2022
Yumiko Murai, Alissa N. Antle, Alexandra Kitson, Yves Candau, Azadeh Adibi, Zoe Dao-Kroeker, John Desnoyers-Stewart, Katrien Jacobs. 2022. Facilitating critical reflection in online distributed maker workshops: Case studies Journal Article . In International Journal of Child-Computer Interaction, vol. 33, 100509, 2022, ISSN: 2212-8689.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Critical making, Critical reflection, Maker pedagogy, Online learning, Online workshop
@article{MURAI2022100509,
title = {Facilitating critical reflection in online distributed maker workshops: Case studies},
author = {Yumiko Murai and Alissa N. Antle and Alexandra Kitson and Yves Candau and Azadeh Adibi and Zoe Dao-Kroeker and John Desnoyers-Stewart and Katrien Jacobs},
url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221286892200037X},
doi = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcci.2022.100509},
issn = {2212-8689},
year = {2022},
date = {2022-01-01},
journal = {International Journal of Child-Computer Interaction},
volume = {33},
pages = {100509},
abstract = {The global pandemic has brought numerous challenges for designers, researchers, and practitioners whose work involves children and new technologies. While many of us have found creative ways to address the obstacles of facilitating activities with children remotely, inciting critical reflection through making, which is already difficult in in-person settings, has become an even greater challenge in online distributed settings. This paper reports on the lessons learned from two two-week online afterschool maker workshops where participants in remote locations engaged in critical reflections on ethical implications of biowearable technologies through designing a biowearable device that benefits their own lives. The results showed preliminary evidence that participants were able to produce a prototype and engaged in critical reflection on the ethical issues of biowearables. We also found that while online environments offer limited social cues and flexibility, access to multiple communication channels enabled just-in-time and situated facilitation for critical reflection.},
keywords = {Critical making, Critical reflection, Maker pedagogy, Online learning, Online workshop},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
The global pandemic has brought numerous challenges for designers, researchers, and practitioners whose work involves children and new technologies. While many of us have found creative ways to address the obstacles of facilitating activities with children remotely, inciting critical reflection through making, which is already difficult in in-person settings, has become an even greater challenge in online distributed settings. This paper reports on the lessons learned from two two-week online afterschool maker workshops where participants in remote locations engaged in critical reflections on ethical implications of biowearable technologies through designing a biowearable device that benefits their own lives. The results showed preliminary evidence that participants were able to produce a prototype and engaged in critical reflection on the ethical issues of biowearables. We also found that while online environments offer limited social cues and flexibility, access to multiple communication channels enabled just-in-time and situated facilitation for critical reflection.
Alissa N. Antle, Yumiko Murai, Alexandra Kitson, Yves Candau, Zoe Minh-Tam Dao-Kroeker, Azadeh Adibi. 2022. “There Are a LOT of Moral Issues with Biowearables” ... Teaching Design Ethics through a Critical Making Biowearable Workshop Proceedings Article . In Interaction Design and Children, IDC '22 Association for Computing Machinery, Braga, Portugal, 327–340, .
Abstract | BibTeX | Tags: Biowearables, children, Critical making, design ethics, ethics, teaching ethics, youth
@inproceedings{10.1145/3501712.3529717,
title = {“There Are a LOT of Moral Issues with Biowearables” ... Teaching Design Ethics through a Critical Making Biowearable Workshop},
author = {Alissa N. Antle and Yumiko Murai and Alexandra Kitson and Yves Candau and Zoe Minh-Tam Dao-Kroeker and Azadeh Adibi},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1145/3501712.3529717},
doi = {10.1145/3501712.3529717},
isbn = {9781450391979},
year = {2022},
date = {2022-01-01},
booktitle = {Interaction Design and Children},
pages = {327–340},
publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
address = {Braga, Portugal},
series = {IDC '22},
abstract = {There has been an increasing focus on teaching youth about design ethics as part of technical literacy. Biowearables are an emerging technology in which devices worn on children's bodies are used to track, monitor and provide feedback about their biological processes. In this paper we describe an online critical making workshop designed to enable students in middle school years to develop technical literacy skills that include reflection on issues related to design ethics. We investigated if and how our workshop enabled eleven youth, aged 12-14, to reflect through processes of making their own biowearable, on potential negative impacts of biowearables on their developing senses of identity, agency, autonomy and authenticity. The workshop elements included facilitated activities using custom created biowearable-tangible kit and ethics cards. Through qualitative coding and thematic analysis of moments of reflection captured with video, chat, and design journals we gathered evidence of the feasibility of promoting critical making as a means to cultivate technical literacy in youth. Our findings suggest the potential of teaching design ethics through critical making workshops and reveal a range of ways that reflection on ethical issues can be supported during making. We interpret our empirical evidence to further explore how workshop elements supported, or failed to support, learning outcomes and generalize our interpretations to propose preliminary guidance about workshop mechanisms that might be used to support ethical reflection during making.},
keywords = {Biowearables, children, Critical making, design ethics, ethics, teaching ethics, youth},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
There has been an increasing focus on teaching youth about design ethics as part of technical literacy. Biowearables are an emerging technology in which devices worn on children's bodies are used to track, monitor and provide feedback about their biological processes. In this paper we describe an online critical making workshop designed to enable students in middle school years to develop technical literacy skills that include reflection on issues related to design ethics. We investigated if and how our workshop enabled eleven youth, aged 12-14, to reflect through processes of making their own biowearable, on potential negative impacts of biowearables on their developing senses of identity, agency, autonomy and authenticity. The workshop elements included facilitated activities using custom created biowearable-tangible kit and ethics cards. Through qualitative coding and thematic analysis of moments of reflection captured with video, chat, and design journals we gathered evidence of the feasibility of promoting critical making as a means to cultivate technical literacy in youth. Our findings suggest the potential of teaching design ethics through critical making workshops and reveal a range of ways that reflection on ethical issues can be supported during making. We interpret our empirical evidence to further explore how workshop elements supported, or failed to support, learning outcomes and generalize our interpretations to propose preliminary guidance about workshop mechanisms that might be used to support ethical reflection during making.
