User Experience Specialization
The User Experience specialization prepares you to design, prototype and evaluate interactive information systems from a user-centered perspective. You will build practical skills in UX strategy, research and design. Students often pair this specialization with business intelligence, information architecture or program/product management & consulting.
Availability: Residential, daytime classes only
Skills you will develop
- Learn to align UX initiatives with organizational objectives, create UX roadmaps and drive accessible and inclusive user-centered decision-making.
- Develop skills in planning and conducting user research, as well as interpreting research findings to gain deep insights into user behaviors, needs and motivations.
- Create user interfaces and digital experiences that are intuitive, aesthetically pleasing, inclusive and optimized for usability across various devices and platforms.
- Design and conduct usability tests to identify design improvements to enhance the overall user experience.
"My engineering mindset used to make me jump to solutions without even thinking whether it is the right problem to solve for or not. This course helped me in understanding the user mindset when it comes to solving problems.”— Saurabh Patil, ‘23
Elective courses in the User Experience specialization
This specialization consists of three courses that will help you master the methods and techniques used to create and evaluate interactive information systems. Additionally, students may be interested in taking related courses from the Department of Human Centered Design & Engineering, Human-Centered Interaction & Design or in the Information School’s Ph.D. program.
Learn more about the core, elective and Capstone/practicum courses in the UW MSIM curriculum.
- IMT 540 Design Methods for Interactive Systems (4 credits)
Examines design methods for identifying and describing user needs, specifying and prototyping new systems, and evaluating the usability of systems. Examines design methodologies such as contextual design and value-sensitive design, giving specific emphasis to human-information interaction. - IMT 561 Visualization Design (4 credits)
Introduces human-centered design, development and evaluation of data visualizations. Coursework focuses on techniques for designing and coding visualizations of structured data, including evaluating usability and accessibility. Topics include principles of visual perception, fundamentals of visual analytics, technical dimensions of visual encoding, prototyping and usability testing. - IMT 565 Designing Information Experiences (4 credits)
Explores experience design including user experience, customer experience and service design. Covers the philosophical foundations of experience, how to design and evaluate experiences, and the business aspects of customer experience.
Career outcomes
Students who specialize in user experience frequently find roles with titles including technical program manager, data analyst, senior product manager, design researcher, UX designer and product designer.

