Design Thinking and Salsa Dancing at Stanford University
PALO ALTO, CALIFORNIA - Ballroom dancing is space planning for two, set to music. There are moments where that challenge can make even the most accomplished people uncomfortable... and that was exactly the idea.
Kathryn Segovia teaches in the Stanford University d.Leadership program and needed something both fun and jarring for her students. "We wanted our students to become more comfortable guiding others through discomfort and risk taking."
That risk came in the form of salsa lessons from Arthur Murray.
Alex Doan, Arthur Murray Redwood City Supervisor, and Christie Thompson, Arthur Murray Live Training Manager, met with Segovia for their special dance lesson assignment. Their job was to take these d.school students out of their comfort zones, and into a new learning environment.
With the mutlitasking, creativity, and many communication parallels of salsa dancing, this surprise visit from Alex and Christie fit the culture of the d.school community. "Our highly immersive program starts with creative transdisciplinary individuals, and adds unique design methodologies, a hands-on approach, a depth in design thinking, and a rigorous approach to problem solving to produce extraordinary results" according to the school's website.
"Christie and Alex were wonderful instructors and helped us complete our mission of putting our innovation leadership students in a posture of experiential learning" says Segovia. "This was truly an experience we couldn't have delivered as a teaching team without help from Arthur Murray and their great team."
Exploring Stanford's d.Leadership Program
Final Thought
Are you ready to give dancing a try? Whether you're wanting to learn with someone special or just for yourself, you can start with a free private lesson to see why Arthur Murray has been the leader in ballroom dance instruction since 1912.