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Design thinking creates future-ready graduates

A specialised programme from the Taiwan Ministry of Education fosters interdisciplinary talent to prepare students for a changing world

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Sponsored by Taipei Medical University

28 Jul 2025
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Freshmen at Taipei Medical University attend introduction to design-thinking event

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¡°Innovation requires more than just specialised engineering or design talents,¡± says Thera Chiu, an associate professor in the Center for General Education at Taipei Medical University. The knowledge economy and ever-changing digital technologies have impacted traditional production and business models, and education needs to adapt to the changing era.

This is why Taiwan¡¯²õ&²Ô²ú²õ±è;Ministry of Education places design thinking at the heart of its Miaopu programme. Design thinking ¡°focuses on human needs, with processes including empathy, define, ideate, prototype and test¡±, she says. The programme, known as Miaopu, which means sapling, in Chinese, aims to foster interdisciplinary talent through design thinking, innovation, and entrepreneurial spirit. 

¡°It emphasises a human-centric approach to problem-solving, encouraging collaboration across different fields and seeking to bridge the gap between higher education and industrial transformation,¡± Chiu says.

Taipei Medical University (TMU) has been involved with the programme since its inception eight years ago, participating in all five phases of the Sapling Project. TMU is a leading private university in Taiwan, renowned for its strong focus on medicine, health sciences and biomedical innovation. Since its founding in 1960, TMU has grown into a comprehensive university with 11 colleges and more than 6,000 students from more than 40 countries.

Since the university became involved in the Miao Pu programme, it has guided ¡°more than 4,000 first-year students in designing their own university learning journeys and provided design-thinking workshop experiences to more than 3,000 students,¡± Chiu says. More than 10 of its faculty members have been certified by the Ministry of Education as official coaches.

The benefits of the programme extend beyond the university. ¡°The Sapling Project has now evolved into a methodology that supports other Ministry of Education initiatives, making it a truly unique programme,¡± Chiu says. 

Teacher development is a starting point, she says: ¡°It begins with cross-disciplinary teaching collaboration among faculty members, which then extends to cross-disciplinary learning among students.¡±

Cross-disciplinary collaboration is vital because it directly responds to the demands of a rapidly evolving world. ¡°A core objective is to cultivate individuals who can collaborate effectively across different fields,¡± she says. ¡°This is seen as crucial for developing innovative solutions and addressing the complexities of future society.¡±

Chiu¡¯s own research focuses on identifying the factors that contribute to success in interdisciplinary education. She says that there are two critical factors: students¡¯ self-understanding and their ability to collaborate in teams. While there is a great deal of research highlighting the importance of collaboration, there¡¯s a lack of concrete steps for educators to follow. ¡°Our team has developed a structured and effective set of guidance strategies for fostering team collaboration, which has proven to be successful and is supported by empirical research,¡± she says.

As the only university that has contributed to all of the programme¡¯s phases, TMU will continue to adopt design thinking as a guiding methodology. ¡°It will help students to design their life paths, root medical education in empathy and promote team collaboration,¡± Chiu says. ¡°Our next vision for this project is to empower students to identify and solve real-world problems through teamwork and empathy, ultimately becoming the kind of future-ready talent needed by society.¡±