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INF 391D.10: Survey of Information Studies

PhD Only
Doctoral Core

This course provides an overview of the major subject areas, ideas, concepts, and theories of Information Studies and introduces the basics of research, publication, and academic conventions in Information Studies. Prerequisites: Admission to the doctoral program and consent of the graduate advisor.

Skills: Areas Of Research In Information Studies, process Of Conducting Literature Reviews, basics Of The Craft Of Research
Topics: Research, analyzing Academic Research Articles, literature Review

INF 391D.11: The Research Enterprise

PhD Only
Doctoral Core

An overview of the nature and purposes of research, and common methods and methodologies in information studies.

INF 391D.12: Disciplinary Foundations For Information Studies

PhD Only
Doctoral Core

An overview of concepts, results, and perspectives from philosophical, social science, humanistic, design, and technological disciplines that provide important underpinnings for information studies.

I 320S: Topics in Social Informatics: Design for Social Impact

Undergraduate
Social Informatics, User-Experience Design

This class explores how to make arguments about and through design. The first half focuses on values, criticism, ethics, and analysis of technology, the latter portion aims to help a soon-to-graduate technologist envision positive social impact in a mission-driven enterprise. Students will practice synthesizing ethical tech considerations – as they will have to do for the rest of their careers – and combining this with an organizational mindset. Through exercises, role-playing, discussions, guest lectures from activist technologists, and wide-ranging readings, students will practice connecting broader implications of their designs with technical choices. Design for Social Impact seeks to arm students with diverse ways of reflecting on their authorial relationship to technology, drawing from art and design to political science and anthropology. Course participants will be encouraged to focus on areas of personal interest, enumerating the social, political, and economic parameters of particular technical systems: parameters that are as important as power consumption, usability, or efficiency.

Skills: Conscious Making, design, social Change
Topics: Values In Design, design Approaches, design Justice, organizational Models

I 320U: Topics in User Experience Design: Civic Engagement and Technology

Undergraduate
User-Experience Design, Social Informatics

Civic engagement involves joining with others to identify and address issues facing a community. Examples include volunteering to clean up a park, participating in a town hall meeting, and voting. Conversations about civic issues emerge in many public and private spaces, including public libraries, coffeeshops, and through group messaging platforms, like WhatsApp. This course will investigate how computing systems have been used to help people surface issues in various ways---from community sensing systems to crowdsourcing budget issues---as well as address issues through online discussion, mutual-aid, and coordinating volunteer networks. Technology can serve as a force multiplier for civic engagement; however, there are important considerations related to their design, deployment, and sustaining them over time. Civic technology is embedded within a policy, political, and technical environment that can be tricky to navigate. Many people also lack access to the time and training to fully engage with a technology; failure to recognize these barriers related to the “digital divide” can result in systematically preventing some groups of people from participating in civic activities. Additionally, there may be unanticipated risks associated with the way that a civic technology collects, manages, and shares personal as well as group level information. These ethical issues deserve special consideration in a civic engagement and socio-technical context.

I 320U: Topics in User Experience Design: Design for Social Impact

Undergraduate
User-Experience Design, Social Informatics

This class explores how to make arguments about and through design. The first half focuses on values, criticism, ethics, and analysis of technology, the latter portion aims to help a soon-to-graduate technologist envision positive social impact in a mission-driven enterprise. Students will practice synthesizing ethical tech considerations – as they will have to do for the rest of their careers – and combining this with an organizational mindset. Through exercises, role-playing, discussions, guest lectures from activist technologists, and wide-ranging readings, students will practice connecting broader implications of their designs with technical choices. Design for Social Impact seeks to arm students with diverse ways of reflecting on their authorial relationship to technology, drawing from art and design to political science and anthropology. Course participants will be encouraged to focus on areas of personal interest, enumerating the social, political, and economic parameters of particular technical systems: parameters that are as important as power consumption, usability, or efficiency.

Skills: Conscious Making, design, social Change
Topics: Values In Design, design Approaches, design Justice, organizational Models
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