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The workshop will define a framework for the scope and content of the knowledge that underpins the usability profession. Source material will include the proposed usability curriculum, the roles of usability practitioners and the suggested competencies for usability certification. The workshop is part of the UPA body of knowledge project. WORKSHOP DESCRIPTIONBackground The goal of creating a body of knowledge grew out of the project to investigate certification for usability professionals in 2001-2002. That project ended with a survey of almost 1000 people on their attitudes towards certification. There was no clear mandate expressed in that survey, but there were some clearly delineated issues that came out of the qualitative comments. An article in the September 2002 issue of The UPA Voice reported on this project, and introduced the concept of a series of projects working towards a usability or user-centered design body of knowledge. These projects built on a model that places a body of knowledge in the center of some related definitions, including defining a curriculum, identifying roles, creating a self-assessment tool, and, when all of the pieces are in place, a certification. Related to this, but seen as somewhat different is the concept of a code of conduct for practitioners. A workshop held at the UPA 2002 Conference identified five initial projects related to the body of knowledge, all are seen as building blocks towards this goal. The projects currently in progress are:
Workshop ContentRequirements What is the purpose of a usability body of knowledge? Who will stakeholders who will benefit or be affected by a usability body of knowledge? What type of information would they like, and what level of detail is needed? Brainstorm possible short- and long-term deliverables that would be useful. Components of a Body of KnowledgeReview the types of information that could contribute to a body of knowledge, including:
Scope and structure of a body of knowledgeThe workshop will divide into 2 or more teams (depending on numbers) to develop an initial scope and structure for a body of knowledge from different perspectives depending on the skills and interests of the participants, for example from the perspective of knowledge, competencies or jobs. Initial frameworkThe groups will report back, and the workshop develop an initial framework that takes account of the relationships between the approaches. Deliverables and plansThe workshop will plan the outputs and activities for different audiences. Each team will elaborate and document their conclusions, and detail the planned outputs and future activities, and timetable for future actions. These will be summarized in the final session.
PARTICIPANT SELECTION CRITERIAParticipants will be selected who can make a constructive contribution to one or more of the topics covered by the workshop. W7– Usability Body of Knowledge: Nigel Bevan's Position Paper Applying to Participate in This WorkshopThe workshop is a closed session that requires an approved position paper. Send your position paper (which will typically be 2 to 3 pages) to Nigel Bevan, nbevan@usability.serco.com . Please contact Nigel in advance if you have any preliminary enquiries or would like to discuss a potential contribution. Position papers received by March 24 will be accepted or rejected by March 31, in time for you to register before the early registration deadline on April 2. Position papers received by May 5 will be accepted or rejected by May 12, in time for the May 14 registration discount. Papers received after May 12 will be evaluated at the facilitator's discretion. If you want to register early for UPA and have not completed your position paper by these deadlines, you may register for the rest of the conference and add the workshop fee later. PRE-WORKSHOP PARTICIPANT ACTIVITIESEach participant will submit a position paper and attach or cite any relevant source material. Participants will review all submitted material in advance of the workshop. PRE-WORKSHOP FACILITATION ACTIVITIESExisting literature and UPA project outputs that could contribute to a framework for a body of knowledge will be collated and summarized. The references and where possible the text will be circulated. Other people who have worked in this area will be specifically invited to attend the workshop. A co-facilitator will be selected. POST-CONFERENCE DISSEMINATION OF RESULTSWorkshop outputs will include a conference poster, a paper for User Experience, a publicly available web site of resources, and a plan for activities to produce more detailed deliverables. POST-CONFERENCE ACTIVITIESThe workshop will set up working groups to produce more detailed deliverables. FACILITATORSNigel Bevan Research Manager Serco Usability Services +44 77 18 19 49 00 Fax: +44 20 7421 6477 nbevan@usability.serco.com
Dr Nigel Bevan is Research Manager at Serco Usability Services. He has first degrees in physics and psychology, and a PhD in man-machine interaction. He provides consultancy and training in usability and user centred design.
Nigel was technical co-ordinator of the EU MUSiC (Measurement of Usability in Context) project that produced methods for usability measurement. These methods have since been widely applied commercially. He was manager of the INUSE and RESPECT projects that set up a network of Usability Support Centres around Europe, the TRUMP project that incorporated user centred design into the development processes of two large organisations. He also managed the UsabilityNet project that has established a web site of usability resources, including a comprehensive guide to usability methods.
Nigel was an active contributor to the usability accreditation initiative, and edited the proposed list of competencies which are one input to the body of knowledge.
He participates in several international standards groups where he has introduced the concept of quality in use. He contributed to ISO 13407 and the Common Industry Format, edited ISO 9241-11 (Guidance on usability), ISO/IEC 14598-1 (Evaluation of software quality - General guide), ISO/IEC 9126-1 (Software product quality model) and ISO/IEC 9126-4 (Quality in use metrics). He currently edits ISO/IEC25030 (Quality requirements) , ISO 20282-2 (Usability of everyday products), and the new Common Industry Format for usability requirements.
Nigel has given tutorials on usability, user centred design and requirements at international conferences including the Usability Professionals Association, CHI, Interact, HCI International and software quality and software engineering conferences.
He is a Board member of the Usability Professionals Association (UPA) and a council member of the UK UPA. Lyle Kantrovich
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