THE USE OF LEGO ® SERIOUS PLAY IN THE ENGINEERING DESIGN CLASSROOM

Linda Bulmer
2011 Proceedings of the Canadian Engineering Education Association (CEEA)  
With the belief that teaching design, innovation and entrepreneurship studies requires methods and techniques that are themselves innovative and entrepreneurial in nature, LEGO® SERIOUS PLAY™ (LSP) has been used within the Technology Management and Entrepreneurship (TME) Program at the University of New Brunswick, Faculty of Engineering, as a complementary instructional technique since 2005. LSP is a creative and experiential process that can facilitate strategic planning, problem solving, team
more » ... building, and innovation mining through the use of specialized LEGO® brick kits. Designed for the corporate environment, it made its formal debut in 2002. Since then, over 250 global organizations, in 27 countries have used this facilitated thinking technique. Example companies that offer enthusiastic testimonials for the methodology include Daimler/Chrysler, Verizon Wireless, Ikea, and Pfizer. LSP is now emerging in the educational environment. The current generation of students, before becoming gripped to electronics, was encouraged by parents to use their hands and imaginations to construct models using LEGO® bricks. They were at one time 'Imagineers'. In addition, engineering students tend to work hard and play harder. Thus it became desirable to test how introducing the element of play [1][2] with purpose into the Entrepreneurship and Design classrooms could awaken students' creative energies that spur innovation. "Constructivism" [3] has been increasingly emphasized as an effective approach to learning. Also, the related "Constructionist" theory suggests that by using our hands and 3D modeling to explore ideas we can surface more information, past experience, intuition and understanding than we can effectively express through speech alone. Based on the promising LSP initial TME pilot results in 2006, it was predicted that Engineering students as a whole could further benefit from the LSP experience and use this form of concrete thinking to solve design/innovation challenges and teaming issues. The LSP pilot action research was extended in collaboration with graduating Civil Engineering students in their Team Capstone Design Course winter 2008. Lego based (LSP) workshops subsequently conducted demonstrated a positive impact on the design teams with respect to their views on team responsibility and accountability, ability to collaborate and cooperate as well as their awareness of team risks and responsibilities over those teams with no LSP workshop experience.
doi:10.24908/pceea.v0i0.3699 fatcat:hjiqokcd2femvdydapggouqlvu