Course:GEOG350/2025/sdfsadf
Appearance
Total length: Approximately 3,200-3,500 words plus visualizations, references, and process reflection
Introduction & Context (~300 words)
- Introduce your topic and its significance to Vancouver
- Situate it within broader urban geography themes from the course
- Preview the wicked problem characteristics that make this challenge complex
Stakeholder Landscape (~400 words) [Empathize]
- Map the key stakeholders affected by this issue
- Describe how different groups experience the challenge
- Identify whose voices are typically centered and whose are marginalized
- Include a stakeholder map visualization
Problem Framing (~500 words) [Define]
- Present your primary problem statement
- Acknowledge alternative framings and competing definitions
- Explain which wicked problem characteristics are most relevant
- Articulate 2-3 "How Might We" questions that guide your analysis
Vancouver Case Study (~800 words) [Prototype]
- Focus on a specific neighbourhood, project, or development
- Incorporate local data and spatial analysis
- Analyze political, economic, and social forces at work
- Include maps, charts, or visualizations of local data
Comparative Perspective (~400 words)
- Connect Vancouver's experience to other Canadian or global cities
- What can Vancouver learn from elsewhere?
- What makes Vancouver's situation distinctive?
Ideas for Urban Action (~500 words) [Ideate]
- Present 2-3 evidence-based approaches or interventions
- Acknowledge trade-offs and potential unintended consequences
- Discuss which stakeholders might support or oppose each approach
- Avoid presenting a single "solution"—emphasize that wicked problems require ongoing engagement
Conclusion & Reflection (~300 words)
- Summarize key insights
- Reflect on what you learned through the Design Thinking process
- Identify questions that remain open for future inquiry
References & Data Sources
- Properly cited academic sources and local data sources
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