Discover this podcast and so much more

Podcasts are free to enjoy without a subscription. We also offer ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more for just $11.99/month.

E10: Trauma-informed Digital Design with Melissa Eggleston and Carol F Scott, PhD

E10: Trauma-informed Digital Design with Melissa Eggleston and Carol F Scott, PhD

FromMuseumX: Designing Experiences for Good


E10: Trauma-informed Digital Design with Melissa Eggleston and Carol F Scott, PhD

FromMuseumX: Designing Experiences for Good

ratings:
Length:
58 minutes
Released:
Oct 19, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

What does a trauma-informed digital experience look like? Or, better said, what does it feel like? Why is trauma-informed design particularly important for today’s digital experiences?  We hear this answers and more this week from Melissa Eggleston and Carol F Scott, PhD - the women behind Trauma-informedTech.com. Melissa is an expert in user-experience design and research with a focus on inclusive, trauma-informed technology and design. Carol is a social worker and social welfare expert whose training intersects law, social work, psychology, human-computer interaction (HCI), and health informatics.  Melissa and Carol discuss what trauma is - and how broad our understanding of trauma has needed to become. We hear why it’s important - particularly today, and particularly with children in mind - to design digital experiences that are trauma-informed. Most importantly, we learn about how to approach and the steps to take in order to design a trauma-informed digital experience. Melissa Eggleston LinkedIn Carol F Scott LinkedIn     Links to resource discussed in episode:  Aquent’s Design for Good grant Birdcall, Melissa’s consulting business Trauma Informed Tech.com, Carol and Melissa’s collaboration providing resources, guidance and consulting on trauma-informed digital design Carol et al’s award-winning paper from ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI) on Trauma-Informed Social Media Recommendation: First, start with the basics of digital design: Usability Principles, Plain Language Principles because if the experience is not easy to use and accessible, it cannot be trauma informed. Next, you must be thinking about mobile - some people are only accessing online resources via mobile, so consider starting your designs for mobile use. The Six Principles of Trauma-informed Digital Design:  Safety (physical & emotional),  Trust and Transparency,  Collaboration & Mutuality,  Peer Support,  Empowerment voice & choice,  Cultural, historical and gender issues (aka, Intersectionality) Paper from Michigan State University on trauma-informed Website Heuristics  Equal Justice Initiative and Legacy Museum SAMHSA - Six Principles of Trauma-Informed Care CDC -  6 Guiding Principles To A Trauma-Informed Approach University at Buffalo School of Social Work Institute on Trauma and Trauma-Informed Care they help organizations become trauma informed.  Look at the Learning Area on Melissa & Carol’s traumainformedtech.com website to find more books, videos and resources.  Book on ‘design gone wrong’ Design for Real Life. Bassetti Architects - Carol says they are doing a good job! Download Bassetti’s workbook here.  You can also listen to our episode on Trauma-Informed Spaces with Lorne McConachie from Bassetti Architects on Spotify. It was our first episode!   Connect with us: Have questions or topics you’d like us to explore on the podcast? Or a recommendation of an expert to interview? Feel free to contact me via the Dig In UX website or  my LinkedIn page. Need help with a user-, visitor- or community-centered project, evaluation or experience design strategy?  Head over to digin-ux.com for info on human and community-centered strategies for your mission-driven institution  Or, contact us via the Dig In UX website about your project or collaboration you’ve got in mind, or just to say hello!
Released:
Oct 19, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (17)

Dig In UX presents MuseumX, where we host conversations at the intersection of experience design and social change to be a resource for heart-centered designers who are called to create experiences that heal our world. You will hear from professionals inside and outside the museum and cultural sectors whose expertise can inform questions like, How might we design for compassion? Or, Create digital experience accessible for all? Or, how might we create teams primed to foster a sense of belonging for diverse groups? Together, we’ll tackle tough questions, explore complex topics and identify action steps to help us create experiences for the public good - experiences that help, heal, enrich and empower, and connect.