ASSESSMENT OF ACADEMIC WEBSITES

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ASSESSMENT OF ACADEMIC WEBSITES

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Title: ASSESSMENT OF ACADEMIC WEBSITES


1
ASSESSMENT OF ACADEMIC WEBSITES
  • Asad Khailany , Eastern Michigan U
  • Michael Sheppard Eastern Michigan U
  • Abhijit Modak , Eastern Michigan U
  • Wafa Khorsheed, Eastern Michigan U

2
ABTSTRACT
  • Currently there are no standard metrics to
    measure the effectiveness of academic web sites.
    In this paper we are recommending 25 metrics
    divided into 5 different categories to measure
    and make academic web sites more effective and
    productive to professors, to students, and to
    public. We have used the proposed metrics to
    evaluate the websites of 40 professors to provide

3
INTRODUCTION
  • Most of faculty members and students heavily
    utilize the Internet for research, news,
    communication and entertainment.
  • Internet provides many opportunities for
    professors to reach out and engage students in an
    interactive and non-threatening medium of
    communication.
  • Variety of web design tools such as WYSWIG (What
    You See What You Get) HTML editors, Flash, Dream
    Weaver, XML, Perl, Microsoft Word and many others
    are available to design dynamic web pages .
  • There no many guidelines to design web effective
    academic websites.
  • Currently there are no standard metrics for the
    measurement of the quality of the academic web
    sites .

4
Seven Principles
  • Chickering and Gamson proposed the following 7
    principles for Good Practice in Undergraduate
    Education
  • 1. Good practice encourages contact between
    students and faculty.
  • 2. Good practice develops reciprocity and
    cooperation among students.
  • 3. Good practice encourages active learning.
  • 4. Good practice gives prompt feedback.
  • 5. Good practice emphasizes time on task.
  • 6.Good practice communicates high expectations.
  • 7. Good practice respects diverse talents and
    ways of learning.

Continue
5
Seven Princples
Continue
  • Chickering and Gamson did not proposed any
    technique or method to achieve their seven
    principles.
  • We believe todays technology provide good
    opportunities for achieving the above principles
    via good quality effective academic websites. For
    that we have taken these principles in
    consideration, combined them with good web design
    practices, and incorporated them into a group of
    metrics that can be applied to measure the
    effectiveness of academic web sites.

6
Proposed Metrics
  • We are proposing 25 metrics, grouped into
    following 5 categories
  • 1. First Impressions pertain to site features
    and observations that a visitor would note within
    the first few moments they have loaded the site.
    Such metrics pertain to whether there is readily
    available contact information, a consistent
    design throughout, download time, aesthetics or
    look and feel and whether the purpose of the
    site is clear. When a visitor has passed a
    judgment on these metrics, they will have formed
    a definite opinion of the site before even
    viewing the sites contents. While the opinion
    may be a strong positive or negative one, it is
    not irreversible. So no extra weighting is given
    to this category that would make it count more
    than the others. The next proposed category is
  •  

7
continue
FIRST IMPRESSION category
  • Following are the proposed metrics for FIRST
    IMPRESSION category
  • 1. The portal quality of the web site is
    good.
  • 2. The site has essential contact information
    like email, phone/fax  numbers.
  • 3. The design is consistent (headers,
    footers, navigation bar, etc.)
  • 4. Download time is short
  • 5. It has a good look and feel Readability,
    Attractiveness
  • 6. The purpose of the site is clear? Is it
    obvious who owns this site?

8
Proposed Metrics
continue
  • 2. Navigation The three metrics proposed for
    this category have fairly obvious intents. They
    are centered on two areas of concern that are
    universal to all websites, not just academic
    ones Do the internal and external links work? Is
    there a map that can sufficiently direct a
    visitor to the content they are looking for? The
    proposed metrics for this category are 1.The
    links all work 2. There are links to the home
    page on every page
  • 3. There is a comprehensive site map

9
Proposed Metrics
continue
  • 3. Content The metrics of this catagory have
    the closest correlation with Chickering and
    Gamsons Seven Principles. They cover a wide
    range of topics and attempt to capture not only
    individual features of the site but also create a
    sense of the total dynamic experience for a
    visitor. After evaluating the site based on the
    metrics in category Content, the evaluator should
    have a sense of its relevancy to a students
    course work, how engaging the site is, the level
    of interactivity it promotes, and how up-to-date
    is the content that is provided.

