Post on 01-Jul-2015
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Crea%ng Engaging and Accessible Online Courses using Wordpress.com Presenta%on delivered at the Connect 2014 Conference on Technology and Learning, Niagara Falls ON.
Robin L Po)er School of English and Liberal Studies Seneca College
INTRODUCTION
2 TRS-‐80 -‐ Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, en.wikipedia.org (Accessed May 2, 2014)
The first computer I ever used.
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MicrosoP Sweden, Apple Computer with Excel 1.0 for Macintosh Screenshot 1985, h)ps://www.flickr.com/photos/microsoPsweden/5395285812/, (Accessed May 2, 2014).
The first computer I ever owned.
THEN AND NOW
4 Steve Jobs image from: h)p://cyberculturenewbie.wordpress.com/ used from www.soul-‐sides.com (Accessed May 2, 2014).
Text-‐based compu%ng Visual informa%on experience
THE DIGITAL DIVIDE FOR MANY OF US
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Jukes, I, & Dosaj, A. (2003, February). The differences between digital na]ve learners and digital immigrant teachers. The InfoSavvy Group. (Accessed February 20, 2014) from h)p://edorigami.wikispaces.com/Understanding+Digital+Children+-‐+Ian+Jukes
CONSIDERATIONS FOR BRIDGING THE DIGITAL DIVIDE
In “Rewri]ng the Syllabus: Examining New Hybrid and Online Pedagogies,” Jesse Stommel suggests: “With digital pedagogy and online educa]on, our challenge is not to merely replace (or offer subs]tutes for) face-‐to-‐face instruc]on, but to find new and innova]ve ways to engage students in the prac]ce of learning. . . So, hybrid pedagogy does not just describe an easy mixing of on-‐ground and online learning, but is about bringing the sorts of learning that happen in a physical place and the sorts of learning that happen in a virtual place into a more engaged and dynamic conversa]on.”
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DESIGN YOUR SITE SO YOUR STUDENTS WANT TO STAY AND COME BACK Consider the experience of these kids: Goats balancing on flexible steel ribbon What is their experience of “the thing”? Max Mur, Chèvres en équilibre -‐ goats balancing on a flexible steel ribbon,
h)p://youtu.be/58-‐ atNakMWw (Accessed February 20, 2014).
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WHAT MAKES FOR A GOOD WEBSITE?
“The most important part of a perfectly designed website is connec]ng the user with the informa]on they came to find. If your design is easy to navigate and captures the interest of the user, you have likely made good design decisions.” Douglas Hughmanick of ANML, a web and content design firm in San Jose, California
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Peter Vukovic, Experts answer what makes Websites great?, h)p://99designs.com/designer-‐blog/2013/05/01/experts-‐answer-‐what-‐makes-‐websites-‐great/ May 1, 2013. (Accessed November 25, 2013); Photo from About Roads & Kingdoms, 2014, h)p://roadsandkingdoms.com/about/, (Accessed February 21, 2014)
“A website design needs to be clean and simple so it’s easy for the user to quickly find what they want. . . It just needs to be done in a tasteful, unclu)ered manner — use whitespace, good typography and be subtle with rounded corners and drop-‐shadows. . .— long, responsive websites are the new trend.”
Pat Johnson, award winning (10 AAF awards) web designer
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Peter Vukovic, Experts answer what makes Websites great?, h)p://99designs.com/designer-‐blog/2013/05/01/experts-‐answer-‐what-‐makes-‐websites-‐great/ May 1, 2013. (Accessed November 25, 2013); Photo from Thumbtack.com, h)p://www.thumbtack.com/in/indianapolis/graphic-‐designers/award-‐winning-‐web-‐graphic-‐design (Accessed February 21, 2014).
