『Designing Spaces Where Students Feel They Belong - Psychological Needs Part 1』のカバーアート

Designing Spaces Where Students Feel They Belong - Psychological Needs Part 1

Designing Spaces Where Students Feel They Belong - Psychological Needs Part 1

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In another episode of Student Success: Built by Design, our panel of experts sits down to discuss the third layer of Maslow’s pyramid, the psychological needs for community and belonging. Once again joining the discussion are Dr. Joel Peterson, Aurora Ayala, Andrea Stalker, and Jeff Johnson, who bring unique perspectives on how built environments, facilities management, and inclusive design contribute to better educational outcomes. The conversation covers how campus design influences student connectivity, trust, community, and belonging. Dr. Peterson reminds us how unmet lower needs show up later when they hinder higher ones and that these needs can be met simultaneously. They draw connections from these ideas to planning environments that feel welcoming rather than surveilled. The panel talks about designing spaces at multiple social scales, from intimate nooks to larger gathering areas, and notes how building character, cleanliness, and maintenance affect student behavior and comfort. They also describe intentional construction communication and community engagement that builds ownership. Episode Guide: 02:24 Maslow Social Needs Explained 04:34 Designing for Trust and Belonging 05:32 Spaces for Connection at Every Scale 10:47 Food Services and Student Centers 12:24 Athletics vs Housing Social Energy 14:17 Stewardship Maintenance and Broken Windows 16:21 Branding Wayfinding and Pride 17:51 Construction Engagement and Campus Staff 21:57 Modern Student Housing Community Design 26:24 Maintainability Lessons and Wrap Up The Student Success: Built by Design is a production of San Diego Community College District and is produced by University FM. Show Links: San Diego Community College DistrictMeasure HH | SDCCDBond Measure HH | LinkedInAurora Ayala | SDCCD ArticleJennifer Gibb | LinkedInJeff Johnson | ContactJoel Peterson | LinkedInAndrea Stalker | LinkedInPBK Architects Episode Quotes: Designing for choice creates real community 26:01 [Andrea Stalker] Different individuals need different amounts of privacy or desire different amounts of privacy or separation. So having an option where you can be alone almost all the time, apartments or suites where you have more interaction. So having a choice is super beneficial for allowing someone to feel comfortable in their home environment and space, and then establishing that what we call that floor mate or that floor community, and having that, you know, 30 to 40 people that you can really relate to at a given time, and it's your support group. It's your immediate community that you go to, while still feeling like you're a part of that broader community and recognizing that broader community is supported by many of the amenities that you're providing in the space like your outdoor courtyards that are gathering spaces or places where you can go for multipurpose events or larger, broader community-oriented things that bring everyone together. And that establishment of really those three layers allows you then to develop different levels of relationship that are so important for someone's sort of personal and social success. On designing a space built for students 10:09 [Aurora Ayala] I think we've seen it across all of our projects, that when we design with intent, when our spaces really do say you belong here, and our students feel it, like we, you can tell because they linger. You can tell because they will intentionally stay in a place and just have conversations, and that's their spot during their breaks. They enjoy the environment that they're in because we designed it with intent. People maintaining the building is a crucial component of belonging 20:56 [Dr. Joel Peterson] We train our maintenance staff and our custodial staff and our ground staff to be friendly and professional, that they greet the students, that they greet faculty members...And the fact that we have buildings at night that have custodial staff makes people feel less alone and potentially, when they're feeling more vulnerable in an evening sense, and they know when they've got people that are there working on the building or around the building. So this isn't just the design, but it's the people that will occupy it in maintaining it, our crucial component of this belonging. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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