Test your knowledge on UX frameworks
Foundations of User Experience (UX) Design (WEEK-2)
Test your knowledge on UX frameworks
Question 1
Identify the five elements of UX design framework. Select
all that apply.
a. Strategy (
b. Surface (
c. Scope (
d. Skeleton (
e. Specify
f. Structure
Question 2
What does the user-centered design framework focus on?
a. User-centered design involves taking an idea and creating a
working product using the steps strategy, scope, structure, skeleton, and
surface.
b. User-centered design puts the focus on the user. In order to
do so, UX designers must understand, specify, design and evaluate during the
design process.
c. User-centered design involves doing something again by building on previous versions and making adjustments.
d. User-centered design involves deep-diving into a particular
role like interaction, visual, or motion design.
Why this answer?
User-centered design puts the user front-and-center. By doing so, designers consider the story,
emotions, and insights gathered about the user.
Question 3
Identify the steps involved in design thinking.
a. Design thinking involves creating affordable and functional
solutions that address problems that users face by empathizing, defining,
ideating, prototyping, and testing.
b. Design thinking involves understanding, designing,
specifying, and evaluating in order to create a product that centers around the
wants and needs of a user.
c. Design thinking involves strategy, scope, structure,
skeleton, and surface in order to turn an idea into a working product.
Why this answer?
Design thinking involves five actionable steps — empathize,
define, ideate, prototype, and test — which is a way to create solutions that
address a real user problem in a way that is both functional and affordable.
Question 4
What is equity-focused design?
a. Equity-focused design means designing for groups that have
been historically oppressed, underrepresented, or ignored when building
products
b. Equity-focused design is the process of creating one product
for users with the widest range of abilities and the widest range of
situations.
c. Equity-focused design means making design choices that take
into account personal identifiers like ability, race, economic status,
language, age, and gender.
Why this answer?
Equity-focused design accounts for users who may not have
the same background, knowledge, skills, capabilities, or familiarity with
technology as some other users.