“Carefully review the words on the websites you design. Are they helping or hur]ng your clients? Like good design, good content can clearly tell visitors how they’ll benefit from a product or service, provide guidance, and make it easy for them to take ac]on. Quality content keeps website visitors – and your clients – happy, and coming back for more.” Rick Sloboda, Web copywriter
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Rick Sloboda, Good Web content examples and what makes them work." Web Design Depot June 7, 2011. h)p://www.webdesignerdepot.com/2011/06/good-‐web-‐content-‐examples-‐and-‐what-‐makes-‐them-‐work/ (Accessed November 25, 2013); Photo from Canada 1, h)p://www.canadaone.com/bio/rick_sloboda.html (Accessed February 21, 2014)
DESIGNING FOR ONLINE WITH YOUR AUDIENCE IN MIND
1. A look at a Wordpress.com Course (as an example) 2. User Experience 3. Usability 101-‐-‐for Online Course Design
a) Course mapping b) Portal Guide to Off-‐Site Course c) Unit overview
4. Accessibility and Readability a) Managing Cogni]ve Load b) AODA—Communica]on and Informa]on c) Page Design
5. Wordpress Course Recap
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WORDPRESS.COM: AN OVERVIEW
Wordpress is a blogging plauorm that started in 2003 with “a single bit of code,” which evolved into the open source blogging/website development site we know today. Dis]nguish between:
-‐ wordpress.com: work with templates -‐ wordpress.org: download the soPware script
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wordpress-‐logo1.bmp, www.evenfromhere.org. Crea]ve Commons A)ribu]on-‐ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
FEATURES OF A WORDPRESS.COM COURSE
Go to Wordpress.com • Theme • Naviga]on
• Site map • Scaffolding content
• Blogging • Easy upda]ng • Mul]media • Polling • Privacy
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ELEMENTS OF USER EXPERIENCE: NEILSON & NORMAN
14 Neospot, Usability vs User Experience, n.d. h)p://www.neospot.se/usability-‐vs-‐user-‐experience/ (Accessed November 27, 2013).
WHAT IS USABILITY?
Jakob Neilson and Don Norman (nnGroup) define Usability as follows:
1. Learnability: how easily a user “can accomplish a task the first ]me they encounter the design.” 2. Efficiency: how well they can perform a task with informa]on provided within the design 3. Memorability: how well they can become adept at using the design aPer not using is for a while
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4. Errors: the number and severity of errors in the design, along with ease of recovery 5. Sa]sfac]on: the degree of pleasure or sa]sfac]on in using the design
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HANDY PEDAGOGICAL TOOLS FOR OPTIMIZING USABILITY
1. Course Mapping -‐ A tool for planning your course, media, materials -‐ A learning guide for students -‐ Template
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2. Learning Portal (LMS) Guide to Off-‐Site Online Course a) General course intro b) Addendum c) Learning guide (course map) d) Student guide e) Link to etext site f) Link to Wordpress.com g) Learn.Wordpress.com (tutorials)
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3. Unit Overview -‐ Orients students to unit
-‐ Topics -‐ Outcomes -‐ Readings and ac]vi]es
-‐ Focus
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BASIC PRINCIPLES OF ACCESSIBILITY
1. Keep your reader’s needs, abili]es, and experience in mind 2. Familiarize yourself with the Accessibility Ontario Disability Act
(AODA) 3. Use mul]media 4. Think about devices 5. Be consistent and predictable 6. Write concisely and clearly
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MANAGE THE COGNITIVE LOAD
Avoid overloading the learning units with too many shiPs between: • content • visuals • styles • dynamics
Plan the combina]on of media elements with care
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AODA REQUIREMENTS
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Image from Panorama, Abili]y in Disability, h)p://www.]gweb.org/youth-‐media/panorama/ar]cle.html?ContentID=6688 (Accessed February 23, 2014)
The Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabili]es Act (AODA) provides guidelines for informa]on and communica]on that are based on the World Wide Web Consor]um Accessibility Guidelines–highlights are linked here.
BASIC ACCESSIBILITY PRINCIPLES FOR ONLINE COURSES
A. Create Unclucered Pages 1. Use sans serif fonts e.g., Calibri, Verdana, Arial
2. Place important informa]on, headings, visual aids at
the leP margin for leP-‐to-‐right reading languages (Neilson, 2011) -‐same rule applies to right-‐to-‐leP reading languages F-‐Shaped Design Rule (Neilson, 2006) • F-‐shaped reading pa)ern
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3. Use short paragraphs and lis]ng (chunk informa]on) -‐ paragraphs—10 lines max
4. Allow for white space
-‐ rests the eye -‐ makes informa]on easy to find -‐ improves reten]on
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Jon Phillips, “5 Things for Improving Readability on Your Website,” 2011, h)p://spyrestudios.com/5-‐]ps-‐for-‐improving-‐readability-‐on-‐your-‐website/, (Accessed February 24, 2014).
