… our Transnational Project Meeting in Paris, 3rd to 5th July 2019. What did we learn? Was it helpful to meet each other personally? YES!
User centered design method
During the project meeting in Paris we got to know the user centered design method. What does it mean? “The chief difference from other product design philosophies is that user-centered design tries to optimise the product around how users can, want, or need to use the product, rather than forcing the users to change their behavior to accommodate the product.” (Wikipedia)
We try to apply this method when we design our wiki. An ongoing endeavour…
Picture: Renaud Bessiers, qodop
Project meeting in Paris, 3rd-5th July 2019
The meeting was dedicated to project management, training sessions about wiki designing as well as an exchange on the wiki contents we are going to create during the project. All participants (2 per organisation) were impressed by the user centered design method in which Renaud Bessiers from qodop introduced. We then discussed on how to apply this approach in our context of European adult education. We agreed on the next steps of the Wiki’s content production. Moreover, we discussed the programme of the following workshop in Romania in October 2019 when we combine discussing articles of the wiki with sharing methods for an analog learning on digitalisation. We experienced two rich days of collaborative work which also gave insights in the profile and organisation culture of our French partner COOPETIC.
Questionnaire on digitalisation
In the beginning of the project, we asked ourselves and our colleagues on their approach to digitalisation, digital revolution, the use they make of digital tools, the level of knowledge as well as their needs. What about the results? Read it on the page “What we produce”.
Picture: Raimond Spekking
Project meeting in Berlin, January 2019
Our first face-to-face meeting took place in Berlin in the end of January 2019. The main focus was given on the common production of our Wiki referring to technological, sociological and political aspects of digitisation in Europe. The colleagues from France, Romania, Spain and Berlin also planned the whole project in detail.
Picture: “You can not not communicate.” (Paul Watzlawick)