Title :
Teaching Web page design: challenges and opportunities
Author_Institution :
Fac. of Commun., Canberra Univ., Australia
Abstract :
This paper describes a research project in which a semester-long, tertiary course was developed to teach students how to design home pages for the World Wide Web. The course outcome was a series of Web pages produced for clients from the public and private sector. Students conducted a needs analysis which showed that, in many cases, clients were keen to develop a presence on the Web because of external, competitive factors, rather than a perceived organisational need. Few clients knew the target audience they were trying to reach and design options were conservative, or governed by designs already seen on the Web. It appears that Web page design is very much technology driven, rather than user-driven and this presents real challenges and opportunities for HCI designers
Keywords :
Internet; computer science education; educational courses; systems analysis; teaching; user interfaces; World Wide Web home page design; competitive factors; needs analysis; organisational need; private sector; public sector; research project; teaching; technology driven; tertiary course; user interface design; user-driven; Business; Education; Government; Human computer interaction; Hybrid integrated circuits; Information analysis; Internet; Project management; Web page design; Web pages;
Conference_Titel :
Computer-Human Interaction, 1996. Proceedings., Sixth Australian Conference on
Conference_Location :
Hamilton
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-7525-X
DOI :
10.1109/OZCHI.1996.560003