Launch
Students will launch the family tree altar project by studying local DΓ­a de los Muertos traditions through a guided community-connected observation experience, then begin empathy-centered idea generation through a story circle, sketch swap, and rapid altar thumbnails.
Days 1 - 2
Research & Empathize
Students will gather direct evidence from museum staff, family stories, peer exchanges, and observation notes to better understand DΓ­a de los Muertos altar traditions and the lived memories behind a loved one’s story. They will organize that evidence into empathy maps, memory/meaning prompts, and early design criteria that can guide stronger altar concepts in the next phase.
Days 3 - 8
Define & Ideate Concepts
Students will turn story-circle notes, museum observations, and critique evidence into a user-centered altar concept. They will define a clear design problem, generate several distinct family tree altar directions, use peer feedback to test clarity and cultural coherence, and choose one evidence-based concept to carry into prototyping.
Days 9 - 13
Prototype & Present
Students will turn their chosen altar concepts into testable mixed-media prototypes, gather feedback from peers and representative viewers, complete two documented revision cycles, and prepare a concise presentation that traces how user evidence shaped their design decisions.
Days 14 - 18
Showcase
Students will present their completed family tree altars to a public audience at Old Town San Diego State Historic Park, explain how symbols, images, and meaningful objects honor a loved one’s story, and reflect on audience response and their growth through the full design process.
Days 19 - 20