51±ŹÁÏÍű

Center for Design Thinking co-hosts the 2026 Future of Design in Higher Education Conference

The Center welcomed the FDHE attendees to learn the long-term effects of design thinking, participate in embodied learning activities and engage in diverse conversations.

In the early morning on June 26, 2026, attendees of the (FDHE) Conference arrived for a full day of meaningful discussions, playful games and collaborative workshops on 51±ŹÁÏÍű’s campus. The three-day convening, hosted by Elon’s Center for Design Thinking and Duke University on June 24-26, was dedicated to bringing together individuals who study and practice design thinking into one community-focused space.

After two stimulating days of idea sharing and collaborative creation at Duke, the attendees took a shuttle bus to Elon, where the final day’s festivities began with an aerial performance by Michelle Spurlock, local business owner of Upside Aerial Arts & Fitness.

“I think it’s so cool that an educational conference is starting with circus arts,” says Spurlock. “It just feels like a special treat to be able to perform here.”

An aerial performer balances on a suspended hoop near the 51±ŹÁÏÍű sign as community members relax on the lawn during an outdoor campus performance.
Spurlock performing for an audience of FDHE attendees (Photo by Ethan Wu)

Spurlock says she wanted to focus her performance on joy, connection, and possibility, which best describes the FDHE Convening. She also hosted a partnered yoga session for the conference attendees, full of “laughter and playful connections.”

“I think Danielle’s done an incredible job organizing a lot of different modalities, a lot of different content, but all connected by this theme of human-centered design as a practice, a process, and mindset, so I’m very excited,” says Vivek Rao, co-organizer of the FDHE Convening, Associate Dean for Master’s and Professional Programs at Duke University.

The morning’s activities continued in Elon’s Innovation Hall with Danielle Lake, director of the Center for Design Thinking, sharing findings from the Center for Design Thinking’s most recent study exploring how Elon alumni continue to use design thinking processes in their post-grad careers as well as their civic and personal lives after working for the Center for Design Thinking. Not only does the study serve as a culmination of the Center’s successful work, but it also provides groundbreaking data on the long-term value of design thinking outside the “Elon bubble.”

People gather on tiered seating inside Innovation Hall while a panel discussion takes place below, with attendees listening and participating in a collaborative campus event.
FDHE attendees participating in an interactive trivia game hosted by Danielle Lake with a panel of Elon alumni (Photo by Ethan Wu)

Instead of sharing the findings as just another “research presentation,” the Center for Design Thinking team created an interactive trivia game testing attendees’ knowledge in the design thinking field that they all study. Additionally, Lake invited five of the alumni interviewed for this study to join in on the dynamic presentation. These alumni included Tyson Glover ’17, Mackenzie Hahn ’20, Kait MacIntyre ’22, Emily Joss ’23, and Chase Soloman ’23.

Chase Soloman ’23 talking about his experiences with design thinking (Photo by Ethan Wu) 

“Actually getting a chance to go out into the real world and use some of the skills that we learned right here at Elon is a full-circle moment right now,” says Glover.

Soloman says that he has used his skills from his experience at the Center for Design Thinking in his professional, academic, and personal life, ranging from relationship management to structuring his own research.

Not only did the attendees listen to the experiences of these Elon alumni, but they playfully engaged in the overall game activity. The room was full of boisterous laughter, surprised gasps and animal noises as the guests took their animal-inspired team names to heart.

Once the prizes for the best three teams were awarded, the attendees were guided on a walk through Elon’s campus to continue the day’s activities inside the Center for Design Thinking.

Inside the Center, guests could choose to attend one of two workshops. The workshop in the main Center space focused on hands-on crafting to prompt a creative avenue to explore the design thinking process. The goal of this “Creatively Unprompted” exercise, according to the presenter, Sarah Rottenberg, executive director of the Integrated Product Design Master’s Program at the University of Pennsylvania, was to simulate idea generation without using Artificial Intelligence (AI).

Two people sit across from each other playing cards at a table during a campus workshop, while other participants collaborate in the background of a bright meeting space.
FDHE attendees participating in the “Creatively Unprompted” workshop (Photo by Ethan Wu)

One FDHE attendee, Raja Schaar, Associate Program Director and Associate Professor of Product Design at Drexel University, says she chose the “Creatively Unprompted” workshop to expand on her love of creating ideas and prototyping with her hands “to cultivate ideas and turn them into something else.”

In the next-door Maker Hub space, participants could choose to participate in the “Maker AI Challenge,” which focused on framing AI usage through a creative lens. The Director of the Maker Hub and Assistant Director of Creative Learning Technologies at Elon, Dan Reis, describes this workshop as a way for individuals to bring their ideas to life with AI working as a teammate instead of a generator.

“I’m very curious about broad-based exploration of how AI is being used in education, design, design thinking and teaching design in particular,” says Abbe Don, Interim Director of the Rick and Susan Sontag Center for Collaborative Creativity (or The Hive)at Pomona College, on why she chose the Hub’s AI workshop.

Three people stand in a makerspace as one participant demonstrates a 3D-printed mechanical device, explaining its design while others observe and discuss the project.
FDHE attendees presenting their inventions from the “Maker AI Challenge” workshop (Photo by Ethan Wu)

Once the two-group workshops ended, the convening concluded with a creative four-piece puzzle exercise. On the first day of the convening, participants answered four different prompts assigned to each puzzle piece. These prompts were designed to encourage participants to set intentions on the content they wanted to learn and share, as well as the connections they wanted to make and receive. Instead of keeping these pieces with them, each piece was given to other participants. On the last day, participants received all of their original puzzle pieces to reflect on whether they achieved their intentions and goals.

This activity served as an end to a convening dedicated to encouraging attendees to further their knowledge in the design thinking field through play, exploration, and connection with others. Not only was the activity a meaningful experience, but for the Center’s Danielle Lake, the overall opportunity to host the FDHE Convening was “a dream come true.”

“This year is the start of my eighth year at 51±ŹÁÏÍű, and since the beginning of my time here, one of our goals has been to form a deeper connection with the FDHE community,” said Lake. “I have been able to have such a good support system through this creative and fun group of people.”

“This year’s gathering, hosted by Duke University and 51±ŹÁÏÍű, has been such a wonderful experience, allowing this interdisciplinary group of teacher-scholars to exchange ideas and build meaningful relationships,” says Eugene Korsunskiy, Associate Professor of Engineering at Dartmouth College and Executive Director of the Future of Design in Higher Education. “I couldn’t have asked for a better convening.”

While this year’s FDHE Convening served as “a chance to show the culmination of our work here at Elon and to collaborate with our co-hosts at Duke University,” according to Lake, the Center for Design Thinking will continue to provide 51±ŹÁÏÍű and the surrounding Alamance County community with opportunities to create, grow and thrive through the design thinking process.