In a heuristic evaluation, usability experts — that’s where we come in — review a site’s interface and compare it against accepted usability principles.
Thank you all for your incredible patience as we wrap the end of the term.
Beginning in January, the first half of our semester focused on understanding the W3C organization, it’s users and the needs of those users. The latter…
In Fall 2017, the User Experience and Interaction Design program at Jefferson University was invited to participate in a project with the World Wide Web Consortium (the W3C). This term, we’ve established a class and a small…
After our interviews and discussions with W3C, this creative brief was formed to state the vision for our collaboration with the W3C. We have compiled this brief to inform and guide us through the process.
Posted on behalf of sarika joglekar and Ishita Ferdousi.
Last week, we wrote about creating the journey maps and personas of users based on our findings. We described the specific issues that users might be facing. Now, we are working on improving the…
Thank you so much for following along on our journey to recommend updates to the W3C specification template. With users around the…
After conducting a round of surveys with the W3C community and affiliated members, we have come up with answers to some critical questions that will help us understand the user base and target audience and their interactions with W3C specifications. The survey…
My students — Ishita, sarika, Cephas, Pratik, and Raeesha — are busy wrapping up their term and preparing their final recommendations for this project.
Please join us Tuesday, May 8 at 2 pm EST for a final readout of our recommendations for the W3C Specification project.