The Evolution of Engagements and Social Bonds During Child-Parent Co-design [Presentation Recording]
Item
Title
The Evolution of Engagements and Social Bonds During Child-Parent Co-design [Presentation Recording]
Abstract/Description
Partnering with parents and children in the design process can be important for producing technologies that take into consideration the rich context of family life. However, to date, few studies have examined the actual process of designing with families and their children. Without understanding the process, we risk making poor design choices in user-interactive experiences that take into account important family dynamics. The purpose of this investigation is to understand how parent-child relationships in families shape co-design processes and how they are reshaped through co-design. We document the evolutionary process and outcomes that exist in co-design partnerships between researchers and families. We found that parents' engagement patterns shifted more slowly than that of children's from observing and facilitating to design partnering practices. Our analysis suggests the importance of establishing and nurturing social bonds among parents, children, and researchers in the co-design process. [Presenting Author: Jason C. Yip]
Author/creator
Date
At conference
CHI '16: Proceedings of the 2016 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Place presented
Resource status/form
Presentation/Poster
Film/Audiovisual Recording
Scholarship genre
Empirical
IRE Approach/Concept
URL
Citation
The Evolution of Engagements and Social Bonds During Child-Parent Co-design. (2016, May 31). https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pdc2Nc_5OwM
Linked resources
Filter by property
Title | Alternate label | Class |
---|---|---|
The Evolution of Engagements and Social Bonds During Child-Parent Co-design |
Comments
No comment yet! Be the first to add one!