B. Organize Informa%on Consistently and Predictably 1. Use descrip]ve headings and sub-‐headings
consistently -‐ Verb tenses -‐ Placement -‐ Font style
2. Organize informa]on in predictable ways and place it in similar loca]ons on each page
-‐ reveal informa]on progressively -‐ use parent, child, grandchild pages logically
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Divyat Rawat, “How to Improve Website Usability by Improving Content,” 2014, h)p://www.paulolyslager.com/how-‐to-‐improve-‐website-‐usability-‐by-‐improving-‐content/, (Accessed February 24, 2014).
C. Write Clearly Using Straight-‐forward Language 1. Write concisely; brevity is key in all web wri]ng
-‐ Applies to all languages despite differences in nuances/length (Neilson, 2011)
2. Use the ac]ve voice in 20-‐25-‐word length sentences.
-‐subject + ac]ve verb + object 3. Use the “you a{tude”:
-‐ necessary informa]on first; you-‐oriented 28
D. Support Complex Informa%on with Visual Aids 1. An]cipate when the learner would benefit from
mul]media support and provide it as needed a) Logical placement b) Compa]ble with content: clarifica]on, illustra]on,
explana]on, etc. c) Easy to find
2. Accompany audio and video informa]on with a transcript or sub]tles (AODA requirement)
-‐ Many Youtube videos have closed cap]ons
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REMEMBER
“Quality Design is an Indicator of Credibility”
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Dimitri Fedeyev, 10 Useful Usability Findings and Guidelines, 2009, h)p://uxdesign.smashingmagazine.com/2009/09/24/10-‐useful-‐usability-‐findings-‐and-‐guidelines/ (Accessed February 23, 2014); Alicia David, Payton Glore, The Impact of Design and Aesthe]cs on Usability, Credibility, and Learning in an Online Environment, in Online Journal of Distance Learning Administra]on, Winter 2010, h)p://www.westga.edu/~distance/ojdla/winter134/david_glore134.html (Accessed February 23, 2014). Image from locosol, 2013, h)p://locsolu]ons.biz/about/ (Accessed February 23, 2014).
ENGAGEMENT
31 Karen Robert, Yukon Public Schools, from North Ins]tute of Teaching and Learning, March 4, 2011, h)p://ni.oc.edu/2011/03/what-‐does-‐student-‐engagement-‐mean-‐to-‐you/ (Accessed February 20, 2014).
WHAT IS A RESPONSIVE SITE?
Responsive web design is usually understood in terms of • page structure, • typography, and • coding. We are concerned about web page elements that connect faculty with students—and students with faculty and peers.
32 Kyla Wright, Responsive Website Design: What It Is and How to Use It. January 12, 2011. h)p://coding.smashingmagazine.com/2011/01/12/guidelines-‐for-‐responsive-‐web-‐design/ (Accessed November 26, 2013).
ELEMENTS FOR CREATING A RESPONSIVE WEBSITE
1. Easy to update/modify 2. Blogging-‐-‐Comments 3. Polls 4. Contact form 5. Email feed 6. Media-‐enriched elements (for different learning styles) 7. Seamless design
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White African, Blogging Tools: IZEAFest Talk. September 13, 2008. h)p://whiteafrican.com/2008/09/13/blogging-‐tools-‐izeafest-‐talk/ (Accessed December 1, 2013).November 26, 2013)
Works Cited and Consulted Alicia David, Payton Glore, The Impact of Design and Aesthe]cs on Usability, Credibility, and Learning in an Online Environment, in Online Journal of Distance Learning Administra]on, Winter 2010, h)p://www.westga.edu/~distance/ojdla/winter134/david_glore134.html (Accessed February 23, 2014). Dimitri Fedeyev, 10 Useful Usability Findings and Guidelines, 2009, h)p://uxdesign.smashingmagazine.com/2009/09/24/10-‐useful-‐usability-‐findings-‐and-‐guidelines/ (Accessed February 23, 2014). Douglas Hughmanick Photo, About Roads & Kingdoms, 2014, h)p://roadsandkingdoms.com/about/, Accessed February 21, 2014). Steve Jobs image from: