mTID Gets Panties in a Twist

I’m not sure Carnegie Mellon’s master of tangible interaction design is news to me. I sort of recall hearing something about it last spring. But today was the first time I saw a curriculum for the program. Like several of my former peers, I am intrigued by this program. And as a master of interaction design, I am curious how this program relates to my own, given the only difference in name is the word “tangible.”

During my two years as an interaction design student, I took courses with several of this new program’s faculty. So I wonder what these students will get that I did not. What they will get, and what is a question for some of my peers, is a master of design distinction despite the program being part of the school of architecture and not the school of design.

From the program description…

The Master of Tangible Interaction Design program is a one-year program at Carnegie Mellon University centered around new computational technologies in making. The program serves two distinct groups: those with significant engineering and/or computer science knowledge who wish to master design or artistic skills, and those with significant design, art, or architecture experience who wish to master technological means of making. The scope of study in the mTID program is broad, including digital fabrication, analog and digital electronics, media and materials, and computer programming.

Some comments collected on Twitter:

Phil Robinson yeah we were discussing putting ‘extreme’ before our name, or making us interaction designers of everything

Kyle Vice is it just me, or does this feel thrown together? 

Jared Cole does the mTID fall under the realm of art or design? are we talking MFA or M.Des? Art, I can see… Design, I cannot

Jodi Forlizzi yes, just add water and prerequisites, you’ve got yourself a master’s program.

This sounds like a cool program. It’s new, so I can excuse its haphazard appearance. But I do consider my master of interaction of design to include all types of interaction, tangible and intangible. So is this a subset of what I studied? To a degree, with a lot less emphasis on design. And it does not seem like a focus within interaction design, but more experimental, particularly with its deference to art and computer science.

Certainly, it will only benefit humankind if more people that make products with embedded computing (which is how I interpret this program) have some exposure to design. But a master in design (albeit mTID, which is even more obscure than mDes) from the school of architecture? Curious.


Comments

2 responses to “mTID Gets Panties in a Twist”

  1. I recently came across your blog jamin.org while searching on experience design (after having seen Adaptive Path’s Aurora prototype video). After having read a number of your entries, I would really like the opportunity to chat with you. Not only do I enjoy reading your ideas about design, but some of your past experiences are exactly the ones I am thinking of pursuing. More particularly, I am thinking about pursuing graduate studies at Carnegie Mellon University in the Master of Interaction Design program. I would really like to hear more about your motivation for pursuing graduate studies, your choice of Carnegie Mellon University (and the other universities you considered), and your experiences there. In addition, I would also like to talk more broadly with you about design, a career in experience design as well as your internship at Adaptive Path.

    Currently, I am a software design engineer at Microsoft but have found myself more interested in the creative side of product development, especially experience design. Given your recently travelled path, you are the ideal individual to help answer some of my questions. I will be vacationing in San Francisco from Saturday, September 13 through Tuesday, September 16. Perhaps we can grab a cup of coffee and talk shop?

  2. Sounds like Gross’ class and probably maybe similar to NYU’s ITP program.

    Did you know that SVA is also going to have a Master of Interaction Design program?

    Check it out:
    http://www.schoolofvisualarts.edu/news/index.jsp?sid0=228&page_id=519&content_id=2413