staging Participatory Design
(TBISDK17203)
Course 5 7-point grading scaleInternal examinationWritten or oral exam English
3 Semester
Version A
Design Research Project
(TBISDK17301)
Project 30 7-point grading scaleInternal examinationOral exam based on a project English
3 Semester
Version B
Academic Internship
(TBISDK17302)
Project 30 7-point grading scaleInternal examinationOral exam based on a project English
3 Semester
Version C
International Design Project
(TBISDK17303)
Project 30 7-point grading scaleInternal examinationOral exam based on a project English
3 Semester
Version D
Semester at another university 30
4 Semester
Master’s Thesis
(TBISDK17401)
Project 30 7-point grading scaleExternal examinationOral exam based on a project English

The master program is based on a progression in which the complexity of the themes is progressively increasing:

1st semester:Conceptualisation of Sustainable Value Chains

On this semester the focus is on conceptualising sustainable value chains related to organisation, economics and market. The organisational context that design and innovation processes are happening in is introduced through the course module Design in organisations and the economic dimension of design is introduced through the course module Market creation. The students are to choose between two elective modules: Distributed technological design and Design for sustainability. In the project module Conceptualisation of sustainable value chains, the students use knowledge gained from the two course modules and the selected elective module and explore how sustainable value chains can be realised in organisations and on the market, with point of departure in a realistic problem definition.

2nd semester: Design Strategies as Responses to Wicked Problems

On this semester the focus is on design strategies as responses to wicked problems and how it is possible to tackle these wicked problems through a design approach. In the course module Staging participatory design, the students will learn strategies for how to stage design processes, and the course module Sustainable transition focuses on how to stage larger transition processes.   

3rd semester: Holistic Design

On this semester the students are given the opportunity to take a semester at another university, carry out a design project in an international context, carry out a design research project or do an internship in a company or organization.

4th semester: Master Thesis

At the last semester the students are to carry out their master thesis. It is free for the students to choose topic and collaboration partner themselves, as long as it is related to sustainable design challenges.

The figure below shows a schematic view of the master program. 

Point

5

10

15

20

25

30

Semester

1

 

Conceptualisation of Sustainable Value Chains

Design in Organisations

Market creation

Distributed Technological Design

Design for Sustainability

2

 

Design Strategies as Responses to Wicked Problems

Staging Participatory Design

Sustainable Transition

3

Design Research Project

Internship

International Design Project

Semester at another University

4

Master Thesis

Elective modules

During the master program the students have one elective course module at the first semester. Further, at the 3rd semester, the students have the possibility to choose between 4 options: 1) carry out a Design research project, 2) do a Internship, 3) carry out an International design project or 4) study a whole semester at another university.

 
Electives 1. sem
Module name Course type ECTS Applied grading scale Evaluation Method Assessment method Language
Distributed Technological Design
(TBISDK17105)
Course 5 Passed/Not Passed Internal examination Written or oral exam English
Design for Sustainability
(TBISDK17104)
Course 5 7-point grading scale Internal examination Written or oral exam English

19: Additional information

The current version of the curriculum is published on the Board of Studies’ website, including more detailed information about the programme, including exams.

20: Commencement and transitional rules

The curriculum is approved by the dean and enters into force as of 1. september 2017 - for both 1st and 3rd semester. 

 

21: Amendments to the curriculum and regulations

Minor editorial changes have been made in connection with the digitalisation of the curriculum.