Even for a well-understood, well-motivated problem, choosing a design to invest time into is a difficult and laborious process. This group assignment, spanning multiple weeks of the course, tackles the problem of selecting the right design through contextual inquiry, task development, generating multiple potential designs, and finally selecting a design to pursue.
This assignment is worth 21% of your overall course grade:
The content of the associated presentation is worth 5% of your overall course grade.
Your delivery of the associated presentation is worth 2% of your overall course grade.
This is a group assignment, consisting of nine milestones.
Assignment 2a: Project Ideation
Due: Completed in section on Friday, April 8, 2016
Assignment 2b: Contextual Inquiry Plan
Due: Uploaded the night before class Tuesday, April 12, 2016
Assignment 2c: Contextual Inquiry Check-In
Due: Uploaded the night before section Friday, April 15, 2016
Assignment 2d: Contextual Inquiry Review
Due: Uploaded the night before class Tuesday, April 19, 2015
Due: Uploaded the night before class Friday, April 22, 2015
Assignment 2f: Design Check-In (“3x4”)
Due: Uploaded the night before class Tuesday, April 26, 2015
Assignment 2g: Design Review (“1x2”)
Due: Uploaded the night before section Friday, April 29, 2015
Due: Uploaded the night before class Tuesday, May 3, 2015
Due: Uploaded the night before class Tuesday, May 3, 2015
In this assignment, you will brainstorm a large set of possible tasks and design ideas for your project. You will then use contextual inquiry to learn more about your problem and the current practices of people who might use your design. You will draw upon the ideas developed in your brainstorming and the observations made in your contextual inquiry to help develop a set of potential tasks your design might support. You will next sketch how a set of initial designs might support those tasks. You will choose a design to pursue in the remainder of the course and storyboard the details of your design in the context of important tasks. Finally, you will present your design process in a report and presentation.
More specifically, you will do the following:
Generate ideas for tasks, features, and interactions surrounding your proposal using a group ideation exercise.
Use the contextual inquiry method (or possibly a different user research method if CI does not fit your project) in observing and interviewing at least three people who might use your design.
(Assignment 2b), (Assignment 2c), (Assignment 2d)
Develop six tasks that might be performed with your design.
Select these to capture the important aspects of the problem you are solving and to provide coverage of the designs you will explore. Create these based on your observations and analyses of existing tasks as well as your vision for new tasks enabled by potential designs. Remember that tasks say what is accomplished, while leaving open how to accomplish it.
As you progress through your project, you can and should consider revising your tasks. Expect to refine or change your tasks as your understanding of the problem matures or according to feedback you receive. The tasks you report in this assignment therefore must be appropriate but are not necessarily final.
Brainstorm and sketch three very different initial designs for your interface. Each design should support four of your tasks.
Do not illustrate the entire design, but instead sketch key aspects needed to illustrate the functionality. These should be rough sketches on paper (i.e., not digital mockups), including illustrations of their relations (e.g., arrows showing transitions and relationships).
The purpose of these sketches is to explore the design space before you lock yourself into a single design. They must demonstrate significant consideration of substantially different approaches to your problem.
From your sketches, select one design to pursue for the remainder of the quarter and two tasks that emphasize critical functionality of your design. These tasks should be non-trivial, critical to solving your problem, and should emphasize long-lived or repeated activities. In contrast, a one-time login screen for a social networking application is not worth being the focus of your project, does not define your project functionality, and is not interesting.
Storyboard your chosen design for your chosen tasks, illustrating how the tasks are accomplished in your design.
Summarize your design process in a report and presentation.
Due: Completed in section on Friday, April 8, 2016
Generate 5 to 10 different ideas related to each of the following aspects of your project proposal:
We will provide large sheets of paper. Divide a large sheet of paper into 32 squares, each approximately 2in by 2in. Sketch your ideas, one in each square. Each idea should be either a quick doodle with a caption or a one-sentence idea. A person familiar with your project but not in your group should be able to understand the idea each sketch conveys.
The goal is to begin exploring the space of possibilities, not attempting to polish some particular possibility. Focus on the quantity of ideas, not the quality of any one idea. You may include ideas from existing products. No two ideas should be alike. When you get stuck, find a context to inspire new ideas.
Given a space of possible directions, your project needs to begin to gather information on how to generate and consider ideas. Following up on the above, additionally brainstorm:
The goal is to begin thinking about how to plan effective contextual inquiries toward your design process.
At the end of section, take a photo of your brainstorm and upload it on Canvas here:
https://canvas.uw.edu/courses/1039440/assignments/3220587
You will be able to take your paper with you, and you should continue brainstorming throughout your project.
This milestone will be graded on a scale of 3 points based on participation in generating ideas during the brainstorming exercise.
Due: Uploaded the night before class Tuesday, April 12, 2016
In one paragraph, describe the people who might use your design and other stakeholders for your design. Describe the particular contextual inquiry participants you plan to pursue, including some details of their background and the environment where you will observe their current practices. Give enough details to convince us that you can actually find and interview your target participants in the next week.
