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Spring 2006

SP.723 D-Lab III: Dissemination

Course Outline
 

Class Meetings

Class TR 1-2:30 {Room 1-132}

Course Staff

d3-admin@mit.edu

Course Description

Focuses on disseminating innovations for the common good in developing countries. Students draw lessons from success stories and identify challenges, unintended consequences and failures in implementing technologies, projects and policies. Students acquire skills relating to building partnerships and piloting, implementing, and scaling-up a selected innovation for the common good. Teams develop an idea, project or business plan that is "ready to roll" by semester's end. Limited to 30 students. U(Spring) 3-0-6

Third in the D-Lab trilogy of courses on "Development," "Design" and "Dissemination", students draw lessons from success and failure enterprises in international development and learn about appropriate and sustainable technologies. Students gain specific "how-to" skills related to building international collaborations and to piloting, implementing and scaling-up an innovation. Draws lessons from case studies and covers the range of implementation initiatives—private, public and non-profit. Addresses pros and cons of craft/local production vs. mass production and takes a systems approach to the issues of dissemination of innovations: technical, financial/economic, social/cultural, ethical, environmental, and institutional. Topics include defining vision & strategy, implementation models, mechanics of implementation, social entrepreneurship, micro-financing, monitoring and evaluation, challenges of targeting one's enterprise in a developing country context. Students will work in teams to develop an idea, project or business plan that they will learn to "pitch" to potential supporters and explore useful tools that can support realization of their innovation. The aim is a plan that is "ready to roll" by the end of the semester. Assignments will include a journal of notes on the assigned readings and team-led case study reviews.

Rationale

D-Lab III is a class related to D-Lab I and II, and provides students with an alternative or follow-up to the D-Lab II: Design class.

Course Topics

  • Dissemination Models (What is the common good?)
  • Defining Vision/Goals/Objective (What are you trying to do?)
  • Monitoring and Evaluation Models
  • Craft/Local Production vs. Mass Production
  • Mechanics of Implementation

Case Studies

  • Polio
  • Tube Wells
  • Green Revolution/Organic Farming Revolution
  • Low Cost Eye Glasses
  • H2O-1B! - Clean Water for 1 Billion People
  • Wheelchairs
  • Renewable Energy, Biofuels, Lighting
  • Hydroelectric and Dams
  • Other...

Main Text

Rogers, Everett M. 2003. Diffusion of Innovations. 5th Edition. Free Press: New York. 2003.


 

Contact Information

D-Lab is part of the Curricular Initiative for Development Design at MIT, and is sponsored by the Edgerton Center and a grant from the Alumni Funds. This year's class is organized the Edgerton Center, Setu, the Brazilian Students Association and the MIT Haitian Alliance. Contact Amy Smith (mmadinot@mit.edu) for more information.