Being different as a personality and being design unique requires respect, bravery, and patience vs What learnings from the New Zealand All Blacks Rugby team can be gleaned by tertiary Architectural Students in teambuilding and dealing with differences

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Authors
Rennie, Julian
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Date
2020-02
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Conference Contribution - Oral Presentation
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Christchurch (N.Z.)
New Zealand
architecture students
architecture education
team building
Unitec courses
Festival of Transitional Architecture (FESTA)
design processes
collaborative learning
team leadership
Christchurch rebuild
Citation
Rennie, J.J. (2020, February). Being Different as a Personality and Being Design Unique Requires Respect, Bravery, and Patience. Paper presented at the Joseph Haldane, PhD (London), F.R.A.S. Chairman & CEO, IAFOR The International Academic Forum, The Southeast Asian Conference on Education (SEACE2020).
Abstract
The Festival of Transitional Architecture (FESTA) is a voluntary organisation that came into being after the devastating Christchurch earthquakes between September 2010 and February 2011 (the latter claiming the lives of 185 people). “CityUps” was their 2014 version of the Event. The Festival of Transitional Architecture (FESTA) was a group was set up to specifically to explore the CBD (Central Business District) voids before the ‘rebuild’ of the city could commence. Group ING (for ‘Inspire, Nurture, Grow’). ING’s composition was six female and ten male students, with nationalities ranging through Pacific Island, Kiwi, Indian, Vietnamese, Chinese and one Danish student. The group’s members ranged in age from 19 through to 25 years old.
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The International Academic Forum (IAFOR)
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