2021
Yumiko Murai, Alissa N. Antle, Alexandra Kitson, Yves Candau, Azadeh Adibi, Zoe Dao-Kroeker, John Desnoyers-Stewart, Katrien Jacobs. 2021. Facilitating Online Distributed Critical Making: Lessons Learned Proceedings Article . In FabLearn Europe / MakeEd 2021 - An International Conference on Computing, Design and Making in Education, FabLearn Europe / MakeEd 2021 Association for Computing Machinery, St. Gallen, Switzerland, .
Abstract | BibTeX | Tags: Biowearables, Critical making, Critical reflection, design ethics, design thinking, Maker-centered learning, Online learning, Online workshop, quantification of self, teaching ethics, youth
@inproceedings{10.1145/3466725.3466759,
title = {Facilitating Online Distributed Critical Making: Lessons Learned},
author = {Yumiko Murai and Alissa N. Antle and Alexandra Kitson and Yves Candau and Azadeh Adibi and Zoe Dao-Kroeker and John Desnoyers-Stewart and Katrien Jacobs},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1145/3466725.3466759},
doi = {10.1145/3466725.3466759},
isbn = {9781450389891},
year = {2021},
date = {2021-01-01},
booktitle = {FabLearn Europe / MakeEd 2021 - An International Conference on Computing, Design and Making in Education},
publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
address = {St. Gallen, Switzerland},
series = {FabLearn Europe / MakeEd 2021},
abstract = {The global pandemic has brought numerous challenges for educators who take a maker-centered approach, whose instruction involves direct engagement with materials through collaborative and exploratory social interactions. Many educators have found creative ways to address the obstacles of being remote. However, inciting critical reflection through making, already difficult during in-person settings, has become an even greater challenge in remote settings. This paper reports on the lessons learned from a two-week online afterschool maker workshop where participants worked on a maker project being in remote locations, while engaged in critical reflections on ethical implications of biowearable devices. The results showed preliminary evidence that participants were able to produce a prototype and engaged in critical reflection on the ethical issues of biowearables. We also found that while online environments offer limited social cues and flexibility, access to multiple communication channels enabled just-in-time facilitation for critical reflection.},
keywords = {Biowearables, Critical making, Critical reflection, design ethics, design thinking, Maker-centered learning, Online learning, Online workshop, quantification of self, teaching ethics, youth},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
The global pandemic has brought numerous challenges for educators who take a maker-centered approach, whose instruction involves direct engagement with materials through collaborative and exploratory social interactions. Many educators have found creative ways to address the obstacles of being remote. However, inciting critical reflection through making, already difficult during in-person settings, has become an even greater challenge in remote settings. This paper reports on the lessons learned from a two-week online afterschool maker workshop where participants worked on a maker project being in remote locations, while engaged in critical reflections on ethical implications of biowearable devices. The results showed preliminary evidence that participants were able to produce a prototype and engaged in critical reflection on the ethical issues of biowearables. We also found that while online environments offer limited social cues and flexibility, access to multiple communication channels enabled just-in-time facilitation for critical reflection.
Zoe Minh-Tam Dao-Kroeker, Alexandra Kitson, Alissa N. Antle, Yumiko Murai, Azadeh Adibi. 2021. Designing Biotech Ethics Cards: Promoting Critical Making During an Online Workshop with Youth Proceedings Article . In Interaction Design and Children, IDC '21 Association for Computing Machinery, Athens, Greece, 450–455, .
