#BlackLifeMatters Wikipedia Editathon

A news clip from the New York Public Library’s February 7, 2015 Wikipedia Editathon, #BlackLifeMatters, where I am interviewed about the editing my daughter Jay and I were doing on the life and career of costume designer Judy Dearing, best known for her work on Charles Fuller’s Pulitzer Prize winning drama A Soldier’s Play, the 1976 stage adaptation of Ntozake Shange’s book, for colored girls who have considered suicide / when the rainbow is enuf and the musical Once On This Island. Lead story on the Corporation for Public Broadcasting’s InnovationTrail.com:

http://innovationtrail.org/post/wikipedia-editing-workshops-aim-increase-black-history-content

Upcoming Events: Agency GIS Forum and Brooklyn Technology Transfer

Two upcoming events brought to you by GISMO and OWASP Brooklyn.

 

Agency GIS Forum

GISMO

Thursday, February 5, 2015
100 Church Street
2:30 – 4:30 PM

atelier-digital-world-map

Join us to hear a round of lightning talks given by GIS directors and managers of City agencies. This will be a great opportunity to learn about innovative GIS projects and programs being implemented across municipal government, and to meet with colleagues from other agencies.

GISMO and the Municipal Information Technology Council (MITC) are co-hosting this event. MITC is the organization of City IT professionals. This get together is a unique opportunity to learn about how NYC’s nation leading GIS program is progressing and to have direct contact with the City GIS leadership and staff.

Registration Required

Attendance at this meeting will be by RSVP only and is reserved exclusively for GISMO members*, MITC members and City agency GIS personnel. Please register early as there are a limited number of seats available, and this event will fill up fast!

* GISMO membership means paid dues for the 2014 – 2015 membership year. People on the GISMO mailing list who do not satisfy the above criteria will have to join GISMO and pay their dues in order to attend.

Register at http://www.gismonyc.org/events/next-event/

 

Technology Transfer – Creating Cultures of Innovation

OWASP Brooklyn

Saturday, February 28, 2015
2:00 PM to 6:00 PM

NYU Poly Pfizer Auditorium
5 MetroTech Center, Brooklyn, NY

To attend this event, you must also register on Eventbrite at this URL to get your ticket: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/technology-transfer-creating-cultures-of-innovation-tickets-15406554419

Description: TBD

Facilitator – Moderator: TBD

Speakers:

Zach Tudor, SRI, Author of Technology Transfer: Crossing the “Valley of Death” – his research on Cybersecurity startups will discuss “Creating Cultures of Innovation” Bio: http://www.csl.sri.com/people/tudor/

Professor Nasir Memon, NYU Polytechnic will discuss NYU Poly’s Technology Transfer. Bio: http://isis.poly.edu/memon/

Brett Scharringhausen, USCENTCOM CCJ8-Science & Technology Chief, Discovery & Integration will discuss CENTCOM Requirements.

Ryan Letts, Veterans Advisor, Brooklyn SBDC CityTech will present and discuss SBA research on Veterans Startups in NY.

NYPL Open Book Hack 2015

For the 2015 edition of the NYPL Open Book Hackathon, I participated with a team that was interested in pulling poetry out of Project Gutenberg and creating a user dialogue with a goal toward creating a custom book of poems, based on user preferences. We started out calling it “Pandora for Poetry,” but settled on Musapaedia to avoid obvious copyright issues.

Screen Shot 2015-01-14 at 3.48.17 PM.png

Image Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Musapaedia.pdf

With Musapaedia:

User can (possibilities)

  • Upload/enter a poem and get a set of poems in custom e-book or web“experience”

  • Choose a set of attributes and get a set of poems in custom e-book or web“experience”

  • Use up/down vote system to determine what kinds of poems that come up

User Experience:

  • Poem “mood”, color/image changes with type of poem

Since this year’s edition of the hackathon was one day as opposed to two, we had much less time to complete the project than previous years, but we were able to create a sample user interface and code the processes that extract the poems. Our team will continue to work on this and hopefully release a working application soon.

