For those who are interested, there are still a few spots open in the Value 
Sensitive Design PhD course this quarter....  


Autumn Quarter 2009, Wednesdays 4:30 to 7:30 pm
INSC 543 / CSE 599P
Instructors: Alan Borning and Batya Friedman

Value Sensitive Design is an approach to the design of information technology 
that accounts for human values in a principled and comprehensive manner 
throughout the design process.  On important focus of Value Sensitive Design is 
consideration of values that center on human well being, human dignity, 
justice, welfare, and human rights.  Specific values include but are not 
limited to trust, accountability, freedom from bias, access, autonomy, privacy, 
sustainability, and consent.  This course will provide a thorough introduction 
to Value Sensitive Design's interactional theory, direct and indirect 
stakeholder analyses, value tension analyses, and tripartite methodology of 
conceptual, technical, and empirical investigations.  The theory and methods of 
Value Sensitive Design are to be used in consort with other existing technical 
and design methods.  Ultimately, Value Sensitive Design requires that we 
broaden the goals and criteria for judging the quality of information systems 
to include those that advance human values.

The most significant component of the work in the course will be a quarter-long 
project in which students apply Value Sensitive Design to a project of their 
choosing.   We encourage students to bring
their own projects, in particular ones that could be an aspect of their 
dissertation research.  There are also already some students who will be in the 
course with some very interesting projects, and who are looking for project 
partners.  In addition, there will be a set of readings, some short writing 
assignments, and some focused design activities.  The course will be taught 
studio-style, with one 3 hour session Wednesdays 4:30 - 7:20 pm (with breaks of 
course!).  There will be a mix of lectures, design activities, and reflection 
during the class.

We welcome PhD and MS students from a variety of disciplines, including the 
Information School, Computer Science & Engineering, Human Centered Design and 
Engineering, DXARTS, Biomedical and Health nformatics, Geography, Psychology, 
and others.  Information School students should register for INSC 543, and CSE 
students for CSE 599P.  Others - take your pick (though please try to keep the 
enrollments even between the two course numbers.)  This is a 4 credit graded 
course, but due to a quirk of the CSE 599 course number, CSE 599P is only 3 
credits. Students can register with Alan
Borning for 1 additional unit of CSE 600 to make up the difference if they 
want.  In CSE, this course counts toward the Post-Quals Ph.D. Requirement.  

For more information, including some project ideas, please see 
http://www.cs.washington.edu/education/courses/cse599p/09au/, or contact either 
Batya (batya at u.washington.edu) or Alan (borning at cs.washington.edu).

We hope you'll join us!

Batya and Alan

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