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Designing Collaborative Systems Andy Crabtree

Designing Collaborative Systems By Andy Crabtree

Designing Collaborative Systems by Andy Crabtree


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Summary

An invaluable introduction to the new 'ethnographic' approach to designing effective and user friendly collaborative and interactive systems. Here, designers are shown how to analyse the social circumstances in which a particular system will be used.

Designing Collaborative Systems Summary

Designing Collaborative Systems: A Practical Guide to Ethnography by Andy Crabtree

An invaluable introduction to the new 'ethnographic' approach to designing effective and user friendly collaborative and interactive systems. Here, designers are shown how to analyse the social circumstances in which a particular system will be used. Consisting of four sections the book covers: the requirements problem; how to describe and analyse cooperative work; the design process; and how to evaluate systems supporting cooperative work. Practical examples are provided throughout, based on the development case of a collaborative library database system.

Designing Collaborative Systems Reviews

From the reviews:

"The text is emminently readable. Crabtree is able to synthesize and reflect upon material from a number of areas ... with great clarity of argument. This makes such complex and diverse subject matter approachable for all types of audiences from the social science to computer science, from research to academia.

The requirements problem discussions in Chapter1 provide a most coherent and convincing argument about the problems associated with both traditional requirements gathering techniques and more cognitively focused HCI approaches for socially situated software. This should be compulsory reading for all students of HCI/CSCW/software requirements."

Geraldine Fitzpatrick, University of Sussex - The Computer Journal, Vol 47, No 3, 2004

Fieldwork methods and sociological analysis have become increasingly
relevant for designing interactive systems, but how to bring fieldwork,
analysis and design together is still mysterious. Crabtree provides a
unique insider's perspective and demonstrates the applicability of
ethnomethodological analysis throughout the process of design. As well as
providing valuable lessons to practitioners, his book will also contribute
significantly to ongoing debates about the role, contribution, and
practicalities of these methods.
Paul Dourish, University of California, Irvine, USA

"Of the various perspectives that jostle together under the rubric of ethnography, ethnomethodology has often held the most appeal for designers. Yet, surprisingly, there has not been a systematic explication of ethnography and ethnomethodology for the purposes of system design. Andy Crabtree puts this to rights in a comprehensive, informative, and accessible practical guide which will be of great value to not only designers but also the ethnographers who work with them."
(Graham Button, Lab. Director, Xerox Research Centre, Europe)

"Not only is the book a must for those interested in bringing a social dimension to the system design process, it also makes a significant contribution to ethnomethodology."
(Professor John A. Hughes, Lancaster University, UK)

"This book makes a significant contribution, reflecting the work of ethnography itself, in accounting for the practical work of understanding and design in a coherent and accessible manner. This book could be read equally by ethnographers as a book about applied ethnomethodologically informed ethnography, and by designers or developers as a book about how to apply an understanding of the 'real world, real time character of work' ... ." (Geraldine Fitzpatrick, The Computer Journal, Vol. 47 (3), 2004)

"Andy Crabtree's is a slim, quiet, slightly academic book that somehow manages to bring the airy theoretical concepts to life, and to recommend simple and practical ways of using the ideas ... . Crabtree has produced a fine pioneering essay which sketches, on the basis of a mountainous literature, how in principle ethnography could migrate from the research lab of a university to the research and development lab of a large software or systems corporation." (Ian Alexander, Requirenautics Quarterly, July, 2003)

Table of Contents

Preface
Acknowledgements
1 The Requirements Problem
1.1 The Motivation for Ethnography in Design
1.1.1 Analysing the Design Space: The Waterfall Model
1.1.2 A Paradigm Change in Design
1.2 A Primary Analytic Point of View for Design: Enter HCI.
1.2.1 The User and the Interface in HCI
1.2.2 Mapping Mental Models of the Referent System
1.2.3 The Referent System in HCI
1.2.4 Some Technical Troubles with HCI.
1.3 From Human Factors to Human Actors: Exit HCI
1.3.1 Reconceptualizing the User
1.3.2 Reconceptualizing the Interface
1.4 The Turn to the Social
1.4.1 Cooperative Work?
1.4.2 Self-organizing Structures of Work
2 Making Cooperative Work Visible.
2.1 Ethnography: An Informal Mode of Description and Analysis
2.1.1 Investigating Cooperative Work
2.1.2 Assembling Data or Instances for Inspection
2.1.3 Analysing Cooperative Work.
2.1.4 The Problem of Constructive Analysis
2.2 Analysing Cooperative Work: Sacks and Garfinkel.
2.2.1 Conversation Analysis
2.2.2 Ethnomethodological Analysis
2.2.3 General Methodology: Thick Description
2.3 Representing Cooperative Work
2.3.1 The Unique Adequacy Requirement
2.3.2 The Particular Need to Transcend Generic Analytic Formats
3 Work Studies and Design.
3.1 The Role of Ethnomethodological Studies of Work in Design
3.1.1 Some Practical Strategies for the Use of Ethnography
3.2 Using Ethnography to Give Form to Design (The Bricoleur's Craft)
3.2.1 A Lingua Franca for Design
3.2.2 The Adapted Patterns Framework
3.2.3 Analysing the Design Space with Patterns (Formulating Design Solutions 1)
3.2.4 Co-constructing Use-scenarios (Formulating Design Solutions 2)
4 Evaluating Systems Support for Cooperative Work.
4.1 Prototyping Methodology
4.1.1 Participatory Design
4.1.2 Cooperative Design
4.1.3 Beyond Political Rhetoric
4.2 Evaluation of Prototypes
4.2.1 The HCI Tradition
4.2.2 Alternatives to HCI
4.3 Cooperative Design in Action
4.3.1 Situated Evaluation (Formulating Design Solutions 3)
Summary
References
Subject Index.

Additional information

NLS9781852337186
9781852337186
1852337184
Designing Collaborative Systems: A Practical Guide to Ethnography by Andy Crabtree
New
Paperback
Springer London Ltd
2003-05-12
184
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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