Pedagogy
in
architecture;
overlooked argument impacting the fundamentals of the architecture fraternity.
An schooling
ABSTRACT Architecture is a subject that takes decades to master. Just look at the field’s consensus masters - it is not uncommon for an architect to work through his or her fifties before receiving widespread acclaim. So, it should come as no surprise that architecture schools simply don’t have the time to teach students all there is to know about architecture. School is the place where future architects are given a foundation of skills, knowledge and design sensibility that they can carry with them into their careers - but what exactly that foundation should contain is still a hot debate within the field. To come closer to pinpointing what an architectural education should include? I have carried out this research.
RESEARCH QUESTION How to prepare for architecture?
AIM: -to analyse and scrutinise the practice of architectural education particularly in India. And to meticulously study the underpinning pillars of the educational practice.
OBJECTIVE: - the research article has the primary focus the understand the intricacy of the course and formulate a detailed evaluation based on the rational observations through case studies and statistical data supported by facts
INTRODUCTION Every epoch brings specific challenges, offers space for necessary change, but also encourages the self-reflection, which is essential for any progress. This article argues about the interconnection of architectural practice and education from history to the present. How is the position of the architect as a pedagogue or pedagogue as an architect perceived today? Are there any fixed limits between the academic and professional fields? Where and how one gains the knowledge about architecture? Bucky (as Buckminster Fuller was nicknamed) said: …The specialist in comprehensive design is an emerging synthesis of artist, inventor, mechanic, objective economist and evolutionary strategist. Architecture is undoubtedly a complex discipline that can be taught only through a long-term study, because, as Vitruvius has noted, only such a process can lead to the …summum architecture to the architecture itself. It must be understood and perceived, and a good architect should have some innate gift. the aim should be grand culture as a whole - a beautiful and man-serving architecture. It is all about patience, peace, contemplation and waiting, not about immediate mechanical responses to a given impulse. It is about controlling oneself in general. The way of seeing things is greatly