ENGR104B: 
Designing Your Spiritual Life


 

what is this course about?

The course Designing Your Spiritual Life was created to serve as space for spiritual students to approach the wicked questions of life with a structured framework that helps them to process the various challenges that are unique to their college and life experiences as a religious minority, and to equip these students with practical ideas and tools with which they can proactively craft their post-undergraduate vocational and life experiences. 

This class includes seminar-style and small-group discussions, activities, personal written reflections, guest speakers, and individual mentoring/coaching. Designing Your Spiritual Life will be co-taught by Junaid Aziz from the Design Group, the Life Design Lab, and Dr. Amina Darwish from the Office of Religious and Spiritual Life, and will include guest speakers - chaplains, priests, and spiritual leaders from the Office for Religious and Spiritual Life. The capstone assignment is the creation of an “Odyssey Plan” focusing on taking action in the 3-5 years following your Stanford graduation.

This is a 2-unit class, meets once a week and is graded on credit/no credit basis. 

when is this course offered?

This course is offered in the Autumn and Spring terms.  Class is open to students of all ages and of any major, and inclusive of students of faith and allies. Enrollment is limited and often over-subscribed.

WHAT ARE STUDENTS SAYING?

Check out this article by Nick Benavides, Class of 2019, Co-President of ASES, in which Nick shares some of what he got out taking the course.

“Because of DYL, I not only got my dream job after college, but was super intentional about my life- friendships, health, hobbies, relationships, etc, in a way that I wouldn’t have been otherwise that made life after college just as fun, if not more fun, than my time at Stanford, which I didn’t think was possible!”

“Designing Your Life gave me ‘permission’ to dream. I was able to take myself out of my present setting and think, ‘What would I do if I could do anything? Where would I go?’ Somewhere along the way I had become scared, and I had decided that I was comfortable where I was. Working through DYL gave me the validation I needed to dream. To be okay with asking for what I want. To come up with plans to get what I want. To see that these dreams were in fact more attainable than I thought they were.”

“I came into DYL thinking I had it all figured out. My previous quarter, I got the grades, the girlfriend, and the job. I thought, ‘When I graduate, I’ll try the job, do some fun things on the side, and then go from there.’ I know. Laughably general. But through the course, I learned the importance of having specific, intentional directives. And now I’m more excited to graduate and start the next journey than I was ever before.”

What’s “design thinking” and how does it apply to my life and career?

Design thinking is a human-centered approach to problem solving and innovation through prototype iteration. It is highly collaborative and a hands-on process for conceiving new solutions and getting unstuck. Design thinking emphasizes learning by doing and through feedback and iteration, allows students to make ideas real in the world. This approach lends itself especially well to the challenge of designing your life and vocation, large and vaguely defined tasks, because is allows you to start where you are - and build from there. While some people really do know what they want to do with their lives, the large majority of people have to try a few things out and learn as they go. The steps along the way are prototypes to enjoy and learn from, not failures.

How much work is this class?

It’s 2 units. The class meets for two hours each week, which will include both class and section time. Attendance at all classes is mandatory unless by special arrangement, and missing more than 1 class will result in the need for discussion with instructors and may result in no credit. Outside of class expect 30-60 minutes of reading and one or two hours of written work and reflection exercises. The two major homework efforts are making a number of information interviews and writing them up and at the end of the course developing a draft “Odyssey Plan” for your post graduation season. These assignments are larger in scope and may take multiple hours.

Who’s the course for?

Any Stanford Junior or Senior who would like to learn and apply a creative approach to designing their life. The course will “work” for people in a wide range of situations — from having a solid major and a good career idea already to being ready to jump into a new major and restart. Most importantly, the course is for students who want to engage with ideas and their peers and mentors in an honest effort in thinking about their lives. If you’re just curious about how we go about this, but don’t have much interest in applying it yourself, then it may not be for you. Much of the work occurs in class, so if you don’t plan to attend all classes, or can’t commit to engaging with your peers each week around the work, this also might not be a good fit.

I’m majoring in the Humanities — does it apply for me?

Absolutely. Even though “design” is part of the School of Engineering, this isn’t a technical class nor is it just for technical or business people. The process of design thinking can be applied to a host of situations.

Why is enrollment limited?

There are two reasons we limit the class size.  First of all we don’t want to overcrowd our class space.  Secondly, the course is structured around a small group experience with an emphasis on group discussion.  We’re constrained by both the room size and the number of section groups we can manage.

What if I don’t have career ideas yet or even am unsure about my major?

No problem. One of the advantages of this approach is it doesn’t start by asking the question, “Well —what is your passion?” or “What is your childhood dream?” Those questions don’t actually work for most people so planning approaches that start with those questions just fail those people — which is most of us! This design approach begins with right where you are now, regardless.

Do I have to actually design things in this class?

Products - no. But prototype behaviors, ideation, and designs for things that you can do and try yourself - yes. You will get exposure to the design thinking process, and practice the steps of empathizing, defining and framing design problems, ideation, prototyping and testing prototypes in action and in conversation. You will use the mindsets of a designer on your own life and to get unstuck. By the end of the term, you will be able to apply the design process on problems that matter to you.

ARE THERE SIMILAR COURSES I COULD TAKE?

Designing Your Life is one of many courses we teach that applies the Design Thinking approach to wicked life problems. Check out the full list of courses we offer here. With each course, we’ve tailored the material to a specific student population.

Stoked! where can i sign up? 

Sign up for ME104B: Designing Your Life on Axess.