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Qualitative Approaches to HCI

Recommended for

Graduate student .

The course was last given:

Spring 1999.

Goals

The course will discuss the intellectual and pragmatic yields qualitative approaches, particularly ethnography, the study of human-computer interaction. The course is inteded to help students to become more competent in assessing the reserach of others. By looking at the strengths and weakness of this body och literature, it will also help student design and argue for their own research and research agendas.

Prerequisites

Graduate student status.

Contents

This graduate seminar course will introduce students to qualitative approaches to HCI. As such there will be no prerequisities. The readings will start with Suchman's Plans and Situated Actions (1987) and will run chronologically through some of the HCI literature. The course would cover some of the Scandinavian and N. American approaches to HCI. The course will also treat current developments and research in HCI as development out of HCI's earlier history and paradigms. Given the breadth and depth of the HCI literature, the class will focus on the CSCW research literature. One topic that the course will discuss is participatory design. The course will look at Scandinavian (Bodker, Kensing/Simonsen) and N. American (Blomberg) approaches to participatory design as a practical research activity. In particular, the course will look at the contributions ethnography can make to participatory design.

Literature

Selected readings.

Teachers

James M. Nyce.

Examiner

James M. Nyce

Schedule

Spring 2001.

Examination

Class work will include assigned readings, seminar participation (2 points) and one research paper (1-3 points). Course credit may be changed.

Credit

2 + 3 credits

Comments

Intensive course.


Page responsible: Director of Graduate Studies