LITA UX IG Meeting at ALA Annual 2015 - Mon. 6/29 3PM

Kim, Bohyun bkim at HSHSL.UMARYLAND.EDU
Wed Jun 17 10:31:35 EDT 2015


*Apologies for cross-posting!*

LITA User Experience IG Meeting
Date & Time: Monday, June 29, 2015 - 3-4 PM
Location: Hotel NIkko Golden Gate<http://alaac15.ala.org/node/28709>

Heading out to ALA Annual Conference in San Francisco? Check out the LITA User Experience IG Meeting. We will have the following three 10-min. presentations and Q&A (5 min). We will also have discussion time for any UX topics on-site. If you have any UX-related topics you would like to discuss, please bring them with you! http://connect.ala.org/node/240559

Rocket Surgery for the Recent MLS: Use the skills you already know to become a lean, mean UX machine

Jennie Rose Halperin - Safari, jennie.halperin at gmail.com<mailto:jennie.halperin at gmail.com>

When first tasked with defining a qualitative research roadmap for Safari Books Online this year, I was shocked to discover how much I used the skills I learned in my MLS and experience as an reference librarian, from usability testing to proper survey protocol to distinguishing what users want versus what they're asking for. User experience and research is an obvious career choice for the recent MLIS graduate, and learning the basics (and jargon) of UX is often a book, podcast, or blog post away.

In my talk, I will discuss the resources I found most useful as I entered the field of user and design research as well as highlight common popular tools, patterns, and methods I use at an Agile company that can translate to libraries and other cultural heritage institutions.

I'll also emphasize how the common sense skills that librarians possess are an asset and a weapon in the field of usability and user research. Slaying usability dragons often takes little more than a love of documentation, excellent organizational skills, and a lot of confidence. Librarians are uniquely positioned to be UX leaders, and I hope that this talk can help those who want to transition their skills in the library world and beyond.

Card Sorting, One small step forward

Allison Deluca, Systems Librarian at Florida Atlantic University, adeluca at fau.edu<mailto:adeluca at fau.edu>

Description: Card sorting may be the gateway user testing your library needs to begin a website redesign. Step-by-step, I will go over the process I used to begin my user testing experience at my own library, Florida Atlantic University.

User testing opened our eyes to a new way of looking at our own website and our patrons. While we suspected our patrons didn't understand our jargon, or how to navigate the website efficiently, we were floored with the results of each and every user test we conducted.

Deciding to conduct this user testing has been one small step forward for our library and I'm more than happy to share my experience so that others can benefit.

#litaUX Monthly Chat by the UX IG and Weave
Bohyun Kim - LITA UX chair/ AD at University of Maryland, Baltimore HS/HSL, bkim at hshsl.umaryland.edu<mailto:bkim at hshsl.umaryland.edu>

Did you know that the LITA UX IG holds a monthly Twitter chat #litaUX with the editors of Weave, a library UX journal? See more details and the chat schedule here: http://connect.ala.org/node/239151.  We will do a mini #litaUX chat at the meeting with a topic of your choice! Bring your discussion topics and get cool ideas from others!



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2015-06-17
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