Assignment 1 post

*Disclaimer* This work was intended to be read in hard copy and is therefore written in a linear format, disregarding the rules I have outline in the piece itself.

The mark of a good webpage, among other things, must be that it delivers what the audience wants.  The online reader is fickle, impatient and demands a lot of information in very little space.  So in order to evaluate any website, I’ve found that I must first evaluate the visiting audience.  To examine this point, I have chosen three university sports websites which can be compared in usability, cross-promotion, and content.  The first is the sports website for the University of Melbourne, my current institute of higher learning. The next is my alma mater, the University of Miami and their Hurricane Sports page.  And last I will look at the Australian University Games website, a program in which I will participate in September 2009, part of the Australian University Sport website.  I have a personal connection to all of these schools and sports programs, and therefore can consider myself a member of the target audience of each.

The first website is the sports home page of the University of Melbourne.  As an Australian university, sports are generally open to the entire student and staff population, as well as in most cases the general populace of Melbourne also.  There are fees associated with participation, and the website’s aim is to get involvement (and thereby get income for the sports programs and departments). The article I chose is up on the main page of the website as featured content, and is linked with a teaser and option for more, as well as a liked image.

The copy of the article gives the basic rundown of the who, what, where, when and why of the particular event, in this case the men’s basketball team winning their division championship. There is a heading, which gives the most comprehensive information of the three articles, and specifies the key points of the article.  Following are a date, and an author, then about 650 words of plain text broken up into 11 chunks. I will give the author credit for chunking, but that is about it. In order to accommodate our dynamic online reading style, online text must be scannable, according to Jakob Nielson. This includes highlighted keywords (including hypertext links), useful and meaningful sub-headings, and bulleted lists where necessary. This article ignores each of these techniques. Good online paragraphs should employ only one idea, but in this case the majority of ideas are scattered and the writing leaves much to be desired. The writing follows a somewhat inverted pyramid style, with the most important information at the beginning, however even this is poorly executed.

Following in suit, the article itself contains no links. Links are necessary for a sense of connectedness, to give the information on the page a context, and to make the article influential.  Scott Karp outlines how links transform online reading from scattered to organized, and create networks that can follow a linear or dynamic format. Clearly the reader in this instance is not intended to have further questions, need more information, or clarification about the article.  However, at the very least the page could link to the Basketball division website, perhaps information about the team, or past articles relating to a similar topic.  The page does have links to the parent page (The University of Melbourne), as well as easy navigation on the left hand side to the home page, and other areas of the website.  Contact information for the author is given at the bottom, but in a non-linking format.  This page loses more points for the inconvenience associated with having to copy and paste the email address.

In terms of design, the page is simple and easy to navigate, but certainly earns no credit for style or originality.  The background does not distract from the text, the navigation buttons are easy to locate, understand and use, and formats are consistent throughout the website.  One of the two graphics on the page has a caption, however neither provides an alt label (which is a caption given when your mouse scrolls over the image).  

The University of Melbourne sports website is a host to many teams which are independently owned, and each pays ‘rent’ to use the school’s facilities.  Therefore the school is not making money from the sports or players, and needless to say the men’s basketball division 2 championship would not have brought in any money, or school or team awareness. The website, and this page, are a reflection of this.

On the flip side of the coin, The University of Miami is a huge sports school, where a great deal of income is brought in by the sports programs.  In particular, football, basketball and baseball.  The university’s sports programs and website are sponsored by Nike, Gatorade, CSTV, CBS, JetBlue and MuscleMilk, among others.  The aim of the website designers here is to inform current students, players and fans, and also to gain sponsorship from several areas.  Just a look at the homepage tells a very different story from the previous example.  There are flashing ads, an events calendar, scrolling headlines, sponsor links, shops, and a plethora of distracting, eye catching links.  The chosen article is not even regarding a big-money team, or a big championship, but merely one win by the low-profile volleyball team.  However, as part of the featured content, it is one of the scrolling headline images, and easy to click to with a link on the image, as well as the headline.

The article and the page as a whole show a much higher calibre of online writing and organisation than the first example. The article begins with a heading, then a sub-heading (kicker) for clarification. However the heading does not cover some of the most important points of the article, which are the records set by several players. Following the headings, we are given the date and location of the event.  Immediately we are presented with two links to the box score (one in PDF format for convenience), to accompany the play by play we are about to read.  Every step of the way, names are highlighted, and linked to the player biography on a separate page, forming a narrative for the reader to follow.  The copy is chunked and organised in an easy to read, top-down manner.  A link back to the homepage is embedded in the text itself.  This page provides a high level of reader interactivity through links, multimedia, and colour. However, it is lacking in use of white space, which is important to help users reduce the cognitive load and digest chunks of information, according to Smashing Magazine.