For example, your target participants should not be “doctors” but instead a specific group of doctors (e.g., Family Practitioners in the UW Roosevelt Clinic). If gaining access to the target participants is non-trivial (e.g., as with busy doctors), describe the steps you have already taken to gain access and your plans to recover if you are unable to gain access. Indicate when you will be conducting your three inquiries, being as specific as possible.
In another paragraph, describe how you will interact with your participants and your role as the “apprentice”.
Please be as specific as possible, providing potential examples of your observation focus or interview questions.
Examples from prior offerings include:
No more than one page of text in PDF format. Submit via Canvas here:
https://canvas.uw.edu/courses/1039440/assignments/3191184
In lecture, be prepared to discuss the plan with other teams and the course staff.
Be sure to take notes during critique. We will provide a worksheet you can use:
2b-critique-worksheet-ciplan.pdf
After class, submit images of your notes in PDF format. Submit via Canvas here:
https://canvas.uw.edu/courses/1039440/assignments/3191185
This milestone will be graded on a scale of 3 points:
Due: Uploaded the night before section Friday, April 15, 2016
Complete at least one contextual inquiry prior to this check-in. You hopefully learned something about the needs of people who might use your design, but also about how to conduct a contextual inquiry.
Describe your first inquiry:
Discuss what remains to be pursued after your first inquiry. We fully expect changes will be necessary, as inquiries can be difficult to get right and often important topics are left unresolved.
REMEMBER: All names of inquiry participants should be replaced with pseudonyms in all documents you submit to us! It is important to protext the identity of your participants even in the case that your study seems harmless.
Examples from prior offerings include:
No more than one page of text in PDF format. Submit via Canvas here:
https://canvas.uw.edu/courses/1039440/assignments/3191186
In section, be prepared to discuss your contextual inquiry with other teams and the course staff.
This milestone will be graded on a scale of 6 points:
Due: Uploaded the night before class Tuesday, April 19, 2015
Complete all three of your contextual inquiries. Discuss your process and what you learned:
Across the three inquiries, we expect some emergence of common themes, problems, and practices.
If you are having trouble identifying high level themes and problems from your inquiries, it may be a sign that you need to run an additional inquiry. You are required to run three inquiries, but you are not limited to only running three. These inquiries are critical for setting the foundation of your project, so ensure that you have strong findings from your inquiries before moving forward!
Provide brief answers to the following questions. These should help you begin to identify tasks essential to your design.
Examples from prior offerings include:
No more than four pages of text in PDF format:
Submit via Canvas here:
https://canvas.uw.edu/courses/1039440/assignments/3191187
In lecture, be prepared to discuss your contextual inquiry with other teams and the course staff.
Be sure to take notes during critique. We will provide a worksheet you can use:
2d-critique-worksheet-cireview.pdf
After class, submit images of your notes in PDF format. Submit via Canvas here:
https://canvas.uw.edu/courses/1039440/assignments/3191188
This milestone will be graded on a scale of 6 points:
Due: Uploaded the night before class Friday, April 22, 2015
Building on what you learned in your contextual inquiry, design six tasks that you believe are integral to your overall design goal:
Each task should be described in text. Tasks say what is accomplished, leaving open how to accomplish it. So be sure that your task conveys a problem and what is accomplished, rather than a step-by-step walkthrough of scenario with a particular design.
Examples from prior offerings include:
No more than two pages of text in PDF format:
Submit via Canvas here:
https://canvas.uw.edu/courses/1039440/assignments/3191189
In section, be prepared to discuss your tasks with other teams and the course staff.
This milestone will be graded on a scale of 6 points:
Due: Uploaded the night before class Tuesday, April 26, 2015
You have identified and described six important tasks for your design problem. You will now brainstorm and sketch three very different initial designs for your interface:
The purpose of these sketches is to explore the design space before you lock yourself into a single design. They must demonstrate significant consideration of substantially different approaches to your problem.
Examples from prior offerings include:
No more than three pages of text in PDF format:
Images do not count against your page limit, and are therefore effectively free. You should embed images throughout your PDF, keeping them near the text that references them. The limit applies to the approximate amount of text you would have if all images were removed.
Submit via Canvas here:
https://canvas.uw.edu/courses/1039440/assignments/3191190
In lecture, be prepared to discuss your design sketches with other teams and the course staff.
Be sure to take notes during critique. We will provide a worksheet you can use:
2f-critique-worksheet-designcheckin.pdf
After class, submit images of your notes in PDF format. Submit via Canvas here:
https://canvas.uw.edu/courses/1039440/assignments/3191191
This milestone will be graded on a scale of 6 points:
Due: Uploaded the night before section Friday, April 29, 2015
From your design sketches, select one design that you will refine in the remainder of this course. Then select two tasks that will be the focus of your design refinement. The selected tasks need to be representative of the experience of using your design.
Prepare one paragraph describing why you selected the design you did. Draw upon feedback from critiques and data from your contextual inquiry.
Convey a strong understanding of which design you chose, which tasks you chose, and why you chose them.
