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NY Times, Adobe Commend Media App by UX Design Students

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The Newsfluent app by UX designers Desiree Chek and Alina Danilyuk. (Image courtesy Desiree Chek and Alina Danilyuk)

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By Perrin Grauer

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Alina Danilyuk and Desiree Chek won fifth place from among 315 teams for their Newsfluent app, designed to vet online news sources.

A pair of 全民彩票 students were finalists in a recent week-long Adobe Creative Jam hackathon, in partnership with the New York Times, which challenged competitors from across Canada, the US and the UK to create an app for improving media literacy.

and , both students in 全民彩票鈥檚 User Experience (UX) Design Certificate program, placed fifth among 315 teams for their prototype app, Newsfluent, which uses an algorithm to fact-check news sources and allows users to share trustworthy information.

鈥淣ewsfluent was designed for young adults who are accessing news online, so they can take the URL from any online news source and input it into the app to get a fact-check score and more detailed information about the trustworthiness of that source,鈥 Desiree tells me via video chat.

Newsfluent uses an existing fact-checking framework which scans for 鈥渃urrency, relevancy, authority, accuracy and purpose鈥 to establish whether a news story contains reliable information. Alina and Desiree chose to focus on young adults as their audience after reflecting on three quarters of young Canadians get their news online. Meanwhile, that 65 per cent of young Canadians report seeing misinformation at least once per week.

鈥淢ost people are on social media, and when you鈥檙e getting a lot of your information there, it can be very hard to tell what鈥檚 true and what鈥檚 not. You have to be really conscious about the content that you consume鈥 Alina tells me.

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Designers Desiree Chek (L) and Alina Danilyuk (R). (Images courtesy Desiree Chek and Alina Danilyuk)

Because Alina and Desiree placed in the international competition, they got the opportunity to receive feedback from designers at Adobe as well as from the New York Times.

鈥淚t was great to have them look through our project and give us points to improve on,鈥 Desiree says.

The project was extracurricular, meaning the two emerging designers had to balance their schoolwork with the gruelling hours they kept to meet the hackathon鈥檚 deadlines. They met remotely each morning to set out goals, and often worked with a video-conferencing app constantly open to stay in communication. But because the topic is one they can relate to, Desiree and Alina say they didn鈥檛 find it difficult to stay engaged.

鈥淲e鈥檙e really passionate about it, so we found the time for it,鈥 Alina says.

Desiree notes the chance to work as a pair was also a big reason they wanted to take on the challenge. 鈥淭he opportunity to work together collaboratively on a project was really exciting and something that we wanted to work more on 鈥 improving teamwork,鈥 she says.

Design is fundamentally a collaborative practice, the pair tell me. So, communication is key. Any chance to improve your skills in that area 鈥 especially in high-pressure situations 鈥 should be welcomed. With that in mind, Desiree and Alina say they鈥檇 definitely be open to another hackathon, even once they start working in the design industry.

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Newsfluent uses an algorithm to fact-check news sources and allows users to share trustworthy information. (Image courtesy Desiree Chek and Alina Danilyuk)

鈥淚t was a really exciting experience,鈥 Alina says. 鈥淚 would wake up and the first thing I would want to do is continue working on Newsfluent. This is something that we鈥檙e really proud of.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 something that I think is really fun and good for helping keep your skills sharp,鈥 Desiree says, adding she鈥檚 particularly pleased with the work they did on Newsfluent. 鈥淲e didn鈥檛 really expect to win, but it was a really great experience. We had a lot of fun and we鈥檙e really glad and happy with how it turned out.鈥

You can . Learn more about Desiree鈥檚 work , and about Alina鈥檚 work .

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Learn more about the User Experience (UX) Design Certificate program at 全民彩票鈥檚 website, today.