Schedule

During our workshop at CHI 2022, participants will have the option to either attend in-person or conference call in to the meeting. Additionally, attendees will be able to access all written materials used for the workshops, including recordings and transcripts from our reading groups, on our website following each meeting. We will provide accommodations as specified and requested by participants in the submissions form.

Since our goal is to engage a new community interested in HCI research with QTBIPOC people, we will open up a hybrid (in-person or remote) workshop participation to additional participants attending the CHI 2022 conference. We hope that additional participants will be able to learn and contribute to the workshop topic, and join the burgeoning community.

Workshop Schedule:

9:00 am - 9:30 am | Introductions and Review of Workshop Goals

9:30 am - 10:15 am | Invited Community Keynotes

10:15 am - 11:00 am | Summary of Reading Group Discussions(Race in HCI, Gender and Sexual Orientation in HCI)

11:00 am - 11:30 am | Break

11:30 am - 12:15 am | Problems and Opportunities Discussion(Problems with Design Thinking methodology for the QTBIPOC community, How would HCI benefit from using an intersectional approach)

12:15 pm - 12:45 pm | Network and Discover

12:45 pm - 1:45 pm | Lunch Break

1:45 pm - 3:30 pm | Recommendations and Considerations Discussion(Recommendation generation for community-based participatory design with the QTBIPOC community, Brainstorming instrument development that is respectful of people's race, gender and sexual orientation, and their intersections)

3:30 pm - 4:00 pm | Closing

Time will be allocated at the beginning of the workshop to make brief introductions, elaborate on community guidelines and expectations for participation in the workshop, and develop rapport with participants to facilitate open discussion surrounding the intersectionality of race, gender, and sexual orientation in HCI and design research.

We will provide a summary of the motivations, goals and desired outcomes of the workshop. We will invite community champions and advocates working on intersectionality, race, gender, and sexual orientation to share their thoughts in short opening keynotes. We will then share the outcomes of our reading groups, and invite participants to share their perspectives on current or emerging challenges to be addressed in participatory design research in relation to intersectionality. We will also include an overview of anti-racist, queer, and feminist theories. We will then encourage discussion with participants on whether current standards for inclusive HCI methodologies and practices incorporate anti-racism, anti-queerphobia, and feminist theory.