Final code we completed today is on GitHub!

https://github.com/rossgoodwin/musapaedia

Team:

Ross Goodwin Ross.goodwin@gmail.com

Noreen Whysel nwhysel@gmail.com

Vimala Pasupathi vcpasupathi@gmail.com

Clarisa Diaz clarisadiaz@gmail.com

Rike Franklin rikefranklin@gmail.com

Beth Dufford emdufford@gmail

Stephen Klein stepheniklein@gmail.com

 

 

 

Semiotics in Mapping and Emergency Response

On November 1, 2014 I participated in a Semiotics Web and Information Architecture meetup at New York Public Library. Mypresentation, “Semiotics in Mapping and Emergency Response,” discusses symbology in mapping as an aspect of semiotics and presents an example of emergency response map symbology and a discussion of applications for first responders and broader uses.

Joining me were Loren Davie on Conversational Architecture – http://telltrail.me/ and CAVE language, Laureano Batista who discussed Steps Toward a Pragmatic Philosophy in the Age of Big Data and Neural Networks and Donald Gooden, the NY Chapter Leader of the OWASP Foundation, who spoke about the OWASP.org.

Read a detailed write up of this event by Nathaniel Levisrael at http://scignscape.appspot.com/meeting1-summary

Better Experience is the Payoff in Education

In Jon Kolko’s article, “Why Investment in Design is the Only Way to ‘Win’ in Education” (UX Magazine, September 16, 2014), he discusses how the value proposition of educational technology should be better education, and that the design of that experience should not be simply a “forgivable attribute.”

“…for us to collectively realize the benefits of advanced technology in the context of education, we need to treat the experience of learning as the primary ‘thing we are trying to improve.’ This requires empathy with the people doing the teaching and learning, which is gained through a qualitative design process.”

Read more at: http://uxmag.com/articles/why-investment-in-design-is-the-only-way-to-win-in-education

Architecture_MPS Launches Pinterest Campaign

Architecture_media_politics_society is a a peer-reviewed academic journal and its website serves as a forum for the analysis of architecture, landscape and urbanism in the mediated, politicized environment of contemporary culture and society. I have been managing the social media campaign for Architecture_MPS. My goal is to drive traffic to the journal and its resource content and conference series.

The primary social media outreach channels include Twitter (@architecturemps) and Facebook. I have begun developing several Pinterest boards related to published articles in the journal, Architecture_MPS, and architecture conferences, competitions, films and books. Curated engaging content to help drive readership to the journal’s articles and resource repositories. Sample content includes gender and public space, satellite imagery and human rights, and laissez-faire development in early 20th century Chicago. The journal has recently received approval to create a Google Gallery, which will be a site of further curation and experimentation.

Screen Shot 2014-09-10 at 12.43.22 PM

Architecture_MPS is a collaboration of Ravensbourne University College, UK and Adelphi University, New York. The journal hosts a number of conferences related to “The Mediated City” and “Housing-A Critical Perspective.” We have released a Call for Papers and Proposals for Housing-A Critical Perspective, to take place in Liverpool on April 6-8, 2015 and encourage interested parties, students and researchers to submit projects. The Los Angeles edition of “The Mediated City” will be at Woodbury University in LA on October 1-3, 2015. To register, visit: woodburymcd.wix.com/mediatedcityla

West 104th Street Block Association Talks IA

The April 15 issue of the West 104th Street Block Association Newsletter featured the efforts of my design team in an article about the Association’s pending website redesign. I also had the unexpected honor have my profile featured on their website.

As part of the project, my design team conducted interviews, surveys and user testing of current residents, neighbors and prospective residents. These were divided into four test groups including families with children, younger residents (couples and singles), those aged 55 and over and those considering a move to the neighborhood. The block association reported that “The respondents to the survey requested that the website be reorganized to find information more easily with an emphasis on portraying a ‘neighborhood feel.'” Indeed, my team found a great need among the test population for findable and accessible information.

My specific user test population included site users aged 55 and older. Among the requirements of this group, legibility and safety information was the most important need, and descriptive pictures of the block’s people and activities were especially appreciated.

