Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum has developed three variations of their City of Neighborhoods program, each using community as the focal point to bring design thinking to new audiences. At the AAO conference, Mei Mah, Deputy Director of Education, and Kim Robledo-Diga, Professional Development Manager at Cooper-Hewitt led a break-out session that was a case study about the City of Neighborhoods program. They shared models that have been successfully engaging New York City public school students, K-12 educators nationwide, and a rural Texas border town.
Be sure to scroll to the bottom for the audio!

Mei Mah, Deputy Director of Education, Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum, Smithsonian Institution
Mei Mah is the Deputy Director of Education at Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum, Smithsonian Institution (CH-NDM) where she is responsible for strategic educational initiatives and collaborations. She served on the development and launch team of National Design Week and www.educatorresourcecenter.org (ERC), the Museum’s online resource design hub. During her tenure at the Museum, Mei, has produced symposia, hands-on activities, and gallery programming for over sixty exhibitions including Open Talks: Pioneers of Change, Extreme Textiles: Design for High Performance, Feeding Desire: Design and the Tools of the Table, 1500-2005, and the National Design Triennial series. Mei sits on the New York State Council of the Arts (NYSCA) museum panel and cultural committee of the Netherlands America Foundation. Her interest in design education began while working in architecture and community development and prompted her to pursue a M.A. in Arts Administration from Teachers College, Columbia University.
Kim Robledo-Diga, Professional Development Manager, Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum, Smithsonian Institution
Kim Robledo-Diga, has over nine years experiences in arts education. As Professional Development Manager at Cooper-Hewitt she is responsible for integrating design thinking into local and national school curricula standards and professional development trainings across the country. Kim earned a Bachelor of Fine Art with a Minor in Art History from the Maryland Institute, College of Art and a Masters of Fine Art with additional studies in arts administration from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. In her prior positions, Kim developed workshops and content that utilizes museum’s collections which address state and local educational standards, designed youth exhibitions, family guides and produced a variety of cultural events and educator training on techniques for using works of art to enhance the learning experiences of children. In addition to her work in the museum field she taught at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, was the ceramics department head at the Instituto Allende in Mexico and taught and oversaw special events at Baltimore Clayworks in Maryland.
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