Aimee-Elisabeth Kyffin

About

Aimee is an Industrial and Product Designer with a First-class Product Design BSc degree from Brunel University London. Before studying Innovation Design Engineering at the RCA and Imperial College she worked as a Junior Innovation Designer at Philips Design in the innovation department for health and well-being. During IDE her work and projects have been focused on solving real-world human problems, whether that be physical or digital solutions, systems, or services. Each project is driven by human-centred design research methods alongside constant user testing to assure the best solution for their needs.

Statement


We live in a consumerist society where products are cheaply made and bought, only to be thrown into landfill after very few uses. As designers, we have the incredible privilege to make the world and society a better place but also the responsibility to prevent producing more landfill. Aimee wants to contribute to change the world by understanding the emergent needs of people and to work with them to create a preferable future, by and through Design. In this context, Design, Engineering, the Social Sciences and Economics need to work differently together, to enable change to happen as part of a collective approach. 

Clickit : A multi-sensory language development tool

10% of the global population is known to be dyslexic.
20% of students show some signs of dyslexia.
35% of entrepreneurs are dyslexic.
35% of dyslexics drop out of school.
40% of self-made millionaires are dyslexic.
50% of rocket scientists at NASA are dyslexic.
50-70% of teens in trouble with the law are dyslexic.
80% of dyslexics aren’t diagnosed in school.

So, what are the differences between success and failure for those who are dyslexic? It’s their education and whether they were supported and encouraged through it. The foundation of this education is the ability to read, something that all dyslexics struggle with to varying amounts. To ‘succeed’ in life you don’t have to be a fast reader or solely read for your job, but you do need to be able to read and communicate your ideas on paper to some degree. So those dyslexics who haven’t been supported in learning to read or write efficiently soon believe they are incapable of succeeding in anything else. But those who are supported in their weaknesses and encouraged to see their strengths learn to see what is possible, they make their success; and often without the need for writing. Dyslexics who succeed, become the great creative problem solvers we all need in this world; just look at Richard Branson, Albert Einstein, Walt Disney, Jamie Oliver and so many more.

Dyslexia is a neurological difference that causes difficulties with reading and writing, but it makes them very creative, great problem solvers and are engaging verbal communicators when supported. Dyslexics learn to read in a very different way to others. They use the visual/right hemisphere over the language/left hemisphere. Because of this dyslexics need to be taught in a multi-sensory way. Dyslexics are hands-on learners who learn best while observing and doing. The schools today teach while saying and wrote memorisation. But the new workforce of the 4th industrial revolution which we are currently in, needs employees who are creative, free-thinking and collaborative problem solvers. So instead of ignoring the way dyslexics learn we could embrace this way of learning so that all may succeed in becoming creative problem solvers who believe in their strengths and are aware of their weaknesses and how as a team when we support each other’s weaknesses, we succeed all the more.

How Clickit works

Clickit is a multi-sensory language development tool, co-designed with key users. With Clickit, everyone is taught in a way that is beneficial for them, those who are non-dyslexic have more fun, and dyslexics learn more efficiently. Clickit will be used by teachers and parents with students from age 4-18. But specifically with all students learning to read and write in KS1 and students who need more support.

The Clickit storybook

Developed alongside the letters, the clickit storybook brings awareness to parents/teachers of dyslexia and to show the importance of teaching in a multi-sensory way. The story is also the instruction on how to use clickit. The characters of Betty and Alfie empower those who are dyslexic, by showing them that they are not alone and that they have amazing strengths which they can use to overcome their weaknesses.
A graphic designer for a publishing house, teachers, parents and children have all read the storybook and found it eye opening and hugely valuable.

User testing and validation

From January - March, Shafina (my research and development partner) and I conducted user testing in schools with students aged 5 -17 by observing lessons and testing concepts. While testing clickit I wanted to see if it helped students learn to spell and increase engagement. I used Lego for user testing because it allowed me to test the three key components of clickit; colour-letter association, letter placement, and multi-sensory learning. I used data collection forms to monitor each student's improvement. “One student couldn’t even spell ‘beginning’ correctly, and with one go on Click-it he got it correct! It slows him down and helps him visualise it.” Secondary SENCo

Due to lockdown, I had the opportunity to test my product with homeschooled students age 4-13 from March to May. I sent clickit prototypes out to families around the country and conducted the same experiment via Zoom. All students would play and learn for up to an hour and they were so engaged during testing that wanted to learn with clickit again. All students then also used clickit to learn their own school spelling without me, while at home. Parents were amazed at how much they learned and enjoyed learning with clickit

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