The Information Architecture community also got a shout out:

“We are very lucky to have an information architect on our block to develop our ‘new and improved’ website that will be informative for all our residents.”

It is an honor to be recognized by the block for our contribution, and I thank my teammates for doing such a great job. We expect to launch the new site in June.

Read more about the West 104th Street Block Association Web Redesign.

NYC Emergency Management Timeline


Client: NYC Office of Emergency Management
Date: May 27, 2014
Visit Website

In 2011, I participated in the NYC GeoSymposium 2001-2011-2021, which took a look at the advances and challenges of Geographic Information Systems in emergency response since 2001. I had been working with colleagues at GISMO for many years to draw attention to the important role geographers played in the 9/11 rescue and recovery. The GeoSymposium was a great experience, because it intended not just to honor those who participated in these efforts, but also to highlight the need to preserve the thousands of maps that tell the story.

OEM Timeline Poster

My own contribution to the GeoSymposium was to explore the legacy of these efforts by examining the technological improvements at the Office of Emergency Management in the context of emergency events that had occurred since 2001. I was looking for a way to present time-based information in a map format and also to start a conversation with attendees about the history of emergency response technology and the importance of the preservation of geographic artifacts. My project contained a map of New York City with events plotted and color-coded by discrete periods, characterized by a common group of new technologies.

An online version of the map is available at ArgGIS Explorer Online.

OEM-Incidents-interactive-map

View Interactive Map


Download OEM Incident Map – Poster

NYC Emergency Management Incidents Presentation

OEM-Incidents-screenshot
Screen Shot 2015-09-10 at 2.45.54 PM

Sample Slide:

View Detail Slides (Requires Microsoft Silverlight)

The map highlights how the events surrounding 9/11 prompted improvements in incident management technology. Attendees, including the keynote presenter and eminent information designer, Edward Tufte, gathered around to discuss their experience with the events I had mapped and to offer advice on ways to enrich its design. (Some of Mr. Tufte’s comments led to further improvements which you can see via the links above.)

Simply talking about how to improve the map was an exercise in exploring history and memory. How people understand what happened, how events are related to one another, how what you choose to include and what not to include can influence a person’s understanding of the events, how the description of one event can bring to mind another similar one, etc. It was thrilling to observe the spontaneous conversation that started all because of a three by four foot piece of foamboard.

For more details and context around the planning for a 9/11 Map Archive, see my blog post, Towards a 9/11 GeoArchive.

Site Maps and Variations: A Real World Review

A sitemap is a useful tool both for users and designers of a web interface. Designers use sitemaps to visualize website navigation, while users rely on them in combination with search and browsing to help them find what they are looking for. A third user, search engines, rely on sitemaps in part to index websites. Increasingly, designers are integrating sitemaps and subsets of sitemaps directly into website navigation. For this report, I reviewed the literature on sitemaps to see how they have evolved as a tool for design and navigation and explore new uses and variations.

Background and Definitions

Much of the earliest literature on sitemaps describe them as a tool to help users navigate a website. A sitemap in this context is a page on a website that displays an organized list of links to every page on the site. In the 2002 edition of Elements of User Experience, Jesse James Garrett describes sitemaps as tools designers use to develop the structure of a website.

Sitemaps are also used as tools for design. Dan Brown (2011, p. 94) defines sitemaps as “A visual representation of the relationships between different pages on a web site. Also known as a structural model, taxonomy, hierarchy, navigation model, or site structure.” According to Brown, website designers, developers, project managers and stakeholders use site maps to:

  • Clarify information hierarchy,
  • Establish a navigational backbone, and
  • Facilitate content migrations.

 

Because of the dual use of sitemaps as a tool for design and as a navigational feature of a website, Jesse James Garrett recommends referring to a sitemap, the design tool, as an architectural diagram (Garrett, 2002, p. 17). Peter Morville and Louis Rosenfeld (2002) prefer the term blueprint, which also borrows from the terminology of physical architecture, but can be confused with other information architecture tools, such as wireframes, which employ the conventions of architectural blueprints, such as monochrome color scheme and annotation. In referring to the design tool, I prefer the term sitemap, because it conveys a sense of the orientation and context of site content, rather than instructions for building a site. 

