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Inspiring design: the use of photo elicitation and lomography in gaining the child’s perspective. Lynne Hall, Susan Jones, Marc Hall, Joanne Richardson & John Hodgson. Overview. Designing with children in eCIRCUS Photography as design input Lomography and photo elicitation
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Inspiring design: the use of photo elicitation and lomography in gaining the child’s perspective Lynne Hall, Susan Jones, Marc Hall, Joanne Richardson & John Hodgson
Overview • Designing with children in eCIRCUS • Photography as design input • Lomography and photo elicitation • Design Context: Water Safety • Gaining inspiration – our experience
Designing with children in eCIRCUS • eCIRCUS: FP6 project – technology enhanced personal, social and emotional learning • Aims to • provide a classroom-based, curriculum-focused participatory design approach • Increase and improve involvement of primary users and stakeholders
eCIRCUS approach • Participatory, child-centred, aims to reflect children’s interests and activities • Range of methods and techniques • Child as informant • Aims to reflect adult-child dynamic in classroom context • Takes into account curricular needs of teachers and pupils • Small group activities (best practice key stage 2 and 3) • Covers aspects of national curriculum
Photography • Powerful medium for documenting human experience • Used to mark key events and remember the past • Can generate concepts and ideas with visual methods increasingly gaining attention • Photography offers potential for analysis and dialogue stimulation • Photographic content can be fed into design process • Use of photography matches increasing visual (digital) communication approach • Successfully used in cultural probes and diary methods
Using photography for design input • Typically structured experience with photos required of specific artefacts or events • Our approach • More in common with “probing” • Flexible • Child chooses what to record and present • Lomography
Using photography to support design with children • Children keen to use personal technology • Cameras high availability and increasing sites and software aimed at supporting children’s sharing of photos • Provide a focal point rather than child themselves • Photographer has guaranteed knowledge about the photo • Helps children to express themselves and offer information
Lomography • Photography technique developed as a response to over arty and stylistic photographic approaches • Name and initial approach based on a small Russian camera • Multiple frames of same photo • Flexible, quick, unstructured photography • Nearly lost, but rediscovered by a group of students • Now very popular approach to photography
“Doing” Lomography • Meant to be fun • Freedom - photo anything you want, anytime, anywhere • Aims to capture everyday experience • Personal and free form of photography • Ideally suited to the digital age • Camera is always there and aims to enhance the user experience
Photo Elicitation • Lomography used as basis for photo elicitation • Using photos as talking points stimulates discussion, memories and ideas (e.g. autodriving, photo voice) • Limited use but has been successful for stimulating dialogue with adults and children
Design Context • 11-13 year olds • Enhance “Water Safety Roadshow” held in Sunderland schools • Web-based application • Serious issue - one of most common causes of death for age group • Children NOT aware of intended design context • No structure / focus pre-provided for photos
Approach • Ten 11-12 year olds • Disposable cameras provided for one school week • Group based discussion, categorisation and annotation of photos • Occurred in the classroom but after school
Results: main images • Technology, phones, computers • Animals and pets • Outdoor scenery, areas and activities • People – friends, family
Results: categorisation and discussion • Children engaged with process • Readily discussed own and other’s photo contents • Collaborative activity with turn taking and happy dialogue • Considerable agreement about allocation of photos to categories and in annotation • Provision of emotional and personal information about photos
Results and design context • Children unaware of intended context BUT • Significant number of images with water (beach, fountains, pools, fish ponds, etc.) • Water images positively described • Children strong fascination with water and play near it
Water movement Waves which splash Water rippling in fountains / ponds Local landmarks and scenery Fish in water Fun and engaging aspects of water Design Inspiration from photos
Using lomography and photo elicitation with children • Care-free style retains fun and excitement of taking photos • Photos ideal vehicles for discussion • Small group, class-based activity that is fun and enjoyable for all • Links well to National Curriculum (Art & Design, ICT, Literacy, etc.) • Unplanned nature still produced valuable information • We had forgotten the fascination that water holds for children, but on reflection can all remember!
Summary • Lomography combined with photo elicitation and categorisation effective for gaining useful data from children • Fun, interesting and stimulating • Can be used in the classroom and links to curriculum • Valuable and effective input for designing with children