TY - CPAPER KW - Bottom up KW - Bottom-up KW - Cross-cultural design KW - Cross-cultural designs KW - Curricula KW - decolonization KW - Economic and social effects KW - Egypt KW - HCI KW - HCI education KW - HCI4D KW - Hci educations KW - Human computer interaction KW - Human engineering KW - ICT4D KW - Intangible cultural heritage KW - Intangible cultural heritages KW - Postcolonialism KW - Students AU - Danilo Giglitto AU - Shaimaa Lazem AU - Anne Preston AB - We critically engage with CHI communities emerging outside the global North (ArabHCI and AfriCHI) to explore how participation is configured and enacted within sociocultural and political contexts fundamentally different from Western societies. We contribute to recent discussions about postcolonialism and decolonization of HCI by focusing on non-Western future technology designers. Our lens was a course designed to engage Egyptian students with a local yet culturally-distant community to design applications for documenting intangible heritage. Through an action research, the instructors reflect on selected students activities. Despite deploying a flexible learning curriculum that encourages greater autonomy, the students perceived themselves with less agency than other institutional stakeholders involved in the project. Further, some of them struggled to empathize with the community as the impact of the cultural differences on configuring participation was profound. We discuss the implications of the findings on HCI education and in international cross-cultural design projects. C2 - Conf Hum Fact Comput Syst Proc DO - 10.1145/3173574.3173864 N1 - Journal Abbreviation: Conf Hum Fact Comput Syst Proc N2 - We critically engage with CHI communities emerging outside the global North (ArabHCI and AfriCHI) to explore how participation is configured and enacted within sociocultural and political contexts fundamentally different from Western societies. We contribute to recent discussions about postcolonialism and decolonization of HCI by focusing on non-Western future technology designers. Our lens was a course designed to engage Egyptian students with a local yet culturally-distant community to design applications for documenting intangible heritage. Through an action research, the instructors reflect on selected students activities. Despite deploying a flexible learning curriculum that encourages greater autonomy, the students perceived themselves with less agency than other institutional stakeholders involved in the project. Further, some of them struggled to empathize with the community as the impact of the cultural differences on configuring participation was profound. We discuss the implications of the findings on HCI education and in international cross-cultural design projects. PB - Association for Computing Machinery SN - 9781450356206 (ISBN); 9781450356213 (ISBN) TI - In the Eye of the Student: "An Intangible Cultural Heritage Experience, with a Human-Computer Interaction Twist" UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85046942715&doi=10.1145%2f3173574.3173864&partnerID=40&md5=5a06b75e99f2d68378bf98ce785233a8 VL - 2018-April ER -