Miller@arch - Utah.edu WWW - Arch.utah - Edu/miller: Course Syllabus
Miller@arch - Utah.edu WWW - Arch.utah - Edu/miller: Course Syllabus
Miller@arch - Utah.edu WWW - Arch.utah - Edu/miller: Course Syllabus
Course Syllabus
On Architectural Theory
The English word “practice” is adopted from the Latin practicus and
from the Greek praktikos, meaning “record, action”, and from prattein,
meaning to “do, act”. Practice also means the habitual doing or
carrying on of something, or a customary or constant action.
This course is designed to help you see the way writing and theory can
serve you as tools in the design process, professional practice, and the
way you engage in the world around you. Writing can introduce you to
more conscious living, tap unused resources that lie dormant within
you, and can make you a more valuable and effective member of an
architectural design team.
The writing you will do will help you free up your writing style, expand
the genres of writing you can master, and consider ways you can use
writing to open up your creativity, enable you to process and record
your ideas, help you get jobs. It will explore theoretical concepts and
their application to your design work. Writing is not the enemy.
Hopefully, you will make writing your friend.
Critical reading
For critical reading, you cannot sit back and wait for the author to tell
you a story, what the writing has to say. Reading is a sort of social
interaction which requires that you set to work as the author is “silent”
to speak in their place, to make your own conclusions and synthesis,
and follow your own agenda. You might imagine that you are engaged
in a conversation with someone (Corbusier for instance) and once he
has completed what he wants to say to you, you are in a position to
speak back, to say something of your own. If you have no response,
you are readily lazily and need to instead, read critically to formulate a
response.
Communication Emphasis
2. Short essay responses to two texts (20 points each) 40 points total
d. Critical book review
e. Relation to personal philosophy
f. Corbusier, Huxtable texts
Required Readings