10
CONTENT category
Continue
  • Following are the proposed metrics for CONTENT
    category
  • 1. It has bulletins announcements
  • 2. There is class meeting information date,
    time, location, agenda
  • 3. Home works and assignments are posted
  • 4. The site contains tutorials for related
    materials to your course
  • 5.The site contains the solutions for past exams
  • 6. The site has a syllabus. The syllabus
    contains the hot links
  • 7. There are handouts posted on the web site. The
    handouts make sense within
  • the context of the course.
  • 8. There is personal information about the author
    of the site
  • 9. The page is dated and current
  • 10. The site uses valuable graphics, animation or
    sound
  • 11. Level of interaction is high (i.e. exercises,
    bulletin board feature, etc.)
  • 12. There are synchronous collaborative
    communications tools for real-time
  • interaction(ie. chat functionality)
  • 13. There are asynchronous collaborative
    communications tools (i.e threaded
  • discussion feature)

11
Proposed Metrics
continue
  • 4. Findability The fourth proposed category
    measures how easily a viewer can locate the web
    site from a search engine. The metrics in
    Findability ask the evaluator to check for
    relevant keywords in the header of the HTML code.
    It also asks the evaluator to assess whether
    they feel the URL path is simple and easy to
    remember. Not only is Findability concerned with
    whether a visitor can easily find a professors
    homepage but whether they can find their way to
    specific content within the site from outside the
    site. This is the intent in the metric It does
    NOT use frames. Though frames can be a
    convenient way for the developer to create a
    clean uniform site, they also can present the
    would-be visitor some daunting challenges as they
    try to locate and bookmark a specific page on the
    professors site.

12
Findability category
Continue
  • Following are the proposed metrics for
    Findability category
  • It uses intuitive keywords.
  • It does not use frames.
  • 3. The URL is intuitive.

13
Proposed Metrics
continue
  • 5. Compatibility This category is the most
    self-evident of the five metric categories. The
    effort behind this category is aimed at
    establishing whether the site provides enough
    backward compatibility with older browsers.
    Following are the proposed metrics for this
    category
  • 1. Internet Explorer 4.0 and up 2. Netscape 5.0
    and up
  • The proposed metrics attempt channel those
    seven principles specifically to the online
    presence professors have built to support their
    classroom teaching. Some of the metrics in our
    evaluation are articulated to directly support
    one or more of the seven principles.

14
USING PROPOSED METRICS
  • We used the proposed metrics to evaluate the
    quality of the websites of 40 professors from
    different colleges and universities. The web
    sites studied achieved an average rating of 2.59
    out of 4.00 or 64.70 effective. The median score
    was 2.65 out of 4.00 or 66.20. Based on our
    analysis of individual characteristics of each
    web site, we concluded that a web site might be
    considered successful by achieving an average
    score of 3.00 out of 4.00 in each of the main
    categories.

15
USING PROPOSED METRICS
Continue
  • The web sites generally scored highly on the
    following metrics
  •    The site has essential contact information
    like email, phone/fax
  • numbers.
  •     Download time is short
  •     The purpose of the site is clear. Is it
    obvious who owns the site?
  • The web sites scored weak on the following
    metrics
  •     The portal quality of the web site is good.
  •     There is a comprehensive site map.
  •    There are asynchronous collaborative
    communications tools (i.e. threaded discussion
    feature)
  •     There are synchronous collaborative
    communications tools for real-time interaction
    (i.e. chat functionality)
  •      Level of interaction is high (i.e.
    exercises, bulletin board feature, etc.)

16
CONLUSION
  • By improving their web sites around these issues,
    professors can better engage and maintain the
    students attention.
  • Unless the portal quality is improved and a
    comprehensive sitemap is provided, the students
    may spend too much time trying to find relevant
    information, which can cause the student to
    discount the value of the site as a learning
    tool.
  • The use of synchronous communication tools, such
    as live chat, and asynchronous collaborative
    communications tools, such as the threaded
    discussion feature, are important in order to
    develop reciprocity and cooperation among
    students and encourage contact between students
    and faculty.
  •   

17
CONLUSION
Continue
  •   The use of synchronous communication tools
    combined with a high level of interaction through
    exercises, bulletin boards, etc., would achieve
    the Chickering and Gamson principles of time on
    task, active learning, and prompt feedback.
  •  The matrix is a flexible tool that allows a
    professor to use it in a manner that meets their
    needs. For example, a professor may elect to use
    it as a personal tool where they can rate the
    effectiveness of their own site. Others may
    elect to use it as part of an instructor-lead
    evaluation, where they ask their students for
    feedback on their web site
  •  It is the goal of every educator to build an
    effective, and useful website.. With our proposed
    metrics educators can effectively, analyze, and
    improve the quality of their web sites. We used
    these metrics to evaluate the websites of 40
    professors. Websites cannot be regarded one-shot
    deals that can be developed and not updated. It
    must be continuously evaluated and updates. Our
    metric ease such evaluations and updates.
    Complete research results provided in the
    appendix
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