Sitemaps as a Design Tool

Designers use sitemaps to develop a new site structure, create a current view of website content and to analyze gaps in content or problems in the arrangement of content (Brown, p. 95). Sitemaps are often created using a drawing tool such as Microsoft Visio or PowerPoint, but can also be represented in Excel. Drawing tools allow you to map relationships between pages by grouping boxes and connecting them with lines, much like an organizational chart. The following sitemap is the result of importing an Excel file into Visio:

sample-visio-sitemap

Figure 1: Sitemap from The Lazy IA’s Guide to Making Sitemaps (Turbek, 2006).

The presentation of a sitemap as a series of hierarchical boxes with interconnecting lines is useful in diagramming the relationships between content on a section of a website or within an entire website. These diagrams are rarely seen by website users, though the resulting structure informs the site navigational structure of the website and may be represented in a page on the website itself.

Sitemaps as a Navigation Tool

From a user’s perspective, “A site map’s main benefit is to give users an overview of the site’s areas in a single glance by dedicating an entire page to a visualization of the information architecture” (Nielsen, 2002). We think of user experience as a somewhat recent development in the design of interactive products. However, in an even earlier article about sitemaps, Peter van Dijck (1999) stresses that the user experience is paramount when developing a sitemap.

Van Dijck says that because users are looking for something specific on a website, the sitemap should be complete, so they can find it. Second, he says that since users are on a website to find information that is enjoyable and of interest, the sitemap should also include meta-information to help the user decide if the effort of clicking on a link is worth it. These are two requirements for sitemaps: completeness and meta-information. He suggests grouping pages within like ideas, highlighting the most popular pages in bold or color coding links. Most sitemaps follow this concept by grouping pages by top-level navigation and utility, or meta, navigation. Some also group links into facets in addition to the more traditional sections, but the goal is to present a visualization of every page on the website in one place, which is useful as a secondary navigation tool.

A 2002 study by Jakob Nielson provided a number of suggestions for effective sitemaps. It recommended that websites include a link to the sitemap on every page, clearly labeled “site map.” It also indicated that sitemaps should be relatively short, no more than two and a half times the window size. It recommended that layers of hierarchy are acceptable if designed well, i.e. simple and compact. It also suggested that interactive sitemaps can be confusing and should be avoided.

As for level of detail, Garrett (2002) states that a sitemap on a website should only show one to two levels of the site, rather than a complete map of every page. Nielsen, however, says a complete map is best for small sites, but that several levels can be displayed if the sitemap is designed well. Search engine optimization expert, Shari Thurow, recommends having a complete sitemap to improve accessibility by search engines (S. Thurow, personal communication, November 29, 2013).

Nielson also concluded, “…users are reluctant to use site maps and sometimes have problems even finding them.” In the study, only 27% of users turned to sitemaps to find information. Nielsen found that less than half of the sites included in his book, Homepage Usability, had sitemaps at all. Nielsen inferred that perhaps users didn’t expect a site to have a sitemap and simply didn’t look for them.

In a 2008 follow-up to his first sitemap study, Nielsen reported that sitemaps remain useful as a secondary navigation aid, despite the fact that sitemap usage fell to only 7% of users in the later study versus 27% in 2002, because “they’re the only feature that gives users a true overview of everything on a site.” He justified sitemaps because they don’t hurt people who don’t use them, they help those who do use them, and they are relatively inexpensive to produce (Nielsen, 2008).

Sitemap Alternatives

Nielsen notes, “Users go to site maps if they are lost, frustrated, or looking for specific details on a crowded site” (Nielsen, 2002). He likes sitemaps because they offer a clean, simple website overview and represent an alternative finding aid in what may be a cluttered website. I thought it might be interesting to look at some of the alternative variations on sitemaps that help users find content. It turns out that Nielsen has much to say about these alternatives as well.