h)p://cyberculturenewbie.wordpress.com/ used from www.soul-‐sides.com (Accessed May 2, 2014). Hanna Lee, Culture Interfaces: The Blackberry Project. n.d. The Royal College of Art. h)p://ied.rca.ac.uk/uncategorized/culture-‐interfaces-‐the-‐blackberry-‐project (Accessed November 26, 2013). Pat Johnson Photo, Thumbtack.com, h)p://www.thumbtack.com/in/indianapolis/graphic-‐designers/award-‐winning-‐web-‐graphic-‐design (Accessed February 21, 2014). Jukes, I, & Dosaj, A. (2003, February). The differences between digital na]ve learners and digital immigrant teachers. The InfoSavvy Group. Retrieved February 23, 2009 from h)p://edorigami.wikispaces.com/ Understanding+Digital+Children+-‐+Ian+Jukes 34
Max Mur, Chèvres en équilibre -‐ goats balancing on a flexible steel ribbon, h)p://youtu.be/58-‐atNakMWw (Accessed February 20, 2014). MicrosoP Sweden, Apple Computer with Excel 1.0 for Macintosh Screenshot 1985, h)ps://www.flickr.com/photos/microsoPsweden/5395285812/, (Accessed May 2, 2014) Neilson, Jakob. F-‐shaped PaEern for Reading Web Content. April 17, 2006. h)p://www.nngroup.com/ar]cles/f-‐shaped-‐pa)ern-‐reading-‐web-‐content/ (Accessed November 14, 2013). Neilson, Jakob. Interna]onal Usability: Big Stuff the Same, Details Differ. June 6, 2011. h)p://www.nngroup.com/ar]cles/interna]onal-‐usability-‐details-‐differ/ (Accessed November 26, 2013). Neospot, Usability vs User Experience, n.d. h)p://www.neospot.se/usability-‐vs-‐user-‐experience/ (Accessed November 27, 2013). Jon Phillips, “5 Things for Improving Readability on Your Website,” 2011, h)p://spyrestudios.com/5-‐]ps-‐for-‐improving-‐readability-‐on-‐your-‐website/, (Accessed February 24, 2014). D i v y a t R aw a t , “ H ow t o Im p r o v e We b s i t e U s a b i l i t y b y I m p r o v i n g C o n t e n t , ” 2 0 1 4 , h)p://www.paulolyslager.com/how-‐to-‐improve-‐website-‐usability-‐by-‐improving-‐content/, (Accessed February 24, 2014).
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Karen Robert, Yukon Public Schools, “Engagement Word Cloud,” from North Ins]tute of Teaching and Learning, “What does student engagement mean to you?” by Berlin Fang March 4, 2011, h)p://ni.oc.edu/2011/03/what-‐does-‐student-‐engagement-‐mean-‐to-‐you/ (Accessed February 20, 2014). Rick Sloboda, Good Web content examples and what makes them work." Web Design Depot June 7, 2011. h)p://www.webdesignerdepot.com/2011/06/good-‐web-‐content-‐examples-‐and-‐what-‐makes-‐them-‐work/ (Accessed November 25, 2013). Rick Sloboda Photo, Canada 1, h)p://www.canadaone.com/bio/rick_sloboda.html (Accessed February 21, 2014). Tom Springer, Domenico Azzarello, Jeff Melton, Bain Consul]ng, “What it takes to win with customer experience,” July 8, 2011, h)p://www.bain.com/publica]ons/ar]cles/what-‐it-‐takes-‐to-‐win-‐with-‐customer-‐experience.aspx (Accessed February 20, 2014).
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Jesse Stommel, “Rewri]ng the Syllabus: Examining New Hybrid and Online Pedagogies,” presented at the ASSETT Teaching with Technology Symposium, April 28, 2014, h)ps://docs.google.com/document/d/1jaIbXUXKPujMIrpySEgwyGokOKXV34C2iF4I2M9WjD4/mobilebasic?pli=1 (Accessed May 2, 2014). Peter Vukovic, Experts answer what makes Websites great?, h)p://99designs.com/designer-‐blog/2013/05/01/experts-‐answer-‐what-‐makes-‐websites-‐great/ May 1, 2013. (Accessed November 25, 2013). Wikipedia, TRS-‐80 -‐ Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, en.wikipedia.org (Accessed May 2, 2014) Website Design Canberra, “Customer Experience Design,” technowand.com.au, (Accessed February 20, 2014).
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This presenta%on has been created by Robin L Pocer Robin.Pocer@senecacollege.ca Tw: @newbuscom Registered under a Crea%ve Commons license:
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