Title
Fiddling, Pointing, Hovering, And Sliding: Embodied Actions With Three Evaluation Tools For Children
Abstract
In user studies with children, it is important to use age appropriate evaluation tools to better understand their preferences, opinions, and thoughts. Here, we studied two accepted evaluation tools: The Five Degrees of Happiness, and the Sticky Ladder rating scale; together with the Paper Ladder, a paper version of the latter. Thirty-six preschoolers rated two creative and play activities ("Painting" and "Construction Blocks") and a game ("Musical Chairs") in terms of difficulty, enjoyment, and preference. Drawing from theories of embodied and distributed cognition, we performed a video analysis of the children's interactions with these tools, focusing on how each tool supported the children's cognitive processes and communication with the researcher. Here, we first describe children's embodied behavior and discuss how these were supported by design features and affordances of the tools. Then, we discuss strengths and shortcomings of each evaluation method. Last, we provide recommendations for their design, appropriation, and usage by researchers developing and evaluating playful solutions and games for children.
Year
DOI
Venue
2019
10.1145/3311350.3347170
CHI PLAY'19: PROCEEDINGS OF THE ANNUAL SYMPOSIUM ON COMPUTER-HUMAN INTERACTION IN PLAY
Keywords
Field
DocType
Children, Evaluation, Survey Methods, Rating Scales, Likert Scale, User Studies, User Feedback, User Experience
Computer science,Embodied cognition,Multimedia
Conference
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
0
0.34
0
Authors
5
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Cristina Sylla18718.73
Elena Segura210618.67
Akeiylah DeWitt300.34
Ahmed Sabbir Arif457.49
Eva Irene Brooks500.68