Co-design methods have involved older adults in the design process to fill the knowledge gap that younger adult designers might encounter when designing for an aging population. A focus of co-design means establishing equal and equitable relationships be-tween users and designers. To understand the factors that contribute to equal collaborations between older adults and student de-signers, we conducted 12 co-design sessions with 16 older adults and 11 student designers. We examined their interactions by adapt-ing a framework initially aimed to understand the child-adult design partnership. We also analyzed student designers' reflections to understand their experiences and learnings from designing with older adults. Our findings demonstrate that developing a design partnership is complex. The framework helped surface factors like sharing life experiences and role ownership that influenced bal-anced or unbalanced interactions. Through the student designers' reflections, we found that student designers identified challenges they encountered and the assumptions they had about the older adult population. We believe that immersing students in a co-design experience with older adults and leveraging reflection activities provides an educational and meaningful experience to the design students.
https://doi.org/10.1145/3479506
The 24th ACM Conference on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work and Social Computing