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A Beginner's Guide to Getting Started in UX Research
excellent collection of how-to content
A comprehensive list of UX design methods & deliverables | by Fabricio Teixeira | Jan, 2021 | UX Collective
The most common tool, methods, processes, and deliverables that designers use throughout the digital product design process.
Using Social Media in Community-Based Protection - UNHCR
Does Budget Matter for Great Nonprofit Videos? | Classy
Scale up toolkit
BehaviourWorks Australia and the Victorian Government Behavioural Insights Unit have developed an evidence-informed toolkit to help behavioural insights researchers and practitioners to start with scale up in mind, including how to: Learn about scale up, its challenges, and useful frameworks. Identify which behaviour to target with an intervention. Assess the feasibility of different intervention ideas. Select a scalable behaviour change intervention. Design or adapt an intervention for testing and scale up. Test scale up assumptions about your intervention in a pilot or trial. This website provides videos and tutorials on how to use the toolkit, and extra resources to help achieve behavioural impact at scale. All content will be iterated upon; we welcome feedback and the opportunity to develop better tools.
OSF | The COVID-19 Vaccine Communication Handbook.pdf
Our project tracks behavioural science evidence and advice about COVID-19 vaccine uptake. The handbook is for journalists, doctors, nurses, policy makers, researchers, teachers, students, parents – in short, it’s for everyone who wants to know more: about the COVID-19 vaccines, how to talk to others about them, how to challenge misinformation about the vaccines. The handbook is self-contained but additionally provides access to a Wiki of more detailed information, found here: https://sks.to/c19vax.
How to write an image description | by Alex Chen | UX Collective
Testing Content with Users
Product Development with Consequence Scanning – TechTransformed
Consequence Scanning – an agile practice for Responsible Innovators A timely new business practice; Consequence Scanning fits alongside other agile practices in an iterative development cycle. This is a dedicated time and process for considering the potential consequences of what you’re creating
How to add gifs to your videos| LinkedIn
The Social Media Post Checklist: 9 Examples of Engaging Social Media Posts | LinkedIn
25 Email Marketing Best Practices That Drive ROI (2021) - GetResponse
How to Answer “Tell Me About Yourself“ in 3 Simple Steps
This Is How To Change Someone’s Mind: 6 Secrets From Research - Barking Up The Wrong Tree
Again: you don’t convince people. People convince themselves. Studies done as far back as the 1940’s by Kurt Lewin showed that lectures about why people should change their behavior were effective a measly 3% of the time. But when people self-generated reasons for the same activity, behavior change occurred 37% of the time. People reject ideas they are given and act on ideas they feel they came up with themselves.
USING THE BEHAVIOUR CHANGE WHEEL FRAMEWORK WITHIN GENDER-FOCUSED INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMMES: A Field Guide
Managing Misinformation in a Humanitarian Context: Internews Rumour Tracking Methodology
Described and Captioned Media Program - Learning Center
DCMP is the leader for captioning and description standards. We provide not only accessible content but the standard for professionals and amateurs working to build quality, accessible media.
Conducting Successful Virtual Focus Groups - Child Trends
A checklist for prosocial messaging campaigns such as COVID-19 prevention appeals
DOING FIELDWORK IN A PANDEMIC - Google Docs
9P Meeting Planning Worksheet
A Guidebook for Developing Public Health Communities of Practice - NNPHI
Behaviour change 101: How to do a Rapid Review | LinkedIn
In our work at BehaviourWorks Australia (BWA) we are frequently asked ‘What does the research say about getting audience Y to do behaviour X?’. When our partners need an urgent answer we often provide it using a Rapid Review. In this article I explain Rapid Reviews, why you should do them, and a process that you can follow to conduct one. What is a Rapid Review? Rapid Reviews are “a form of knowledge synthesis in which components of the systematic review process are simplified or omitted to produce information in a timely manner” [1]. Indeed, with sufficient resources (e.g., multiple staff working simultaneously) you can do a Rapid Review in less than a day. The outputs of these reviews are, of course, brief and descriptive, but they can be very useful where rapid evidence is needed, for example, in addressing COVID-19. Rapid Reviews can therefore provide detailed research within reduced timeframes and also meet most academic requirements by being standardised and reproducible. They are often, but not always, publishable in peer-reviewed academic journals.