At the bottom of the page, 26 other sites are linked, however they are all other CBS sponsored sites.  Although readers should be wary of the same ownership of all pages, there are also links to related articles and college sports pages on the right hand side of the page.  There are also links to every other area of the website, from other sports, to shopping, to tickets, to team rosters. It appears to be a trend with this style of website and writing, by the school and about the school, that any outside opinion is discounted, whereas a news website writing about unrelated and unaffiliated news would be wise to link to other sources and trusted sites. 

This page has a higher standard of graphics, with only one associated picture and caption (excluding an alt label), but an overwhelming amount of sports related images, advertisements, and colourful text surrounding the article itself.  It remains easy to navigate, but has much more choice, as well as distraction for the reader. The advertisements, although annoying on most websites, in this case are fairly unobtrusive, but give the page a sense of credibility, youthfulness and professionalism, which are important to the target audience. 

The final example differs in the fact that it is not intended only to promote one school.  Instead, it is set up to inform participants about Australian University Games, held once every year around Australia. Students are invited for 1 week of competition against other schools around the country. The parent website is Australian University Sport, associated with the Australian Government Sports Commission. The article I chose regards one student’s success at the World University Games. 

The article is linked as a part of the scrolling headlines on the right side of the home page, and can also be accessed through a series of links from the left hand menu of the first page. The first page highlights several in-house articles, but also links to some outsourced articles from other news venues, including the Age, the Courier and the Sydney Morning Herald.  This article, although the shortest and chunked into only 5 parts, it is the best example of the three of inverted pyramid style writing, giving the most important information first, and trickling down with details. The important information such as date, author and headline are given, however it does not have a subheading. The heading alludes to the key points in the article, which are the accomplishments of the students, but remains quite vague.  The copy has no live links, but does have a lot of contact information at the bottom of the page for follow up, and a linked email address. The side bar of the article page cross-promotes related headlines, making navigation easier. As with the first article, the links on the left side and bottom take the reader back to other parts of the website, but not beyond the boundaries of Australian University Sport.

The graphics and texts are less visually appealing and easy to navigate than the university of Miami website, however funding may again be to blame here. The page is nonetheless easy to understand, and the article has a high level of readability because there are few distracting elements.  The entertainment value is low, but information value is high.  This page follows several of the outlined features of a good website, as pointed out by Robin Williams: the background does not compete with the text, it is easy to read but not too big, and the information is clear.

Each article has value in its own right, however the University of Miami article, and the whole website, do the best job of understanding and acknowledging their audience.  The users of each site are likely to be university students interested in athletics.  This target audience is likely to prefer a dynamic reading style, especially online reading, and so the best approach to reach this group is lots of graphics and multimedia.  The second article also does the best job of linking to other parts of the website (in the text itself), and to other sites that may be of interest to the reader (despite being owned by the same parent company). Ultimately, there are infinite ways to make a good website, but following certain guidelines and writing for your audience are certainly among the most important for success.

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Cricket

Hello Australia.  Hello kangaroos, and trams, and surfing (kinda), and 'cheers mate', and AFL, and cricket.  

I'm still coming to terms with that last one.  I like sports, I love playing and watching and cheering and drinking and scoring and 'barracking'.  I do enjoy AFL despite sitting in the freezing cold wind and rain for 3 hours.  But I have yet to come to terms with cricket.  It goes for days, and very little happens.

Ive been doing my research, I want to be more informed and therefore perhaps enjoy cricket when the season comes back around.  So here are some things I've found:

1. Cricket is a game of minute details
Everything from the way you grip and face the bat, to the wind and spin on the ball affect each play
2. Inches can make all the difference (as in most sports)
If the batsman stands even an inch closer to the bowler, he has less reaction time from when the ball leaver the bowler's hands, hits the pitch, and bounces back up toward his face.
3. Fielding is less boring than it looks
The fielders have to be ready everytime a ball is bowled because if not, thats the one time the ball will be hit in their direction (fact)
4. The captain has all the power
When it is gametime, unlike any other sport, the captain takes over and makes all the decisions, leaving the coach on the sidelines to just watch.  Talk about pressure!
5. Each pitch is different
Home team advantage is more important in cricket than any other sport, as each pitch is completely different conditions, from temperature, to ground firmness, to oval shape and size.

Interesting stuff for a game that goes for days! Check out Nick Bryant's blog for more indepth coverage of the sport.

Sidenote: On my first ever flight to Australia, I was flying from Sydney to Melbourne, and scattered around the plane were boys in the same outfits.  I assumed they were a club team of some sort, all looked very young.  But I distinctly remember highlighted hair.  Fast forward 2 days, I'm in Coles for the first time ever, checking out the cereal isle in this foreign country, and what do I see on the Weetbix box.  Highlights. About seven of the boys from the plane.  Turns out i was traveling with the Australian Cricket team.  Kinda cool.

