Virtual and in-person co-design workshops: from alternative to complementary approaches.
https://virtual-physical-codesign.webflow.io
June 20th, 2022
Venice, Italy
Workshop co-located with ACM Creativity&Cognition 2022
https://cc.acm.org/2022/
OVERVIEW
The pandemic has forced us to re-think the ways we design and facilitate co-design.
Activities once relying on in-person interaction, often mediated by physical artifacts
(e.g. brainstorming cards, postITs, playing tokens), had to be quickly redesigned as
virtual experiences – often with trade-offs involved. Can in-person and virtual workshops
co-exist and complement each other?
We invite a diverse pool of participants, including technologists, educators,
psychologists, and sociologists to share their experiences and reflect on how to bring
together virtual and in-person co-design workshops. Through discussion and hands-on
sessions with physical, digital, and hybrid co-design toolkits created by the organizers
we aim to reflect on the following research questions:
• What are the challenges of transforming location, methods, and toolkits that are
designed for in-person workshops into the digital?
• How the diverse affordances available in the physical and digital realms impact on the
ability of co-design tools and methods to foster participants’ creativity, collaboration
and learning skills.
• How does the virtual space influence the interaction between participants, e.g. virtual
breakout rooms vs. different tables or corners in a real workshop room?
• How do workshop facilitators can to adapt to virtual and hybrid settings?
DATES
• Research statement submission May 12st (extended)
• Notification of acceptance May 15th
• C&C Early Registration May 20th
• Workshop June 20th
ORGANIZERS
• Simone Mora, MIT Senseable City Lab
• Monica Divitini, NTNU
• Albrecht Kurze, Chemnitz University of Technology
• Arne Berger, Hochschule Anhalt
• Martina Mazzarello, MIT Senseable City Lab
• Dries de Roeck, Studio Dott.
CONTRIBUTIONS
Participants shall submit a 1-page research statement with a summary of their experience
in the field and topics they would like to discuss during the workshop. Participants are
also invited to bring and demo their own toolkits (contact us). We also encourage young
researchers with little experience to participate.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
• Physical, digital and hybrid co-design workshop methods and toolkits
• Evaluation of co-design methods and tools
• Experience facilitating co-design workshops in formal and informal settings
• The use of co-design workshops in education
Please email your research statement to virtual-physical-codesign(a)mit.edu
Best,
Simone
--
Simone Mora, PhD
Research Scientist
Senseable City Laboratory
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
T +1 (617) 902-8703
W
http://senseable.mit.edu