Then create a storyboard of each task for your selected design. These should be done on paper, then scanned (i.e., do not create or recreate them in a drawing package). They should clearly indicate the functionality of the design and what the interface will be like, conveying the major aspects of the design in enough detail that a person not in your group can understand how the design supports each task. As needed, add descriptions that explicitly reference the storyboard, add more sketches, or annotate them in multiple colors.
Examples from prior offerings include:
No more than one page of text in PDF format:
Images do not count against your page limit, and are therefore effectively free. You should embed images throughout your PDF, keeping them near the text that references them. The limit applies to the approximate amount of text you would have if all images were removed.
Submit via Canvas here:
https://canvas.uw.edu/courses/1039440/assignments/3191192
In section, be prepared to discuss your choices and storyboards with other teams and the course staff.
This milestone will be graded on a scale of 6 points:
Due: Uploaded the night before class Tuesday, May 3, 2015
Prepare a report documenting your process of getting the right design. Your report should follow the outline below, and will be graded using the guidelines that follow. The provided page allocations are estimates, intended to help convey how to divide up the space.
If you completed all of your milestones above, you will have much of the content for this report. But, it is critical that you revise and update that content. You have received extensive feedback throughout your design process, and evaluation of your report will include how you have addressed and incorporated that feedback to improve relative to your prior milestones.
Title
A short, creative, and marketable title capturing the key idea.
Each Team Member’s Name and Role(s)
Problem and Solution Overview: (1 paragraph)
A concise statement of the problem you are tackling and a brief synopsis of your proposed solution.
Contextual Inquiry Target, Stakeholders, and Participants: (1 page)
Describe your contextual inquiry, including the participants, their background, and their environment.
Describe why you chose the particular participants in your inquiry.
Contextual Inquiry Results and Themes: (1 page)
Discuss common themes, problems, and practices that emerged in your inquiry.
Include any updated themes that emerged when considering your contextual inquiry in your design process.
Answers to Task Analysis Questions: (2 pages)
Provide brief answers to the task analysis questions.
These should be updated according to your evolved understanding of the problem and your design.
Proposed Design Sketches - “3x4”: (1 page)
Present scanned images of your three initial designs in the context of their four tasks.
Include one paragraph for each design, discussing how it supports your tasks.
Include one paragraph discussing your choice of design and tasks to further pursue.
Written Scenarios - “1x2”: (1 page)
Convert your two tasks into written scenarios for your design. Scenarios include the steps a person will go through to accomplish the task, including references to your design.
Scenarios do not need to detail every little step, but should be realistic, should be dependent upon the design you have chosen, should appropriately reference elements of your design, and should communicate how a person will accomplish the task using your design.
Storyboards of the Selected Design
Include updated storyboards of your design. Reference these appropriately in your scenarios.
Ensure your report is appropriately clear and easy to read. This includes:
Be sure your presentation looks good:
Examples from prior offerings include:
No more than eight pages of text in PDF format, following the above outline.
Images do not count against your page limit, and are therefore effectively free. You should embed images throughout your PDF, keeping them near the text that references them. The limit applies to the approximate amount of text you would have if all images were removed.
Submit via Canvas here:
https://canvas.uw.edu/courses/1039440/assignments/3191193
This report will be graded on a scale of 25 points:
Due: Uploaded the night before class Tuesday, May 3, 2015
Prepare a presentation of your process in getting the right design. It should encompass all of your work in Assignment 2.
A suggested organization of this presentation is:
Title:
A short, creative, and marketable title capturing the key idea. Include team member names and roles.
Overall Problem:
Tell this as a story, instead of simply reading the slide. Motivate your audience to be interested in your problem.
Contextual Inquiry:
Include images that give your audience a feeling for your fieldwork. Convey that you have seen and understand the challenge.
6 Tasks:
At most one sentence per task. Convey the breadth of tasks you have considered.
3 Design Sketches:
Convey the breadth of designs you considered.
Selected Design Storyboards and Tasks:
Convey your rationale for choosing a design focus.
Present your storyboards, ensuring they effectively illustrate your selected design and tasks.
Summary:
Summarize the lessons learned in your design process.
We strongly recommend rehearsing your presentation beforehand. For example, arrange to practice together with another group or two, giving each other feedback on your presentations.
Examples from prior offerings include:
The projects we have been posting this quarter:
Additional projects from the same prior offerings:
Additional examples of CSE 441 presentations. These cover a different scope of content, but were polished based on an initial round of feedback. So their structure will be different than your talks, but you may benefit from seeing their presentation.
Your presentation may be in PPT, PPTX, or PDF format.
To minimize switching time, we will have all presentations on a single laptop running Microsoft Windows. You should optimize your presentation for portability (e.g., ensure any necessary fonts are embedded). If we detect any obvious formatting issues on the presentation machine, we may fix them or contact you to fix them. But you are ultimately responsible for your presentation.
Submit via Canvas here:
https://canvas.uw.edu/courses/1039440/assignments/3191194
The course staff and your peers will have feedback forms they keep during your presentation:
2h-presentation-instructor-form.pdf
2h-presentation-student-form.pdf
The content of this presentation will be graded on a scale of 10 points:
The delivery of this presentation will be graded on a scale of 4 points: