How children represent sustainability in the home
Author(s) -
Audrey Desjardins,
Ron Wakkary
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
summit (simon fraser university)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.1145/1999030.1999035
Subject(s) - sustainability , context (archaeology) , interview , perspective (graphical) , exploratory research , visualization , wright , computer science , psychology , knowledge management , sociology , social science , artificial intelligence , geography , ecology , biology , archaeology , anthropology , programming language
This paper describes an exploratory study about children's perspective on sustainability in the house through a drawing-telling method. Here, we describe the methodological framework used for interviewing children about issues related to sustainability using the drawing-telling technique as described by Susan Wright [26]. The participants (children from age 9 to 13) were asked to draw two houses and then describe their drawings in terms of sustainable actions and features. The results show how the participants understand sustainability and how they represent it in the context of a house. This pilot study is an initial step to investigate if there are opportunities to develop eco-visualizations (EVs) for children. The goal of this study is to inform the design of eco-visualizations for children based on their understanding of sustainability and their own visualization of their homes.
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