Archive for the ‘Unisa Modules’ Category

The new WikiStudent is now live

Saturday, October 17th, 2009

The new WikiStudent, for Unisa students, went live a couple of weeks ago. The URL: http://wikistudent.ws/Unisa

We need Unisa students to become editors to help fill in the content - see the new site for how to join.

This blog is no longer being updated. You can browse the archives if you’re interested in how WikiStudent was re-built.

Tester # 1 views a module page

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

I love this tester - he’s very talkative and “thinks out loud” when looking at the pages I show him, which is exactly why I’m doing this “live” user testing. You learn some things that you don’t learn by emailing someone and asking for feedback electronically.

Here’s the page he looked at (COS340A)

 

COS 340-A

And here’s what I learnt:

Positive

  1. He understood the picture of the teapot graphic (i.e. that it was related to the subject COS340A), even though he is studying languages, not computer graphics.
  2. He liked the idea of taking a quiz about a subject.
  3. He noticed all the [edit] buttons along the right-hand side of the page and wasn’t afraid to click on them.

Negative

  1. He didn’t notice the tabs at the top of the page, so I had to point them out.
  2. He thought the “discussion” tab was where you could e.g. complain about the lecturers. (It’s actually where you discuss the content and layout of the page, not a discussion forum!)
  3. I asked him to try sell a textbook and he had no clue how to insert his name and book into a table. The wiki markup for tables with all those pipe symbols (||) is not intuitive!

Surprises

  1. He said he would want to print the page, and clicked on the “printable version” link.
  2. He thought that the assignment due dates calendar wasn’t necessary because myUnisa has this info.
  3. He said “where are the other students?”. He wanted to see names on the page, of other people taking the course.

So, I’m off to make some changes to the layout of Unisa module pages…

To quote from page 134 of Don’t make me think:

Testing one user is 100 percent better than testing none. Testing always works, and even the worst test with the wrong user will show you important things you can do to improve your site.

Very true!

Navigation has its limitations

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

I’m amazed at the number of types of management modules apparently on offer at Unisa. From the search box logs again, students are looking for info on:

financial management
purchasing management
strategic management
operations management
safety management
business management
sports management
human resource management

This makes it very tempting to have a menu item called “Management”, with all the above management courses listed as sub-menus.

But I’m not going to do this because it would overcrowd the site. Navigation items already in place are:

  1. A menu (with course codes)
  2. A tag cloud (with subject names)
  3. A search box
  4. A mini-feed (New!)

So someone doing e.g. Business Management can get to their module page with:

  • 2 clicks via the menu (MNB –> MNB101D)
  • 2 clicks via the tag cloud (Management –> MNB101D)
  • 1 click via the mini feed
  • 0 clicks via the search box, by just typing in MNB101D and hitting Enter!

Hopefully if you’re looking for “Business Management” you’ll either know more or less what the course code is (MNB is good enough) or you’ll understand that it falls under “Management”. I really can’t have every possible search term visible in the navigation items. I hope my architecture makes sense. Will find out next month during the usability testing!

Strange-looking Unisa module codes…

Monday, May 25th, 2009

Here are some of the weirder Unisa module codes I’ve come across, looking at the logs of this blog’s search box:

LRL241P-09-Y1
ETH102L-S1
PBCMO1-H
CCBF015
BSM1M1P
CTA2M2A
ECT261Z
BASC12-P
DCIB01U

I have absolutely No Idea what these course codes stand for, and they look pretty wrong to me because they don’t follow the format of the subjects I took (which had three letters followed by three digits).

They are not going to feature on the wiki with the re-launch, mainly because they’re not popular enough, and also because I haven’t a clue about them. If students taking these modules want to contribute towards them they will be welcome to do so though!

(I can’t believe Unisa would have changed their module formula and am guessing that these are Technicon SA codes that were brought in with the merger).

The module pages are done!

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

I’m happy to report that my goal for April, namely completing all the Unisa module pages, has been achieved: I’ve gone through all the old content, re-wrote some of it, organised it into the new headings, updated each subject’s prescribed textbook, and assigned categories to each page.

Here’s what the page listing all categories on the wiki looks like:
categories

This category list is hidden in the MediaWiki “Special pages”. Now what I want to do is display these categories on the home page, in a tag-cloud format. The category names with the most members will be in a large font (e.g. Law, Computer science) and the ones with only one member (e.g Anthropology, Statistics) will appear the smallest.

What’s nice & useful is that some pages are assigned to several categories. So, “Software Project Management” falls under both “Information systems” and “Management”.

I got stuck with a few module codes and wonder if anyone can help:

I can’t find anything on PMM301 or ENN104. Perhaps these modules don’t exist (anymore)? Also, TXN211 seems to be replaced with TXN201, and TXN213 seems to be replaced with TXN203. Please correct me if I’m wrong!