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What we teach and what we do. The on going “discussion”. Lidia Oshlyansky. No clear professional definition of roles or career progression. Suggested solution: SFIA needs publicising. (Skills framework for the information age www.sfia.org.uk)
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What we teach and what we do The on going “discussion” Lidia Oshlyansky
No clear professional definition of roles or career progression Suggested solution: • SFIA needs publicising. (Skills framework for the information age www.sfia.org.uk) • We need to develop, within SFIA, other roles and overlapping roles with related disciplines. • Participate in process; set up a group to be ready for the next SFIA call. • Evaluate what’s already prepared. • Build bridges with CHI activities, UPA, RDCEO. • “Positions wanted” lists could be used as source materials to ensure relevance.
HCI is not seen as valuable Suggested solution: • Need to do cost justification – we’ve been doing this and need to keep doing it. • Need case studies to demonstrate value. • Need to be able to point to HCI and its purpose. • Need to define what HCI is.
Lack of framework for field Suggested solution: • No formalisation in our field – a language we agree on • Acknowledgment of the pluralistic basis of HCI. • Defining the good, the bad and the ugly of methods. • Do we need a professional reading list? • Continuing profession development (CPD) products should be offered by academia to industry.
Not teaching students full range of benefits and costs of methods Suggested solution: • Our degrees need to do more to map onto jobs • We need to teach critical thinking to students • Industry needs to offer placements and feedback • Students need to be taught practical skills and how to apply them
Lack of applicability of academic work Suggested solution: • Need more on methods and how to do them. • A new “how to” method book every six months! • Disseminate information on methods and how to use them • Existing text books are not enough – they don’t offer appropriate level of detail for industry • Industry needs to take more responsibility for contributing to the knowledge of methods, their application and their appropriateness
Companies aren’t investing in the knowledge and methodologies of HCI Suggested solution: • Companies in UK invest less in R and D than other countries. • Part of that larger problem. • Practitioners are keen to learn so go to conferences. • Needs to be viewed as an investment. • Community of practice and community participation.
Lack of communication between industry and academics • Really poor, narrow channel • Communication is not timely on the scale of industrial problems specifically making a profit. • Knowledge transfer needs to be considered in lots of different ways and in both directions
Suggested solution • Maintain contact with students – they go into industry • Let alumni at the research, particularly postgraduates. • Need plain English in academia. • Encouraging conferences as a community event and bringing students into them. • Promoting networks that include both academia and industry. • Give students a view of academics as approachable resources for future use. • Consider industry placements for students instead of formal thesis projects. • Professionals giving lectures as part of degree programmes. • Set industry challenges for students as part of course works and see what students have come up with.
Participants • Philip Bonhard • Paul Cairns • Lorraine Catwell • Chandra Harrison • Tom McEwan • William Newman • Natalie Webb
Comments? • Questions?