Slide 1: Cover Page Title: “Design-Thinking to Address Lack of Sleep” Subtitle:

Slide 1: Cover Page
Title: “Design-Thinking to Address Lack of Sleep”
Subtitle: “Innovative Solutions for a Well-Rested Life”
Group members’ names and affiliation
Visually appealing graphics related to sleep and well-being
Slide 2: Explanation (Background Knowledge)
Title: “Understanding Lack of Sleep”
Briefly define the issue of lack of sleep and its impact on health and productivity
Emphasize the importance of finding innovative solutions
Slides 3-7: Five Key Points of Design-Thinking for Addressing Lack of Sleep
Slide 3: Empathy
Title: “Empathy in Addressing Lack of Sleep”
Brief explanation of understanding the challenges individuals face with sleep
Real-world example: How empathizing with shift workers led to improved sleep solutions in the workplace
Slide 4: Define
Title: “Defining the Problem of Lack of Sleep”
Explanation of the importance of clearly defining the factors contributing to lack of sleep
Real-world example: How identifying specific lifestyle factors helped tailor interventions for better sleep
Slide 5: Ideate
Title: “Ideation for Better Sleep”
Discussion on generating creative ideas to improve sleep habits
Real-world example: How collaborative brainstorming sessions led to innovative sleep-promoting strategies
Slide 6: Prototype
Title: “Prototyping Sleep Solutions”
Explain the significance of testing and refining sleep-related interventions
Real-world example: How testing sleep prototypes in controlled environments helped refine sleep improvement methods
Slide 7: Test
Title: “Testing Sleep Solutions”
Discuss the importance of testing interventions in real-world scenarios
Real-world example: How implementing and monitoring sleep solutions resulted in positive outcomes for individuals and organizations
Additional Tips:
Use consistent and visually appealing design elements across all slides.
Ensure the slides meet ADA requirements by using accessible fonts, contrast, and alt text for images.
Pay attention to grammar, spelling, and punctuation to meet technical requirements.
Practice the presentation to ensure it is articulate, focused, and confident.
Assign specific sections to each group member to ensure equal contribution.
This structure provides a comprehensive overview of how design-thinking can be applied to address the issue of lack of sleep, with each key point supported by real-world examples.
Design-Thinking PowerPoint Project
In groups of peers with the same career interests, build a PowerPoint (PP) presentation to introduce how design-thinking benefits your field of study.
1. Create a cover page
2. Explanation slide (background knowledge)
3. What does design-thinking “look” like in this field? Break down the five key points of design-thinking with a focus to your career path. Create a page for **each** key points and provide real-life circumstances as examples.
Requirements and Rubric
Total pages = 7 PP slides
Design = Does it meet ADA requirements? It is visually appealing? Is there a message/purpose and logic for each slide? (35)
Technicalities = Grammar, Spelling, Punctuation (GSP), clarity, work choice/awkward phrasing (15)
Requirements: Subject/Field of Study/Career is defined and explained; five key points in Design-Thinking are mentioned; each key point is given a real-world example in the workplace. (50)
Presentation and Practice = Presentation is articulate, focused, and confident. All members of the group have aided in the construction of the project. (10)

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