User Interface Design

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Below are the top discussions from Reddit that mention this online Coursera specialization from University of Minnesota.

Offered by University of Minnesota. Design Better User Interfaces. Learn to create effective and usable interfaces for a range of products ... Enroll for free.

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Taught by
Loren Terveen
Professor
and 4 more instructors

Offered by
University of Minnesota

This specialization includes these 1 courses.

Reddit Posts and Comments

0 posts • 7 mentions • top 4 shown below

r/userexperience • comment
1 points • YidonHongski

Just start with any intro-level online course and then improvise from there. The key is getting your hands dirty asap rather than thinking you need to learn more before doing. (At least, that's the most efficient way to prep yourself for a path into the industry.)

There are many ways to start, such as reading books, shadowing veterans, but it ultimately comes down to creating/doing something, get feedback, and improve upon it.

In fact, Coursera has a User Interface Design course starting today. Just do that.

r/argentina • comment
2 points • paralels

Si sabes ingles te recomiendo Coursera, los cursos son pagos, pero todos tienen la opción de aplicar a una beca (llenas un formulario diciendo que no podes pagar el curso). Yo ya vengo haciendo varios cursos completamente gratis, termino uno y ya aplico para otro.

Para lo que vos pedís por ejemplo tenes User Interface Design Specialization brindado por la Universidad de Minesota.

Lo bueno de coursera es que muchos cursos son dados por grandes universidades, incluso podes hacer certificaciones con peso a nivel internacional, como por ejemplo el curso de data science de IBM.

r/web_design • comment
3 points • KeuriseuDotCom

You can start with a couple of general design books--The Design of Everyday Things by Donald Norman and Don't Make Me Think by Steve Krug.

Next, you can check out a couple of specializations (course sequences) on Coursera--UI/UX Design from CalArts and User Interface Design from the University of Minnesota.

Hope that helps.

r/UXDesign • comment
1 points • guiksr

No, I don't have a degree and I'm a college dropout, but I have some links for you :)

I'm currently working through a self learning design/code curriculum, those are some courses that you may find helpful.

https://www.coursera.org/specializations/michiganux#enroll

https://www.coursera.org/specializations/interaction-design#enroll

https://www.coursera.org/specializations/user-interface-design

I recommend that you throw some books in the mix.

If you are like me and see value on learning how to code to build your own products and/or bridge the design development gap, I would recommend www.theodinproject.com/

There are so many amazing content to learn online, and I'm actually pretty jealous from the educational resources that the CS and Programming community have made, look there is a free open-source CS Curriculums https://github.com/ossu

Maybe the design community should get together to build a path for a more tradicional design education. I would like to be part of it!