TY - GEN
T1 - Determining requirements within an indigenous knowledge system of African rural communities
AU - Winschiers-Theophilus, Heike
AU - Bidwell, Nicola J.
AU - Chivuno-Kuria, Shilumbe
AU - Kapuire, Gereon Koch
PY - 2010
Y1 - 2010
N2 - Eliciting and analyzing requirements within knowledge systems, which fundamentally differ so far from technology supported systems represent particular challenges. African rural communities' life is deeply rooted in an African Indigenous knowledge system manifested in their practices such as Traditional Medicine. We describe our endeavors to elicit requirements to design a system to support the accumulation and sharing of traditional local knowledge within two rural Herero communities in Namibia. We show how our method addressed various challenges in eliciting and depicting intangible principles arising because African communities do not dichotomize theoretical and practical know-how or privilege a science of abstraction and generalization. Ethnography provided insights into etiology, or causal interrelationships between social values, spiritual elements and everyday life. Participatory methods, involving youth and elders, revealed nuances in social relations and pedagogy pertinent to the transfer of knowledge from generation to generation. Researcher and participant-recorded audio-visual media revealed that interactions prioritize speech, gesture and bodily interaction, above visual context. Analysis of the performed and narrated structures reveal some of the ways that people tacitly transfer bodily and felt-experiences and temporal patterns in storytelling. Experiments using digital and paper-based media, in situ rurally showed the ways that people in rural settings encounter and learn within their everyday experiences of the land. These analyses also demonstrate that own ontological and representational biases can constrain eliciting local meanings and analyzing transformations in meaning as we introduce media. Reflections on our method are of value to others who need to elicit requirements in communities whose literacy, social and spiritual logic and values profoundly differ from those in the knowledge systems that typify ICT design.
AB - Eliciting and analyzing requirements within knowledge systems, which fundamentally differ so far from technology supported systems represent particular challenges. African rural communities' life is deeply rooted in an African Indigenous knowledge system manifested in their practices such as Traditional Medicine. We describe our endeavors to elicit requirements to design a system to support the accumulation and sharing of traditional local knowledge within two rural Herero communities in Namibia. We show how our method addressed various challenges in eliciting and depicting intangible principles arising because African communities do not dichotomize theoretical and practical know-how or privilege a science of abstraction and generalization. Ethnography provided insights into etiology, or causal interrelationships between social values, spiritual elements and everyday life. Participatory methods, involving youth and elders, revealed nuances in social relations and pedagogy pertinent to the transfer of knowledge from generation to generation. Researcher and participant-recorded audio-visual media revealed that interactions prioritize speech, gesture and bodily interaction, above visual context. Analysis of the performed and narrated structures reveal some of the ways that people tacitly transfer bodily and felt-experiences and temporal patterns in storytelling. Experiments using digital and paper-based media, in situ rurally showed the ways that people in rural settings encounter and learn within their everyday experiences of the land. These analyses also demonstrate that own ontological and representational biases can constrain eliciting local meanings and analyzing transformations in meaning as we introduce media. Reflections on our method are of value to others who need to elicit requirements in communities whose literacy, social and spiritual logic and values profoundly differ from those in the knowledge systems that typify ICT design.
KW - oral and performed knowledge
KW - requirement elicitation
KW - rural
KW - rural communities
KW - traditional
KW - traditional knowledge
KW - video
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84885212670&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1145/1899503.1899540
DO - 10.1145/1899503.1899540
M3 - Conference Paper published in Proceedings
AN - SCOPUS:84885212670
SN - 9781605589503
T3 - ACM International Conference Proceeding Series
SP - 332
EP - 340
BT - Fountains of Computing Research - Proceedings of SAICSIT 2010 Annual Research Conference of the South African Institute of Computer Scientist and Information Technologists
T2 - 2010 Annual Research Conference of the South African Institute of Computer Scientist and Information Technologists, SAICSIT 2010
Y2 - 11 October 2010 through 13 October 2010
ER -