Leading Groups Online: a down-and-dirty guide to leading online courses, meetings, trainings, and events during the coronavirus pandemic
Online Meeting Resources Toolkit for Facilitators - Google Docs
extensive lists of links
Turning your in-person trainings into virtual trainings: 6 tips & tools in the age of the coronavirus - The TESA Collective
A Comprehensive List of Tips, Tools, and Examples for Event Organizers During the Coronavirus Outbreak | CMX
The ultimate guide to remote meetings in 2020 | The Official Slack Blog
How To Run A Free Online Academic Conference - Google Docs
Level Design - In pursuit of better levels - Google Docs
Crisis Communication Resource Guide: Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)
Built by and for foundations & nonprofit organizations supporting communities at local, regional, national and global scale.
Evidence-Based Behavior Change Campaigns to Improve Traffic Safety Toolkit - AAA Foundation
STRATEGIC COMMUNICATIONS FOR SOCIAL CHANGE
This handbook has been compiled by Well Made Strategy (WMS) who have extensive professional experience developing impactful strategic communications across a range of sectors from security to financial inclusion, education, agriculture, health and governance. WMS helps individuals, organisations and networks harness the power of strategic communications to influence policy change, prepare for and anticipate crises, inform the national discourse, build will for social reform and nudge entire communities towards new ways of thinking and behaviours. We have developed this handbook to serve as a guide to strategic communications for those interested in using strategic communications but who may not have an in-depth understanding of the concept.
STRATEGIC COMMUNICATIONS FOR SOCIAL CHANGE: A WORKBOOK
The purpose of this workbook is to provide a workspace for you to develop your own communications strategy by working through the various modules of the Strategic Communications for Social Change handbook. While the workbook is separate from the handbook, they are closely linked to each other.
Checking Our Blind Spots: The Most Common Mistakes Made by Social Marketers
Facilitation Guide for an Integrated Evaluation Methodology: Most Significant Change and PhotoVoice | Health Social Change and Behaviour Change Network
Home | Better Evaluation
We are a global collaboration aimed at improving evaluation practice and theory through co-creation, curation, and sharing information.
How to Broadcast a Facebook Live Event in 7 Easy Steps
Tools for better thinking | Untools
Collection of thinking tools and frameworks to help you solve problems, make decisions and understand systems.
Mike Morrison on Twitter: “Let’s make sharing new research on Twitter more fun! Want an easier way get updated on all the new science in your field? Sick of just clicking links to abstracts? Watch this cartoon to learn how to create a quick #TwitterPoster
How to create Twitter Posters
Twitter for Scientists
Evidence-Based Process for Prioritizing Positive Behaviors for Promotion: Zika Prevention in Latin America and the Caribbean and Applicability to Future Health Emergency Responses | Global Health: Science and Practice
To maximize the impact of Zika prevention programming efforts, a prioritization process for social and behavior change programming was developed based on a combination of research evidence and programmatic experience. Prioritized behaviors were: application of mosquito repellent, use of condoms, removing unintentional standing water, covering and scrubbing walls of water storage containers, seeking prenatal care, and seeking counseling on family planning if not planning to get pregnant.
A Practical Guide to Conducting a Barrier Analysis
How to do market research with social listening: a step-by-step guide
Massachusetts Local Health Department Social Media Toolkit for COVID-19
Guidance for Communicating Critical Information and Updates to Your Local Population through Social Media
The Impact-Likelihood Matrix: A policy tool for behaviour prioritisation - ScienceDirect
Text as Data
This class covers a range of different topics that build on top of each other. For example, in the first tutorial, you will learn how to collect data from Twitter, and in subsequent tutorials you will learn how to analyze those data using automated text analysis techniques. For this reason, you may find it difficult to jump towards one of the most advanced issues before covering the basics. Introduction: Strengths and Weaknesses of Text as Data Application Programming Interfaces Screen-Scraping Basic Text Analysis Dictionary-Based Text Analysis Topic Modeling Text Networks Word Embeddings