Assignment Builder

As part of the product team at Newsela, a content and assessment platform for K-12, I helped redesign an important part of the teacher workflow: creating an assignment.

The team rolled out new features in a split A/B test to learn from usage data. As UX research lead, I led interviews to compliment the quantitative data with qualitative insights. Collaborators included product managers and data analysts.

  • Project Type: UX Research

  • Role: Sr. UX Researcher

  • Organization: Newsela

  • Timeline: 2 months (2023)

  • Team Size: 4 members

Background

From past research and data, we knew that teachers were missing key assignment features and were using off-platform workarounds to meet their needs.

So the product team prototyped a set of new features (e.g. ability to lock reading levels, set start/due dates, assign specific activities).

We wanted to see which features brought the most value to teacher users, and consequently, the most value to the company.

Deliverables & Impact

Bi-weekly interview summaries

I led interviews with 20 teacher users to shed light onto what (and why) certain features were performing well, helping our team prioritize what to refine and deploy in a full-scale release.

After each set of interviews, I produced summaries to maintain stakeholder engagement. It included an average rating usability and usefulness for each feature, what was/wasn’t working well, and actionable recommendations.

Final summary for MVP and beyond

After all features had been tested over the course of 2 months, I produced a final summary outlining the takeaways from each feature, as well as short- and long-term recommendations.

The learnings from this study provided the validation needed to roll out critical features for Back-to-School. As hypothesized, teachers were making assignments on the platform more than before given their new set of features.

Challenge

Leading research in a time crunch

With mounting pressure from executive leadership to launch in time for Back-to-School, the product team was moving fast to launch an MVP.

To get ahead of this challenge, I created a testing schedule to work in lock-step with my product counterparts that were releasing features to the experiment group on a biweekly basis. This involved:

  1. Product Managers and Data Analyst reviewed Heap data to identify areas for inquiry in the interviews.

  2. I conducted interviews based on the feature release schedule, with team members observing.

  3. I led weekly meetings to review quant and qual findings, address any critical action items, and prioritize what features to refine.

The UXR timeline weaves in user testing and check-ins over the course of two months.