CIRCA:Assessment Framework

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=(Tentative) Assessment Framework Questions=
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The '''GRAND Assessment Framework''' is an iterative assessment framework designed by the University of Alberta GRAND group. The framework starts with the assumption that the group research project involves practical game design, and continues by attempting to ask the most significant over-arching questions.
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Use these question categories in the process of answering your own questions relevant to a specific project.
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The framework is intended to help game designers and researchers articulate their points (and what those points are in the first place), create a foundation for further work, and to suggest a set of possible methods for that may be of use during that particular part of the design process. Fill in category sub-questions as best you can, and add your own or skip questions as needed.
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Fill in category sub-questions as best you can, add your own or skip questions as needed.
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==Stakeholders==
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==1.0 [[CIRCA: Stakeholders and Expectations|Stakeholders and Expectations ]]==
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*Who are the legacy stakeholders for this project or this type of project?
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*1.1 What's the point of the project?
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**sponsors
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**group members
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**community partners
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**audience demographics
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*Who are the existing stakeholders for this project?
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*1.2 Who are the interested parties in this project?
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**administrative / legal
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**research
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**audience / customer
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**others
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*Who are new stakeholders, or what are recent changes in makeup/orientation/capacity?
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*1.3 What does each stakeholder get out of the project?
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*What if any changes to this category can be expected during the course of this project?
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*Who are potential stakeholders
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*1.4 How will you prioritize the needs of stakeholders?
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** Is there a market or test group available, already existing or in demand?
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**What are potential inclusion or exclusion factors (Does working with these stakeholders require REB ethics clearance?)
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*Where can more information be found about a particular stakeholder, how can this information be used?
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*What is the criteria for acquiring and updating information about stakeholders?
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==Expectations==
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==2.0 [[CIRCA: Requirements|Requirements ]]==
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*What is the purpose of the project?
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*2.1 What is the primary purpose of the project?
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* What is the requirement of the project at a minimum?
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* What ought to be the shared ambition of this project? (each stakeholder should describe this)
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**What is the agreed upon shared ambition for this project?
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* What deliverables are due to each stakeholder (what are they getting out of the project)?
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* What are the stakeholders' responsibilities to the group?
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* To what extent is the project contract to be formalized or kept informal?  
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* What is the project timeline?  
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*2.2 What evidence would indicate success? How will you know it is over?
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** What are our deliverables' timelines
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* How will we conclude this project (what will the end-state look like?)
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==Resources==
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*2.3 How will interested parties discuss the project as it evolves?
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* What are the deliverables?
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*2.4 Is there a project charter agreed among stakeholders that makes clear what is expected of everyone?
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* What is the budget?
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==3.0 [[CIRCA: Resources|Resources ]]==
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**Who is responsible for all aspects of the budget?
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* What technology or tools are required to build, maintain, and play the game?
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*3.1 What resources are required to do the project?
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* What is the length of time it would take to build and run the game?
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*3.2 How will you get the required resources?
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** Is there a deadline? Or can this project be delayed?
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* Is there previous work, either ours or another group’s, in this area?
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*3.3 How will you account to stakeholders for the resources they have provided?
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* How long should the project be able to last?
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*3.4 How will you deal with the loss of resources?
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* Are any outside stakeholders responsible for providing content/information/materials/funding/etc.?
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==4.0 [[CIRCA: Planning|Planning]]==
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* Who is responsible for maintaining the project?
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*4.1 Is there a project plan? Does it include the level of detail needed?  
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* What does the end-state of the project look like?
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*4.2 Is there a method for tracking progress regularly?
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==Execution==
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*4.3 How will the plan be adapted if you fall behind or lose resources?
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* Does the game work?
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==5.0 [[CIRCA: Design|Design]]==
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** What doesn't work?
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*** Is the problem technical, conceptual, or both?
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** Can the game be fixed or is this a future cautionary tale?
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* Who did the game work for (or not work for)?
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*5.1 What design process will work best for this project?  
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** How did the stakeholders react to the game?
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* Does the game advance our research goals?
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*5.2 How can you assess the design process?
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* Is this a successful research project?
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* Is this a successful game?
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* Are there ways to improve the game or the platform based on the results of this attempt?
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*5.3 Which resources are needed to develop the game?
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* Should the game be more intuitive or instructional?
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*5.4 Does the game meet your goals? Are there unexpected problems?
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** How quickly will the target audience be able to learn the game?
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* If the project is repeatable, will we learn new things or benefit from running the game again?
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*5.5 Are there ways to improve the game or the platform based on the results of this attempt?
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==Feedback==
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==6.0 [[CIRCA: Delivery|Delivery]]==
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* Who and how do we want to give or receive feedback? (I think this needs to be broken down into several questions - SL)
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*6.1 How will you deliver the product to your audience?
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** How will we present findings to our stakeholders?
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** Who will we solicit feedback from?
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*** What type of feedback is required? (qualitative? quantitative? game metrics?)
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* What would be the most efficient method - time and resource wise - of gathering assessment data?
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* Do the chosen assessment techniques require ethics clearance?
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** Do we need new ethics or can this fall under a previous project?
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* What tools will give us the most useful data?
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* What questions should the assessment tools pose?
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** Should there be multiple feedback tools available?
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*6.2 How will they become aware of your project?
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(I think this section needs to be much more detailed since this was the original focus of the framework - the assessment process) - SL
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*6.3 How will you train the audience to understand and play the game?
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==Misc. categories (fun, education, technology, etc...)==
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==7.0 [[CIRCA: Feedback|Feedback]]==
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* What are measurable variables that can be defined as '____'?
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*7.1 What feedback do you and your stakeholders want and from who?
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* Can the game teach anything different than a textbook, class, or other resources? ''(Not all of our games are designed to be serious games - this is a better question for the assessment section for specific games, will not apply to all projects)
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** Can this game teach something that can be gained through other resources in a way that the targeted audience finds preferable? ( I think this is outside of the scope of our group, we are not really studying how best to teach a topic or curriculum, we are studying games.)''
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* Is there technology involved? Or theory? (''This question is very broad, I'm not sure what it means and how it is different from resources section - needs to be defined better or broken up into sub questions)''
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* Do we need to advertise?
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* How will we launch the game and attract players?
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** Do we have a captive player group or is the game released in the wild?
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* Can we tweak the game during deployment? Is this a part of the plan?
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==Other things to put in==
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*7.2 How does the game work for players? What is their experience?
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* '''Intellectual Property:''' What sort of license does it use? Who owns the work? Who published it? What is the intellectual property?
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*7.3 How will reports from the players or other stakeholders be handled?
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* '''Time and Money:''' How long did it take to make? How much did it cost to develop? What sort of organization developed it?
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* '''Comparison and Competition:''' What other games are similar? Who is the competition? How does it compare to other games?
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=Other Frameworks=
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*7.4 Can we provide feedback to encourage player engagement with the game?
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==External Links==
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*7.5 How can feedback influence further design?
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* [http://gamification.org/wiki/Game_Design Gamification Game Design Wiki]
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==8.0 [[CIRCA: Closure|Closure]]==
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has a long list of items - have a feeling that these are at different levels of importance so we should read through and sort.
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* [http://circa.cs.ualberta.ca/index.php/CIRCA:RockwellGuide Another section of CIRCA wiki in which Geoffrey Rockwell discusses principles of digital project management in general.]
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*8.1 What will the end-state of the project look like?
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Bits of advice that could be part of a framework content
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*8.2 Does the game meet its goals? How do you know that?
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* [http://www.gamasutra.com/view/feature/132483/learning_the_ways_of_the_game_.php?page=2 assessment using pros and cons, example is pros and cons of using a wiki use for collaborative work]  ''(I think this document is supposed to be less a 'how to' guide and more of a check list/framework for doing the theoretical and technical research and implementation. Perhaps we can start a page of solid design 'how to' resources elsewhere on the wiki)''
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*8.3 How will you know if stakeholders are satisfied?
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* [http://www.jenovachen.com/flowingames/introduction.htm flow in games] ''(This is an awesome paper but please describe how it fits in with the design framework. I'm not sure why this is here)''
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*8.4 Have you communicated to all interested parties that the project is over?
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=Related Wiki Resources=
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*[[CIRCA:The Expanded GRAND Assessment Framework |The Original (expanded) GRAND Assessment Framework]]
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*[[CIRCA:Assessment Tools|Recommended Methods]]
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*[[CIRCA:Methods_for_Game_Design]]
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*[[CIRCA:Game Design Taxonomy|Game Design Taxonomy]]

