Week 10, Project 3, create a navigation diagram of your site
Project 3, Nov. 7-Nov. 9.
a) Create a navigation diagram of your site. Map out the nodes. Here is one website example, and here are some other navigation maps of websites. A subway map for Madrid is also a good model but more complex than your sites: each station is a node, and each node is accessible from at least two directions; some stations (nodes) have connections in six or more directions.
b) Remember that you should make it easy and fast for a lazy, selfish, and ruthless user to navigate within your website. Your site's nodes may have multiple connections. You can draw it out by hand, snap a picture and upload it to Project 3 in ADI.
Project 4. Nov. 14-Nov. 16. each team will give a 5-minute presentation (a kind of dress rehearsal) of their work to date. Five minutes. You will show us your web page and contents you have created. Only what you have done, not ideas about what you will do. You will get instant feedback from the professor and classmates. Each team should plan to consult with the professor if you have doubts about the 5-minute presentation. Make an appointment via jbreiner@unav.es.
Project 5. On Nov. 21-23, The team will review its navigation and usability with the professors during the class. Review of text files for accuracy, scannability, design, links. They will also work on the written version of their report, following the outline used in Project 2.
Nov. 28 and Nov. 30. Final presentations.
We will have three sessions of presentations. Those who cannot attend the Wednesday sessions because of schedule conflicts will present during the lab period on Friday.
Submit the written report on ADI.
a) Create a navigation diagram of your site. Map out the nodes. Here is one website example, and here are some other navigation maps of websites. A subway map for Madrid is also a good model but more complex than your sites: each station is a node, and each node is accessible from at least two directions; some stations (nodes) have connections in six or more directions.
b) Remember that you should make it easy and fast for a lazy, selfish, and ruthless user to navigate within your website. Your site's nodes may have multiple connections. You can draw it out by hand, snap a picture and upload it to Project 3 in ADI.
Project 4. Nov. 14-Nov. 16. each team will give a 5-minute presentation (a kind of dress rehearsal) of their work to date. Five minutes. You will show us your web page and contents you have created. Only what you have done, not ideas about what you will do. You will get instant feedback from the professor and classmates. Each team should plan to consult with the professor if you have doubts about the 5-minute presentation. Make an appointment via jbreiner@unav.es.
Project 5. On Nov. 21-23, The team will review its navigation and usability with the professors during the class. Review of text files for accuracy, scannability, design, links. They will also work on the written version of their report, following the outline used in Project 2.
Nov. 28 and Nov. 30. Final presentations.
We will have three sessions of presentations. Those who cannot attend the Wednesday sessions because of schedule conflicts will present during the lab period on Friday.
- First group, Nov. 28, 8-10 a.m. in Aula 4
- Second group, Nov. 28, noon to 2 p.m. in Aula 13
- Third group, Nov. 30, noon to 2 p.m. in computer lab (or alternative site to be announced)
Submit the written report on ADI.
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