E10: Trauma-informed Digital Design with Melissa Eggleston and Carol F Scott, PhD
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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 answers to these questions 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!
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