Teaching Inclusive Design Skills with the CIDER Assumption Elicitation Technique

Technology should be accessible and inclusive, so designers should learn to consider the needs of different users. Toward this end, we created the theoretically-grounded CIDER assumption elicitation technique, an educational analytical design evaluation method to teach inclusive design skills. CIDER (Critique, Imagine, Design, Expand, Repeat) helps designers recognize and respond to bias using the critical lens of assumptions about users. Through an 11-week mixed-method case study in an interaction design course with 40 undergraduate students and follow-up interviews, we found that activities based on the CIDER technique may have helped students identify increasingly many types of design bias over time and reflect on their unconscious biases about users. The activities also had lasting impacts, encouraging some students to adopt more inclusive approaches in subsequent design work. We discuss the implications of these findings, namely that educational techniques like CIDER can help designers learn to create equitable technology designs.

Teaching Inclusive Design Skills with the CIDER Assumption Elicitation Technique

  • Author Oleson, Alannah and Solomon, Meron and Perdriau, Christopher and Ko, Amy
  • Publication Title ACM Trans. Comput.-Hum. Interact.
  • Publication Year 2023
  • BPC Focus Students with Disabilities
  • Methodology Qualitative, Program Evaluation
  • Analytic Method Case Study
  • Institution Type NA
  • DOI 10.1145/3549074
  • URL https://doi.org/10.1145/3549074