Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / Scopus Indexed Publications Collection
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/7148
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Conference Object Metacognitive, Cognitive, and Creative Dynamics in the Artificial Intelligence-Aided Design Process(Education and Research in Computer Aided Architectural Design in Europe, 2025) Yazici, G.; Doǧan, F.This study examines the effects of artificial intelligence-aided design processes (AIADP) on cognitive load, creativity, and metacognitive awareness. Within the scope of the study, a one-day face-to-face workshop was organised with twenty-eight architects, including architecture students studying at undergraduate and graduate levels, and the data based on the participants' experiences were analysed using qualitative research methods. The results of the sentiment-based content analysis show that integrating AI tools into the design process reduces cognitive load, supports creative thinking processes, facilitates rapid prototyping and feedback mechanisms, and increases metacognitive awareness. The findings reveal that AI-aided design tools can potentially improve designers' cognitive and creative capacities. The study addresses the effects of AIADP in educational and professional contexts from a local perspective, providing a new perspective on the literature on the integration of AI into design processes. © 2025, Education and research in Computer Aided Architectural Design in Europe. All rights reserved.Article Reflection on Designing: Metacognitive Interventions to Enhance Metacognitive Awareness, Motivation, and Performance in Design Learning(Springer, 2025) Yazici, Gizem; Dogan, FehmiDesign education involves ill-defined problem-solving that demands both creativity and self-regulation. While metacognitive awareness significantly enhances learning outcomes and motivation, there is limited empirical evidence on how to systematically foster this skill in design studios. This study aims to investigate whether metacognitive interventions increase architecture students' metacognitive awareness levels, academic goal orientations, and design course success. In a quasi-experimental design, 84 third-year architecture students were divided into experimental (n = 58) and control (n = 26) groups. Pre-post-test data were collected using the MAI and AGOQ scales. Three structured interventions were implemented in the experimental group over six weeks. In the students who received the interventions, significant increases were observed in metacognitive awareness, mastery-performance goal orientation, and design course grades. In students with high awareness, mastery orientation, metacognitive awareness, and design course grades increased significantly, while in students with low awareness, metacognitive awareness and performance orientation increased. Pretest MAI and AGOQ scores accounted for 72.8% of the variance in grades, with MAI showing the strongest positive influence. Learning and proving orientations were moderately and positively correlated to grades, while avoidance orientation showed a moderate negative correlation. Metacognitive interventions enhance learning outcomes in design education by supporting metacognition and motivation.
