[CivicAccess-discuss] Tool ease of Use leads to users using it!
Ilona Dougherty
ilona at apathyisboring.com
Tue Oct 14 12:05:15 EDT 2008
Tracey,
great story thanks for the note.
I agree, tools like this make voting more accessible.
elections canada has done a bad communications job, and doesn't have
a good website, so people don't see that as a resource. that needs to
change, I am hoping Apathy is Boring will be working with them over
the next few years to help make that change.
we have noticed with our site (www.apathyisboring.com) it is all
about making the information relevant to people, and accessible.
The Postal Code tool to find your MP is a critical one, and I really
look forward to finding innovative ways to implement it between now
and the next election.
A is B is really excited about the implications of having access to
this tool.
Ilona
Ilona Dougherty
ilona at apathyisboring.com
Executive Director :: directrice générale
Apathy is Boring :: L'Apathie C'est Plate
514.844.AisB (2472) :: 1.877.744.2472
10 Pins W. #412 :: Montreal, QC :: H2W 1P9
www.apathyisboring.com / www.lapathiecestplate.com
Apathy is Boring uses art and technology to engage youth in
democracy. Help support our work!
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« L’apathie c’est plate » passe par l’art et la technologie dans le
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On 14-Oct-08, at 11:36 AM, Tracey P. Lauriault wrote:
> Last night I attended my friend Tina's Thanksgiving dinner. The
> guests were ladies who are artists, a retired homemaker & a 13 year
> old boy. The demographic was 13, 30, 35, 44, 45 and 70. None are
> bloggers, picture sharers or web experts, the boy used a number of
> tools. It was most interesting to see how they used the http://
> www.voteforenvironment.ca/ tool. First they went to it because it
> was easy to find their riding, they got to readily see the
> boundaries on a map of their electoral riding and they got to see
> who the candidates were. They were of course also interested in
> the politics behind the tool, but that was secondary. Eventually
> Mom who normally voted a certain way, noticed that in her riding,
> to be strategic, it might be better to vote a different way, she
> most certainly was beginning to reconsider breaking her voting
> pattern for the past 4 decades for this election. We wound up
> looking at a bunch of ridings to see the extent of their reach,
> looked at candidates, then drank more, then discussed
> possibilities! There were no discussions about the algorithm, or
> the reliability of the tool or whose agenda was behind its creation
> and dissemination.
>
> It was interesting that they did not go to elections canada and had
> not even considered doing so. The Vote for the Environment
> marketing strategy, the tools useability and aesthetic seems to
> have been very successful indeed reaching beyond the usual web gang
> and into non techy web users.
>
> It was an interesting use case and a kind of guerrila human factors
> experiment. It is probably worth while running some user studies
> with all the tools we develop to see how users interact with it and
> to solicit user feedback.
>
> --
> Tracey P. Lauriault
> https://gcrc.carleton.ca/confluence/display/GCRCWEB/Lauriault
> _______________________________________________
> CivicAccess-discuss mailing list
> CivicAccess-discuss at civicaccess.ca
> http://lists.pwd.ca/mailman/listinfo/civicaccess-discuss
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