So, for anyone else having trouble getting into the spirit of the Ashes, I hope this helps! If you are an avid fan, have played since you can remember or just know a thing or two about the game, leave me a note! Until then, my next plan of attack is to get out there and take a swing!


New species of dinosaur discovered

Every little boys dream has come true... a new species of dinosaur has been discovered! 

Given the nickname Zac, the fossils of this new species were discovered on a sheep farm in Queensland.  This is just 5 years after the largest dinosaur in the country, Cooper,  was discovered in the very same place.

Read the article here for a full run down on the details, but you should know that Australia is in the middle of what experts are calling, a 'dinosaur rush'.  Thats exciting for an animal lover and nerd-at-heart, who illegally keeps a kitten in her apartment, and watches Planet Earth before bed.

Jurassic Park, we all know is a family favourite and classic, but imagine witnessing the unearthing of a never-before seen species of dinosaur.  I will assume it, like everything else, loses its appeal over time, and for the sheep farmer is now old news, but I would love to spend a day in the shoes of a paleontologist.  Of course only on the day that the discovery is made, because other than that they are just sifting through dirt.  Might as well be a construction worker.

 Matilda, Clancy and Banjo were found earlier this year nearby:

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Anyone have any personal dinosaur stories they would like to share with me, I'm all ears!

Blogging on the go

Blogging has really revolutionised the way we do everything.  

When we were younger we used to keep journals of our private thoughts, send paper notes in class, and send postcards from vacation spots.  Nowadays, we can do all of that from our computer, and the magic of the internet.  It still boggles my mind how many people use the internet daily, without having any clue what it actually is, or how it works (myself included).

Travel blogs are particularly interesting to me.  They have taken once remote and virtually untouched corners of the world, and made them instantly accessible to the world.  At one point it sufficed to send a piece of cardboard with an image of a tropical fish on one side, and scribbles of 'wish you were here' and 'having so much fun!' on the other. Now with digital cameras in one hand and pre-paid internet cards in the other, tourists are armed with everything they need to virtually share every detail of the trip with friends, family and strangers at the click of a button. Individuals are becoming the new authors of Lonely Planet and Frommers guide books. 

Of course, those guides more than likely led the bloggers there in the first place, and we wonder why the grass is covered in tour buses, and the local bars are filled with cheesy music and backpackers. In reality, curiosity and human nature's desire to experience the exclusive are to blame here, and blog sites and travel guides are merely cashing in.  A few good travel blogs I've found are The Sydney Morning Herald and Viator.  Of course my personal favourites always belong to friends or family.  Despite taking the fun out of the postcard, travel blogs are in fact a great way to stay in touch with friends and family on the move.

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BLOGGING 101


Technical writing, structural editing, journalism practice and theory…and blogging? As a publishing and communication student, I was prepared to take classes focused on editing, writing, and even basic level designing, but creating and following blogs didn’t even cross my radar.

But why is that? Why, as a student of the 21st century, in a society dominated by Google, Facebook and Twitter, wouldn’t blogging be the first thing to come to mind? Why wouldn’t a $10,000-per-semester school recognise and represent this in their course structure?  Perhaps the much-debated Melbourne Model, though loathed by arts students, has caught on to the need for ‘real life’ experiences in classroom setting education.

Then again, maybe the third highest grossing industry in Australian economy has found more ways to take our money.

I am a little embarrassed to admit that I am so far behind my peers, but I am, until now, a blogging virgin (minus 1 account: my letters from australia posted on my home school sports website here).  However, I think a combination of things are at play here.  To be brutally honest, the word ‘blog’ conjures up images of a pimple-faced, four-eyed, geeky (but not in a cute way) kid, sitting in the basement of his parents’ house, eating bbq chips, ogling pictures of Britney Spears, and commenting on his blog about the newest video game that he camped out for 2 days to buy for $200 and how he will one day rule the world and all the popular boys at school will be his minions.

That is of course not meant to offend anyone reading this, but as a psychology undergraduate major, my instinct is to use visuals to explain how each person’s individual experience and deep-seeded thoughts shape their view of the world around them.  I find it hard to shake this stereotype of the ‘blogger’ despite considering myself smart enough to know it is grossly unfair.  Just look here and here to see a testament to the wide variety of topics that can be blogged on.  I still consider online dating in general a bit weird, and have not yet brought myself to see the value in reading celebrity ‘tweets,’ but I think this course will open my internet eyes to the blogging communities and possibilities.

As someone interested in future magazine publishing, I should be the first to jump on the digital publishing train.  To think that one day I could make a career out of hours of web surfing, rather than cursing myself for time wasting.

Please don’t judge this blog based on this first post of self-centred verbal vomit.  But I thought it would be unjust to expect you to be interested in this blog without giving you a bird’s eye view into my brain and background.  So in a novice approach to blogging, I hope that I can interest, entertain, and engage you over the following semester (and beyond). 

 

If not, leave a note J