Abstract | BibTeX | Tags: Biowearables, computer ethics, Critical making, Design cards, design ethics, reflection, youth
@inproceedings{10.1145/3459990.3465182,
title = {Designing Biotech Ethics Cards: Promoting Critical Making During an Online Workshop with Youth},
author = {Zoe Minh-Tam Dao-Kroeker and Alexandra Kitson and Alissa N. Antle and Yumiko Murai and Azadeh Adibi},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1145/3459990.3465182},
doi = {10.1145/3459990.3465182},
isbn = {9781450384520},
year = {2021},
date = {2021-01-01},
booktitle = {Interaction Design and Children},
pages = {450–455},
publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
address = {Athens, Greece},
series = {IDC '21},
abstract = {There are ethical concerns surrounding how youth interact with biowearable technology and the potential effects it has on their psychological and physiological health. We need to give youth the tools to critically reflect and explore ethical issues surrounding biowearables in order for them to make informed decisions about how they interact with them. To address this, we developed the Biotech Ethics cards as part of a critical making workshop. They are a set of design cards designed to scaffold critical reflection during a critical making workshop where youth prototype a biowearable from a kit. We focus this short paper on the requirements, initial design and revisions we made after studying card use in our workshop. We identified key design elements that are important in the cards and that may generalize to the design of other card sets meant to be integrated into a critical making process.},
keywords = {Biowearables, computer ethics, Critical making, Design cards, design ethics, reflection, youth},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
There are ethical concerns surrounding how youth interact with biowearable technology and the potential effects it has on their psychological and physiological health. We need to give youth the tools to critically reflect and explore ethical issues surrounding biowearables in order for them to make informed decisions about how they interact with them. To address this, we developed the Biotech Ethics cards as part of a critical making workshop. They are a set of design cards designed to scaffold critical reflection during a critical making workshop where youth prototype a biowearable from a kit. We focus this short paper on the requirements, initial design and revisions we made after studying card use in our workshop. We identified key design elements that are important in the cards and that may generalize to the design of other card sets meant to be integrated into a critical making process.
Alissa N. Antle, Alexandra Kitson, Yumiko Murai, John Desnoyers-Stewart, Yves Candau, Azadeh Adibi, Katrien Jacobs, Zoe Dao-Kroeker. 2021. Opportunities and Scaffolds for Critical Reflection on Ethical Issues in an Online After School Biowearable Workshop for Youth Proceedings Article . In FabLearn Europe / MakeEd 2021 - An International Conference on Computing, Design and Making in Education, FabLearn Europe / MakeEd 2021 Association for Computing Machinery, St. Gallen, Switzerland, .
Abstract | BibTeX | Tags: Biowearables, Critical making, design ethics, ethics, teaching ethics, youth
@inproceedings{10.1145/3466725.3466762,
title = {Opportunities and Scaffolds for Critical Reflection on Ethical Issues in an Online After School Biowearable Workshop for Youth},
author = {Alissa N. Antle and Alexandra Kitson and Yumiko Murai and John Desnoyers-Stewart and Yves Candau and Azadeh Adibi and Katrien Jacobs and Zoe Dao-Kroeker},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1145/3466725.3466762},
doi = {10.1145/3466725.3466762},
isbn = {9781450389891},
year = {2021},
date = {2021-01-01},
booktitle = {FabLearn Europe / MakeEd 2021 - An International Conference on Computing, Design and Making in Education},
publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
address = {St. Gallen, Switzerland},
series = {FabLearn Europe / MakeEd 2021},
abstract = {The rapid adoption of biowearables, such as smartwatches, raises ethical issues as youth are increasingly being tracked, monitored and given feedback on a growing number of measures. To address this pressing need, we investigated how to support youth to understand and explore these ethical issues grounded in the processes of prototyping during an afterschool online critical making workshop. The main contribution of this paper is our critical reflection framework, consisting of three interrelated components: ethical issues, technical opportunities, and reflection scaffolds. We focus on ethical issues related to the potential for biowearables to negatively impact six constructs taken from child development. We describe how we created a biowearable-tangible prototyping kit that has under-determined design decision points, creating technologically-mediated opportunities for reflection during the iterative prototyping process. Third, we present a set of critical reflection cards created to support youth to explore the ethical issues related to those decision points. We provide two scenarios from a pilot study that illustrate our framework in action, providing preliminary validation for our approach in an online environment.},
keywords = {Biowearables, Critical making, design ethics, ethics, teaching ethics, youth},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
The rapid adoption of biowearables, such as smartwatches, raises ethical issues as youth are increasingly being tracked, monitored and given feedback on a growing number of measures. To address this pressing need, we investigated how to support youth to understand and explore these ethical issues grounded in the processes of prototyping during an afterschool online critical making workshop. The main contribution of this paper is our critical reflection framework, consisting of three interrelated components: ethical issues, technical opportunities, and reflection scaffolds. We focus on ethical issues related to the potential for biowearables to negatively impact six constructs taken from child development. We describe how we created a biowearable-tangible prototyping kit that has under-determined design decision points, creating technologically-mediated opportunities for reflection during the iterative prototyping process. Third, we present a set of critical reflection cards created to support youth to explore the ethical issues related to those decision points. We provide two scenarios from a pilot study that illustrate our framework in action, providing preliminary validation for our approach in an online environment.