Instructor: Nancy Kaplan, Professor
School of Information Arts and Technologies
200 D Academic Center, 410.837.5319
nkaplan@ubalt.edu
iat.ubalt.edu/kaplan

Office Hours: Tuesdays, 3 - 5:00 PM, and by appointment
Even for office hours, please schedule with me whenever possible to avoid double-bookings and other mishaps.

Description and Objectives

This course acquaints students with professional methods for creating and evaluating useful, usable, and effective user interfaces and with strategies for designing more complex interactions and user experiences with online resources.

By the end of this course, students will have a broad understanding of interfaces and interactivity. They will have analyzed and measured the efficiency of existing interfaces, developed ideas for and prototyped alternative interfaces, researched one or more aspects of interaction for a group project, and built a prototype of that project.

Specific Learning Objectives include:

  • Learning to structure applications and interfaces for specific audiences
  • Learning to specify the content and/or features of an application or interactive system
  • Learning to employ sound principles of User-Centered Design
  • Learning to conduct appropriate research (quantitative, qualitative, literature review)

Course Requirements and Policies

Students are expected to attend every scheduled class, complete the reading assignments, and participate actively in discussion. A statement of general academic policies appears on my Web site. That statement is an extension of this document. See http://iat.ubalt.edu/kaplan/policies.htm. Please also read the University's policies in the Student Handbook.

Every student is required to create a home page (this file must be named index.htm) in his/her directory on the student server: student-iat.ubalt.edu. All completed work must be posted to that directory and must be linked from the student's home page. If it is not in the right place on the server and if no link to the work appears on the home page, the work will not be counted. In addition, every student's home page must have a link to that student's Group Blog.

Required Texts

cover shot of The Humane Interface




Raskin, J. The Humane Interface. Addison Wesley, 2000. ISBN: 0201379376.


cover shot of Designing the User Interface



Shneiderman, B. and C. Plaisant. Designing the User Interface, Fifth Edition. Addison Wesley, 2010. ISBN: 0321537351.

cover shot of Paper Prototyping



Snyder, Carolyn. Paper Prototyping. Morgan Kaufmann, 2003. ISBN: 1558608702.

Plus handouts and on-line assignments TBA

Assignments and Grading Scheme

There are three major and three smaller assignment for this course. Two of the major assignments are individual work and these account for 55% of your course grade. The other four assignments are group work and account for 45% of your grade.

assignmentdue dateweight
Group outline of work10.10.0905%
Interface analysis paper 10.24.0925%
Paper Prototype 111.07.0905%
Research paper11.21.0930%
Paper Prototype 212.05.0915%
Group Project and Presentation 12.12.0920%

Weekly Readings and Assignments

date readings and assignments due
Sep 12 Raskin, Intro, Chapters 1 & 2; Muller, M.: Participatory Design: The Third Space in HCI [pdf] ; form groups
Sep 19 Raskin, Chapters 3-4
Sep 26 Raskin, Chapters 5-6; Snyder, Chapter 15
Oct 03 Shneiderman and Plaisant, Chapters 1-3; Snyder, Chapters 1-4
Oct 10 Shneiderman and Plaisant, Chapter 4; Snyder, Chapters 7 & 9; Group Outline Due
Oct 17 Shneiderman and Plaisant, Chapter 5-6; Snyder, Chapters 5-6
Oct 24 Shneiderman and Plaisant, Chapters 7-8; Snyder, Chapters 12-14; Interface Analysis Due
Oct 31 Shneiderman and Plaisant, Chapter 9; Snyder, Chapters 8 & 10-11
Nov 07 Paper Prototype 1
Nov 14 Shneiderman and Plaisant, Chapters 10-11
Nov 21 Shneiderman and Plaisant, Chapters 12-14 & Afterward; Research Paper Due
Nov 28 No Class: Thanksgiving
Dec 05 Paper Prototype 2
Dec 12 Group Presentations


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Last updated: 09/06/09 18:28:28
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