The page is organised around three things:
Upcoming deadlines surface in the orange banner immediately below; the announcement card above lists material released most recently.
Your presentation is the team's defence of the full user-centred design cycle. Review the complete requirements in the project specification on your section's protected page. Suggested structure:
A live demo of the prototype is required, and all team members must speak.
Timing. Each slot is 20 minutes: aim for a 10-minute presentation (12 minutes maximum), then questions and discussion. Time is tight and strictly enforced, so you will be stopped on time. Practise to stay within your time; lost time is deducted from your slot.
Be ready. Have your slides ready in advance (for example, in PowerPoint). A group that is not ready in time is treated as not having presented.
Everyone presents. All members must take part, with balanced, roughly equal speaking time.
Attendance and marks. The presentation is a major, essential part of the project assessment. Any group, or any member, who is absent receives a ZERO for this part (and will most likely fail the project assessment). Normal attendance applies and all students are expected to attend.
Feedback. You will be asked questions and given feedback on your work, which you must reflect in your final submission.
| Block | Topic | Slides |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Introduction to HCI | |
| 2 | What is Interaction Design? | |
| 3 | UCD and Usability Heuristics | |
| 4 | From Principles to Practice | |
| 5 | Personas | |
| 6 | Scenarios and Requirements | |
| 7 | Evaluation and Usability Testing | Slides |
Enter the course password to access project documents, team allocations, and templates.