In Learning from Our Mistakes, Henry J. Perkinson (1930-2012) suggested that there are three primary approaches to education: education as initiation, education as transmission, and education as growth (Perkinson, 4-5). In architectural education, we see all of these models well-represented. In some cases, initiation and the notion of “teaching through example” is primary. This educational model is structured around an idea that students learn to be architects by observing an architect, doing architectural work. In a classical atelier model, the architect, faculty member, or tutor is positioned as a master, with students working and learning below them as apprentices. It depends on a clear hierarchical structure, as well as the idea that le...