Testing an Academic Library Website for Usability with Faculty and Graduate Students

被引:14
作者
Emde, Judith Z. [1 ]
Morris, Sara E. [1 ]
Claassen-Wilson, Monica [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045 USA
来源
EVIDENCE BASED LIBRARY AND INFORMATION PRACTICE | 2009年 / 4卷 / 04期
关键词
D O I
10.18438/B8TK7Q
中图分类号
G25 [图书馆学、图书馆事业]; G35 [情报学、情报工作];
学科分类号
1205 ; 120501 ;
摘要
Objectives - This usability study was developed to observe faculty and graduate students reactions to a recent redesign of the University of Kansas (KU) Libraries website. The redesign included new navigational features, introduction of a federated search tool, a quick search box on the front page, and research subject pages. The study also provided the opportunity to observe the practices of faculty and graduate students in locating and retrieving information on the Libraries website. Methods - Ten participants (five faculty and five graduate students) representing diverse disciplines were solicited for the study. Participants were required to access the Libraries website to answer a series of questions regarding new and updated features of the website. Observational analysis using Morae(TM) software was conducted and interviews with each participant provided details of their opinions on how these new features would influence their research and teaching activities. Results - Most of the participants either did not notice or ignored the major website changes. Links to and locations of commonly used resources (e.g. catalogue; databases; e-journals) had been changed minimally, and the faculty and graduate student participants gravitated to those familiar features to complete tasks. Prior to the study, participants had not accessed the new discovery tools; however, once previewed, responses to the tools utility were generally favourable. After using the federated search tool on a familiar topic, several participants noted that, when directed to databases they had not previously considered, they were able to locate citations they had missed in the past. Observers noted pitfalls in navigating the site such as inconsistent underscoring of links, ambiguous terminology, and unclear icons meant to expand subject heading lists. Unexpected searching behaviours were observed, including inconsistent and lack of conceptual understanding in searching for e-journal content. Conclusions - This study provides evidence regarding the usability of a library website with a population already familiar with library resources. It demonstrated that faculty and graduate students are not interested in experimenting with new discovery tools but are amenable to their potential value to undergraduate students. The recent trend toward minimizing content and links on websites satisfies this population, one which is already comfortable with the basic attributes of a librarys website.
引用
收藏
页码:24 / 36
页数:13
相关论文
共 21 条
  • [1] Whose Decline? Which Academic Libraries are "Deserted" in Terms of Reference Transactions?
    Applegate, Rachel
    [J]. REFERENCE & USER SERVICES QUARTERLY, 2008, 48 (02) : 176 - 188
  • [2] Bell Colleen, 2007, PUBLIC SERVICES Q, V2, P103
  • [3] Undergraduate use of federated searching: A survey of preferences and perceptions of value-added functionality
    Belliston, C. Jeffrey
    Howland, Jared L.
    Roberts, Brian C.
    [J]. COLLEGE & RESEARCH LIBRARIES, 2007, 68 (06): : 472 - 486
  • [4] Cobus L, 2005, REF USER SERV Q, V44, P232
  • [5] De Rosa Cathy, 2006, COLL STUDENTS PERCEP
  • [6] Fichter D., 2005, Computers in Libraries, V25, P6
  • [7] Fichter Darlene, 2005, COMPUTERS LIB, V25, P56
  • [8] Fichter Darlene, 2005, COMPUTERS LIB, V25, P54
  • [9] Lessons learned: usability testing a federated search product
    George, Carole A.
    [J]. ELECTRONIC LIBRARY, 2008, 26 (01) : 5 - 20
  • [10] Housewright Ross, 2007, ITHAKAS 2006 STUDIES