TY - GEN
T1 - The place for ubiquitous computing in schools
T2 - 13th International Conference on Ubiquitous Computing, UbiComp'11 and the Co-located Workshops
AU - Poole, Erika Shehan
AU - Miller, Andrew D.
AU - Xu, Yan
AU - Eiriksdottir, Elsa
AU - Catrambone, Richard
AU - Mynatt, Elizabeth D.
PY - 2011
Y1 - 2011
N2 - With rising concerns about obesity and sedentary lifestyles in youth, there has been an increasing interest in understanding how pervasive and ubiquitous computing technologies can catalyze positive health behaviors in children and teens. School-based interventions seem like a natural choice, and ubiquitous computing technologies hold much promise for these interventions. Yet the literature contains little guidance for how to approach school-based ubicomp deployments. Grounded in our analysis of a large-scale US school-based intervention for promoting youth physical activity, we present an approach to the design and evaluation of school-based ubicomp that treats the school as a social institution. We show how the school regulates students' daily lives, drawing from work in the sociology of schools to create a framing for planning, executing and analyzing school-based ubicomp deployments. These insights will assist other researchers and designers engaging in deployments of ubiquitous computing systems in settings with established institutional structures.
AB - With rising concerns about obesity and sedentary lifestyles in youth, there has been an increasing interest in understanding how pervasive and ubiquitous computing technologies can catalyze positive health behaviors in children and teens. School-based interventions seem like a natural choice, and ubiquitous computing technologies hold much promise for these interventions. Yet the literature contains little guidance for how to approach school-based ubicomp deployments. Grounded in our analysis of a large-scale US school-based intervention for promoting youth physical activity, we present an approach to the design and evaluation of school-based ubicomp that treats the school as a social institution. We show how the school regulates students' daily lives, drawing from work in the sociology of schools to create a framing for planning, executing and analyzing school-based ubicomp deployments. These insights will assist other researchers and designers engaging in deployments of ubiquitous computing systems in settings with established institutional structures.
KW - children
KW - health
KW - physical activity
KW - school-based interventions
KW - ubiquitous computing
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/80054060925
U2 - 10.1145/2030112.2030165
DO - 10.1145/2030112.2030165
M3 - Conference contribution
SN - 9781450306300
SN - 9781450309103
T3 - UbiComp'11 - Proceedings of the 2011 ACM Conference on Ubiquitous Computing
SP - 395
EP - 404
BT - Proceedings of the 13th international conference on Ubiquitous computing - UbiComp '11
Y2 - 17 September 2011 through 21 September 2011
ER -