Current revision as of 21:16, 4 December 2013

The GRAND Assessment Framework is an iterative assessment framework designed by the University of Alberta GRAND group. The framework starts with the assumption that the group research project involves practical game design, and continues by attempting to ask the most significant over-arching questions.

The framework is intended to help game designers and researchers articulate their points (and what those points are in the first place), create a foundation for further work, and to suggest a set of possible methods for that may be of use during that particular part of the design process. Fill in category sub-questions as best you can, and add your own or skip questions as needed.

Contents

1.0 Stakeholders and Expectations

  • 1.1 What's the point of the project?
  • 1.2 Who are the interested parties in this project?
  • 1.3 What does each stakeholder get out of the project?
  • 1.4 How will you prioritize the needs of stakeholders?

2.0 Requirements

  • 2.1 What is the primary purpose of the project?
  • 2.2 What evidence would indicate success? How will you know it is over?
  • 2.3 How will interested parties discuss the project as it evolves?
  • 2.4 Is there a project charter agreed among stakeholders that makes clear what is expected of everyone?

3.0 Resources

  • 3.1 What resources are required to do the project?
  • 3.2 How will you get the required resources?
  • 3.3 How will you account to stakeholders for the resources they have provided?
  • 3.4 How will you deal with the loss of resources?

4.0 Planning

  • 4.1 Is there a project plan? Does it include the level of detail needed?
  • 4.2 Is there a method for tracking progress regularly?
  • 4.3 How will the plan be adapted if you fall behind or lose resources?

5.0 Design

  • 5.1 What design process will work best for this project?
  • 5.2 How can you assess the design process?
  • 5.3 Which resources are needed to develop the game?
  • 5.4 Does the game meet your goals? Are there unexpected problems?
  • 5.5 Are there ways to improve the game or the platform based on the results of this attempt?

6.0 Delivery

  • 6.1 How will you deliver the product to your audience?
  • 6.2 How will they become aware of your project?
  • 6.3 How will you train the audience to understand and play the game?

7.0 Feedback

  • 7.1 What feedback do you and your stakeholders want and from who?
  • 7.2 How does the game work for players? What is their experience?
  • 7.3 How will reports from the players or other stakeholders be handled?
  • 7.4 Can we provide feedback to encourage player engagement with the game?
  • 7.5 How can feedback influence further design?

8.0 Closure

  • 8.1 What will the end-state of the project look like?
  • 8.2 Does the game meet its goals? How do you know that?
  • 8.3 How will you know if stakeholders are satisfied?
  • 8.4 Have you communicated to all interested parties that the project is over?

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