Mega Drop-Down Menus

Nielsen (2009) refers to a study of “mega drop-down menus,” which are navigational features, often integrated with global navigation. Mega drop-down menus, also described as “fat menus,” are ways for site designers to include subpage navigation by segmenting content into groupings or popular links.

According to Nielsen, mega drop-down menus have the following characteristics:

  • Large, two-dimensional panels with options divided into groups
  • Choices are structured through layout and typography, and may use icons
  • Everything is visible at the same time without scrolling
  • Content is displayed in a vertical or horizontal form (drop-down for horizontal global navigation and fly-out for left navigation bars).

 

Mega drop-down menus allow the addition of featured content as a way to promote or market specific pages within the selected section. The Wall Street Journal includes featured content, such as blogs, videos and magazine content in their mega drop-down menus:

wsj-dropdown-sitemap

Figure 2 Wall Street Journal Mega Drop-Down Menu

Nielsen’s 2009 study concludes that Mega drop-downs work because “…they show everything at a glance, so users can see rather than try to remember.” This goes back to Nielsen’s earlier work on usability that recommends interfaces that rely on recognition rather than recall (Nielsen, 1995).

Why else do mega drop-down menus work? First typical drop-down menus often hide options. Mega drop-down menus contain all of the user’s options for a particular section in a single panel so they do not need to rely on memory. Also, regular drop-down menus don’t support groupings while a mega drop-down’s card or panel layout does. Finally, mega drop-down menus make it easy to include rich typography, images and illustrations.

Retail often also include fat menus with links to sales, promotional features and facets like “Gifts for Her,” which drive sales toward specific pages, as in the following fat menu from Bodenusa.com:

boden-footer-sitemap

Figure 3 Boden Mega Drop-Down Menu

Applying a sitemap as a tool for design, an information architect can look at a shopper’s mental model and user scenarios when shopping within a particular category, and suggest facets and features to include in fat menus. The resulting menu design can then be tested on actual users to determine if the links are appropriate and if they are likely to drive sales.

Doormat Menus

Similar to the mega drop-down menu is the “doormat navigation” design pattern described in the Nokia Developers website and Welie.com. Both display a panel of organized links to content, except the doormat navigation is typically only displayed on the home page, thus the “doormat” reference, and often displays each top-level navigation item in the same panel with sub-groupings of links, rather than focusing on a single top-level section (Welie.com).

Welie.com’s description of doormat navigation suggests that the panel contains sub-section links for each major section, while the Nokia Developers site shows doormat navigation images that are specific to a single site section (Mobile web design: doormat navigation, n.d.). Both Welie.com and Nokia note that doormat navigation is best placed on the home page of large websites with a lot of content, while Neilsen assumes mega drop-down menus would be accessible from every page of the website.

Doormat navigation may be falling out of favor or evolving toward the mega drop-down menu format. Welie.com displays an example of a doormat navigation from Adobe.com; however, Adobe’s current website features mega drop-down menus.

Footer Sitemaps

Van Dijck’s 1999 article is also a very early example of placing the sitemap on the footer of every page. An example of this method is presented on the travel site, Poor But Happy: Colombia. In fact, footer sitemaps, also called “fat footers,” do not appear to have been common before 2009, based on a scan of literature on the topic.

move-to-colombia-sitemap

Figure 4 Poor But Happy: Colombia Sitemap Footer (van Dijck, 2000).

In contrast to van Dijck’s sitemap footer, recent fat footers typically present an abbreviated list of links to major sub-pages of each top-level section, rather than a complete sitemap. Below is a fat footer from the Wall Street Journal:

wsj-footer-sitemap

Figure 5 Wall Street Journal Footer

In Jakob Neilsen’s 2012 article on “SEO and Usability,” he cautions against attempting to stuff fat footers or menus with an entire website. Carefully curated footer content can strengthen structural SEO by guiding link juice to the site’s best pages about each key topic” (Nielsen, 2012). This needs to be balanced by keeping the information compact and scannable enough to prevent confusing the user.

