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Academic Journal
DSGN - Interior Design

“Color, Form, and Light: Recommendations for Design of ECE Classrooms Based on Group Structure and Activity Type”

The aim of this study is to present recommendations for the design of ECE classrooms based on time children spent on activities and the structure of the groups in the classrooms. The study focused on data collected for the National Survey of Early Care and Education (NSECE,) a large national study in the United States. The analyses revealed that the majority children typically spent up to one hour each day on each activity, including physical activity; book reading, looking, and sharing; and singing/rhyming activities. Children spent one hour or more engaged in free-play activities at the majority of the centers. Design recommendations based on the empirical literature are detailed with a focus on images of activity areas in existing early childhood education and care centers. Recommendations are also made for loft design ideas to enhance children’s experiences with different activities in the environment. Variation of these design elements encourages exploration and movement within the space. Color, form, and light combine to enhance the activity areas for children with sensory experiences and inspiration.
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Academic Journal
DSGN - Interior Design

“Environmental Color and the Cooperative Behavior of Children with Sensory Processing Challenges: An Exploratory Study”

The difficult challenge faced by occupational therapists and preschool teachers today is creating environments that benefit concurrently the behaviors of all children within one classroom setting. Occupational therapists and teachers design both the physical environment and the social environment for children with developmental needs across a broad spectrum of abilities. Children who have atypical reactions to sensory stimuli may benefit from a space with environmental color because it could act as a modifier for their attention in the environment. The purpose of this study was to investigate the impact of environmental color on the cooperative behavior of preschool children assessed with having one or more sensory processing challenges. It was predicted that walls with environmental color from focal colors (purple, blue, green, yellow, orange, and red) would positively impact the overall cooperative behavior of children with sensory processing challenges relative to a wall of white color scheme. The male participant showed higher cooperation scores in all visible-spectrum focal color conditions compared to the white color conditions. The cooperation scores for the female participant were lower on all visible-spectrum focal color conditions, except for orange, as compared with the white conditions. The results of the two different case studies within the environmental conditions are illustrated with discussion and implications of the research findings.
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Academic Journal
DSGN - Interior Design

“Identity Expression and Bedroom Personalization by Urban Adolescents in Botswana”

Identity expression through the design of urban adolescents’ bedrooms in Gaborone, Botswana, was the focus of this qualitative study. Interviews were conducted to determine the manner in which decorative and personal items played a role in identity exploration and expression. The findings indicated a clear interplay between personalization and identity formation for adolescents. Identities expressed through personalization of bedrooms were private self, gender identity, age identity, family/social identity, and relationships; past, present, and future roles/identities; and religious identity. In addition to these, boys clearly expressed sport identity, self-image, creative self, and achievements through their bedroom personalization. A model is presented that illustrates the interplay between personalization and identity formation.
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