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Autore principale: Roberts, Gary
Natura: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lingua:en
Pubblicazione: 2005
Soggetti:
Accesso online:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ720354
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author Roberts, Gary
author_facet Roberts, Gary
Roberts, Gary
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Include Your Patrons in Web Design. Computers in Small Libraries Roberts, Gary Internet Web Sites Electronic Libraries Design Academic Libraries Successful Web publishing requires not only technical skills but also a refined sense of taste, a good understanding of design, and strong writing abilities. When designing a library Web page, a person must possess all of these talents and be able to market to a broad spectrum of patrons. As a result, library sites vary widely in their style and effectiveness. This author explains that, in order to design a good, usable library Web site, one must begin by understanding that the library's online home is meant to serve patrons first and librarians and professional staff second. He recommends directly asking the users for feedback, or better yet, including them in the design process. In his role as information systems and reference librarian at Herrick Library, Alfred University, Alfred, New York, he put this theory to work when redesigning their library Web site in 2004. Some of the lessons learned during this process were: (1) Web page design should be a group project; (2) Approach your patrons like a marketer; (3) Create a "safe" environment for discussion; and (4) Formulate a project goal.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ720354
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2005
record_format eric
spellingShingle Include Your Patrons in Web Design. Computers in Small Libraries
Roberts, Gary
Internet
Web Sites
Electronic Libraries
Design
Academic Libraries
Include Your Patrons in Web Design. Computers in Small Libraries Roberts, Gary Internet Web Sites Electronic Libraries Design Academic Libraries Successful Web publishing requires not only technical skills but also a refined sense of taste, a good understanding of design, and strong writing abilities. When designing a library Web page, a person must possess all of these talents and be able to market to a broad spectrum of patrons. As a result, library sites vary widely in their style and effectiveness. This author explains that, in order to design a good, usable library Web site, one must begin by understanding that the library's online home is meant to serve patrons first and librarians and professional staff second. He recommends directly asking the users for feedback, or better yet, including them in the design process. In his role as information systems and reference librarian at Herrick Library, Alfred University, Alfred, New York, he put this theory to work when redesigning their library Web site in 2004. Some of the lessons learned during this process were: (1) Web page design should be a group project; (2) Approach your patrons like a marketer; (3) Create a "safe" environment for discussion; and (4) Formulate a project goal.
title Include Your Patrons in Web Design. Computers in Small Libraries
topic Internet
Web Sites
Electronic Libraries
Design
Academic Libraries
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ720354