I interviewed search engine optimization expert, Shari Thurow, to explore further the effect of fat menus and footers on search engine optimization and findability. She agrees with Nielsen. Thurow said, “Too many links on a page, unless it is a page where humans expect a lot of links (site map/index, top-level category page, View all page, etc.) actually impedes findability. So mega menus should not be too large, ironically” (S. Thurow, personal communication, November 29, 2013). Having a complete sitemap on every page, as van Dijck recommended, may dilute the effectiveness of the search engine optimization strategy as well.

Thurow notes that it is also helpful that menus are coded in a way that is crawlable by search engines and visible to screen readers. Not all menu scripts are accessible. She further recommends that a sitemap page include not only organized links of all site content, but also annotations that provide “…keyword-rich content for the search engines to spider” (Thurow & Musica, 2009, p. 118).  Additionally, Thurow suggests that fat menus and sitemaps by themselves are not enough.  She notes that “..wayfinder pages, like a Brands A-Z page, are really helpful for both humans and search engines” (S. Thurow, personal communication, November 29, 2013).

XML Sitemaps

The ability of search engines to spider library catalogs and other so-called deep Web content is a challenge. Vinit Kumar of the Institute of Library and Information Science, Bundelkhand University, experimented with developing an XML sitemap that can be read by search engines to expose OPAC content to search engines (Kumar, 2012). He presents two ways to create these sitemaps via locally run, hand-coded routines or remote sitemap generation services (p. 495-496). Some local routines include GSiteCrawler (http://gsitecrawler.com/), G-Mapper (http://www.dbnetsolutions.co.uk/gmapper/), and WebDesignPros Sitemap Generator (http://www.webdesignpros.ca).

Remote services include Google Webmaster tools and search engine-specific tools that access a website’s sitemap page. Kumar notes that for most of the remote services, the OPAC data needs to be publicly available in order to be spidered. If the OPAC data is obscure, then additional coding or a local option may be necessary.

XML sitemaps also provide the benefit of encoding semantic web metadata, which offer another tool for the information architect to express meaning within a sitemap. Further research is required to test how XML sitemaps may offer benefits such as improved search and discovery.

The Future of Sitemaps

According to Dan Brown, sitemaps continue to be useful in representing content for structuring websites, despite the increasing complexity of the Web (Brown, 2011, p. 122). Sitemaps are effective tools for conceiving the overall structure of a website, but are limited in their ability to depict dynamic and user generated content accurately.

Victor Lombardi, a founder of the IA Institute, recently started a thread on iai-members discussion list on how to create a sitemap for data (Lombardi, 2013). Dorian Taylor replied with a suggestion to use Gephi, a data visualization tool, to represent the content in a network graph. In an earlier blog post, Taylor presented an example of a Gephi visualization of the IA Institute’s website that he created by using RDF data obtained from a crawler he designed (Taylor, 2011). The resulting graph presents a semantic diagram that according to Taylor precludes the need for sections because the necessary semantic relationships are already built into the RDF metadata for the links between pages.

iai-gephi-sitemap

Figure 6: Gephi Sitemap Diagram of IAInstitute.org

A sitemap as network graph is an interesting idea, but it would require user testing to understand whether website users find it easy to use. As noted above, Nielsen (2002) suggests that interactive maps should be avoided because it may confuse users. On the other hand, this type of visualization is excellent for analyzing gaps in content and natural groupings of concepts and information. That a sitemap such as this can be generated on the fly presents an interesting alternative for mapping dynamic websites and could use more exploration.

Nielsen (2002) predicted that updated versions of browsers, such as Internet Explorer, might include tools that automatically produce a usable, interactive sitemap, but pokes fun at Microsoft for not adopting feature requests quickly. Kumar returns to the idea of built-in browser assistance by noting that libraries could develop a browser plug-in to support search of library OPACs. This would allow patrons to search for catalog content within their browser’s search bar rather than directly in the OPAC. Another approach could be to code the search results so that catalog content is presented first in the results page. Without additional coding, it remains true that the designer must optimize website navigation rather than expect the browser to provide sitemap tools.

