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UX education is saturated and it has become increasingly difficult to filter out the bad sources. Here’s how we can fix that.
I started my self-learning journey with UX Design. Many articles and designers regarded it as UI/UX. Some believed UX was UI and vice versa. It was all about the screens and a small checklist of ‘insignificant’ processes. I had to dig deeper to find a clear difference between the two. That
Why did I have to dig deeper? I mean finding the difference between UX and UI should have been as simple as breathing, right? No, it wasn't. It has never been this easy to access information, interact with, and learn from people. Regardless, there is this trend of churning out content irrespective of its reliability. And what do we get? Noise! What are the implications?
When one source (person or content) says A and the other says B, C, D, and E about the same topic you have many choices to choose from. The tyranny of choices (read
Convenience doesn’t always mean reliability. The lack of reliable sources takes away the essence of good UX education and practice.
Self-learning anything — UX Research and Design in this case — is a process you must take to heart. I
‘When you learn user experience properly, you naturally develop a filter, all while you’re building your critical thinking skills. Learning to ignore the noise becomes a natural occurrence. Anyone who tries to dive in haphazardly will become a statistic. And by the way, being self-taught has a process. You can’t just pick up books and go, not in 2022, because you don’t know which way is up and misinformation abounds.’
Nonetheless, it is okay to fail. It is alright to pass this journey with uncertainty. Experience will always be the best teacher. Trial and error. Like programming: when you attempt to solve a problem, you try different solutions until you get the most efficient and effective one. The comment that most resonates with this point is
‘I wish aspiring and newer researchers understood that what we do is a combination of art, science and improv. There is no one right answer. We often work in the gray space. Ambiguity abounds. Get good with gray.’
You will experience tons of ambiguity, and that is fine. You will make mistakes; that is fine as well. We are imperfect. Learn by opening your mind, practicing, receiving feedback, and unlearning. Seek mentorship if you are unsure of where you are heading.
No one is perfect. We’ll make mistakes. Yet, there is a clear difference between opinion/rambling and evidence. Learning should be based on evidence. Do not forget to ask questions. It may not always work, but it’s a good start.