Conclusion

Sitemaps are useful tools for website design, search and navigation. Because of the evolving nature and increasing complexity of the Web, the role of the sitemap is also evolving. The sitemap is an important aid to navigating complexity for all users, whether designers, stakeholders, site users. As Brown (2011, p. 122) suggests in his conclusion to the Site Map chapter, the growing complexity is making sitemaps more important, not less so. With the increasing power of visualization and semantic web tools, we can anticipate interesting new uses of sitemaps as an analytical and navigation tool.

 

References

Brown, D. M. (2011). Communicating design: Developing web site documentation for design and planning. Berkeley, CA: New Riders.

Doormat navigation. Welie.com. Web. Retrieved on November 20, 2013 from http://www.welie.com/patterns/showPattern.php?patternID=doormat

Garrett, J. J. (2002). Elements of user experience. Indianapolis, IN: New Riders.

Garrett, J. J. (2011). The elements of user experience: User-centered design for the Web and beyond. Berkeley, CA: New Riders.

Kumar, V. (2012). Exposing library catalogues to search engines. DESIDOC Journal Of Library & Information Technology, 32(6), 493-497.

Mobile web design: Doormat navigation. Nokia Developer. Web. Retrieved on November 20, 2013 from http://developer.nokia.com/Community/Wiki/Mobile_Web_Design_:_Doormat_Navigation

Rosenfeld, L., & Morville, P. (2002). Information architecture for the World Wide Web. Sebastopol, Calif: O’Reilly.

Nielsen, J. (March 23, 2009). Mega menus work well for site navigation. Web. Retrieved on November 29, 2013 from http://www.nngroup.com/articles/mega-menus-work-well/

Nielsen, J. (September 2, 2008). Site map usability. Web. Retrieved on November 29, 2013 http://www.nngroup.com/articles/site-map-usability/

Nielsen, J. (January 6, 2002). Site map usability, 1st study. Web. Retrieved on November 29, 2013 from http://www.nngroup.com/articles/site-map-usability-1st-study/

Nielsen, J. (January 1, 1995). Ten Usability Heuristics. Web. Retrieved on November 29, 2013 from http://www.useit.com/papers/heuristic/heuristic_list.html

Nielsen, J. (August 13, 2012). SEO and Usability. Web. Retrieved on December 1, 2013 from http://www.nngroup.com/articles/seo-and-usability/

Nielsen, J., & Tahir, M. (2002). Homepage usability: 50 websites deconstructed. Indianapolis, IN: New Riders.

Taylor, D. (2013, November 26). Site maps from data? Message posted to http://lists.iainstitute.org/private.cgi/iai-members-iainstitute.org/2013-November/010838.html

Taylor, D. (2011). Content Robo Inventory.  Web. Retrieved on December 1, 2013 from http://doriantaylor.com/content-robo-inventory

Thurow, S., & Musica, N. (2009). When search meets web usability. Berkeley, Calif: New Riders.

Turbeck, S. (January 30, 2006). The lazy IA’s guide to making sitemaps. Boxes and Arrows. Retrieved on December 1, 2013 from http://boxesandarrows.com/the-lazy-ias-guide-to-making-sitemaps/

van Dijck, P. (1999). The problem(s) with sitemaps. Web. Retrieved on November 29, 2013 from http://evolt.org/node/710/

van Dijck, P. (2000). Poor hut happy: Colombia. Web. Retrieved on November 29, 2013 from  http://web.archive.org/web/20001204205500/http://poorbuthappy.com/colombia/index.html

West 104th Street Block Association Moves Ahead with Student Design

The West 104th Street Block Association voted to adopt the website design and strategy developed by my team at Pratt Institute. The new web design will update the association’s site from the outdated world of frames and IE4 era optimization to a sleek, modern WordPress interface. Key improvements include an organized layout, legible fonts, searchable newsletter archive, updated content, livelier images, and the ability for board members to edit and add content without needing to understand HTML or php.

While the site is in production, here is a peek at the old and new sites:

Screen Shot 2014-04-06 at 1.49.48 PM