{"title":"Book Review: Don't Make Me Think, Revisited.","authors":"Helen Joyner","doi":"10.1111/1541-4329.12220","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p> </p><p>Don't Make Me Think, Revisited: A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability (3rd Edition), by Steve Krug. 2013. New Riders, ISBN: 978–0321965516</p><p>With the huge movement of courses to an online format in 2020 that is continuing into 2021, it's a good time to take a look at aspects of the course that are in digital format. This includes course websites, syllabi, and assignments. Ideally, students would be able to navigate these things to find the information they needed quickly and easily without any help from the instructor. In practice, students often get lost in a tangle of hyperlinks, misinterpret directions, and can't find what they need without help. These experiences increase the undesirable difficulty of the course.</p><p>Desirable difficulties, a term coined by psychologist Robert Bjork (National Research Council, <span>1994</span>), are anything that challenges the brain and leads to an increase in long-term retention of information. Undesirable difficulties, on the other hand, are things that take up cognitive space, but do not enhance learning. Undesirable difficulties, such as unclear instructions or a course site that is difficult to navigate, may actually decrease learning because they can disrupt the process of storing information in long-term memory (Chen et al., <span>2018</span>). We can help decrease undesirable difficulties in courses, particularly in online courses, by providing students a course site that is easy to navigate and assignments with directions that are short and easy to follow. This has the added benefit of reducing the number of emails from students asking where things are on the website or what they are supposed to do in a given assignment!</p><p>To get started on making our course sites and assignments easier to navigate, we can look at the information currently available on web usability. Steve Krug, a usability consultant, has an excellent—and relatively short—guide to web usability through proper design. In his book, <i>Don't Make Me Think, Revisited</i>, Krug reviews the basic principles of web design for maximum usability, including mobile design. Although this book was originally published around 2000 and the Revisited (3<sup>rd</sup>) edition was published in 2013, the general principles are still highly useful. People still navigate websites in the same way and have become used to certain conventions, like navigation links being either on the top or the left side of the page.</p><p>Don't worry, you don't have to know a single line of code to get the full benefit of this book! It's a fast read with plenty of illustrations and examples to explain the points made. It's also full of humor, which definitely helps the points to stick. Krug starts with what he calls his first law of usability: Don't make me think. The design of a website should make where to do and what to do so obvious to the user that they have to use no brainpower to find what they came for. For example, if a student is looking on a course site for an assignment, the link(s) to get there should be so obvious that they can just click, click, click and have their assignment without taking time to hunt for it.</p><p>But wait, what if we write instructions on how to find things? People won't read them, Krug says. They'll scan the website, stop on the first word or phrase that looks remotely like what they came for, and muddle their way through until they are either too frustrated to continue or they find what they want. This is why, Krug says, we need to design websites like billboards, with as few words as possible and navigation choices made obvious. Backing up and getting to the home page should also be easy to do. Krug points out that people don't mind clicking several times, as long as the path forward is clear and there's an easy way to back up if they click on the wrong thing. In fact, Krug notes that the Back button is the most frequently used button in a web browser!</p><p>After establishing general usability principles, Krug reviews how to apply those principles to a website and check to be sure they are applied correctly. This includes usability testing. Krug points out that usability testing can be done quickly and easily by a few people without any training and should be done often in the process of developing a website. For faculty putting together a course website, whether in a learning management system or through their own webpage, this usability test can be easily done by the course TA or a student or faculty who hasn't seen the course page before. All you have to do is sit them down in front of the course site, give them a few key tasks to do (maybe finding and downloading the syllabus or finding and submitting an assignment), and watch them do it. Have them describe what they're doing as they do it, take note of what they have trouble with, and correct it to improve ease of use. Maybe the syllabus takes too much time to find or the link to upload assignments isn't clearly marked. Things that may be obvious to the course instructor who put the website together may be confusing or difficult for someone who has never interacted with the course site before.</p><p>In the Revisited edition, Krug adds some guidelines for mobile use and accessibility. These are great chapters to browse, since many students have poor internet access off-campus and may use a mobile device to access the course website. The course site should be just as accessible and usable on a mobile device as a laptop or desktop. Usability checks should include mobile devices as well. On the topic of accessibility, Krug states that allowing websites to be accessible to people with disabilities usually improve accessibility for everyone. This is a great point and not often made. However, things like larger font size, more separation between sections on a website, and explanations of what images are in alt text improve readability for all, not to mention the alt text explaining what an image is can be useful in situations where the image doesn't load properly.</p><p>The same usability principles for websites can be applied to instructions for assignments. Assume students won't carefully read the instructions from beginning to end but will scan them looking for specific pieces of information. Make the instructions as short and to the point as possible, preferably in bullet format rather than paragraph format. Make it easy for them to head in the right direction. Have someone look over the assignment and tell you what they think they're supposed to do. Correct as needed. In short, don't make them think about whether they are doing the assignment correctly. Instead, make them think about the course material, which is what they really should be thinking about in the first place.</p>","PeriodicalId":44041,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Food Science Education","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-04-21","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1111/1541-4329.12220","citationCount":"10","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Food Science Education","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1541-4329.12220","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"Social Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 10
Abstract
Don't Make Me Think, Revisited: A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability (3rd Edition), by Steve Krug. 2013. New Riders, ISBN: 978–0321965516
With the huge movement of courses to an online format in 2020 that is continuing into 2021, it's a good time to take a look at aspects of the course that are in digital format. This includes course websites, syllabi, and assignments. Ideally, students would be able to navigate these things to find the information they needed quickly and easily without any help from the instructor. In practice, students often get lost in a tangle of hyperlinks, misinterpret directions, and can't find what they need without help. These experiences increase the undesirable difficulty of the course.
Desirable difficulties, a term coined by psychologist Robert Bjork (National Research Council, 1994), are anything that challenges the brain and leads to an increase in long-term retention of information. Undesirable difficulties, on the other hand, are things that take up cognitive space, but do not enhance learning. Undesirable difficulties, such as unclear instructions or a course site that is difficult to navigate, may actually decrease learning because they can disrupt the process of storing information in long-term memory (Chen et al., 2018). We can help decrease undesirable difficulties in courses, particularly in online courses, by providing students a course site that is easy to navigate and assignments with directions that are short and easy to follow. This has the added benefit of reducing the number of emails from students asking where things are on the website or what they are supposed to do in a given assignment!
To get started on making our course sites and assignments easier to navigate, we can look at the information currently available on web usability. Steve Krug, a usability consultant, has an excellent—and relatively short—guide to web usability through proper design. In his book, Don't Make Me Think, Revisited, Krug reviews the basic principles of web design for maximum usability, including mobile design. Although this book was originally published around 2000 and the Revisited (3rd) edition was published in 2013, the general principles are still highly useful. People still navigate websites in the same way and have become used to certain conventions, like navigation links being either on the top or the left side of the page.
Don't worry, you don't have to know a single line of code to get the full benefit of this book! It's a fast read with plenty of illustrations and examples to explain the points made. It's also full of humor, which definitely helps the points to stick. Krug starts with what he calls his first law of usability: Don't make me think. The design of a website should make where to do and what to do so obvious to the user that they have to use no brainpower to find what they came for. For example, if a student is looking on a course site for an assignment, the link(s) to get there should be so obvious that they can just click, click, click and have their assignment without taking time to hunt for it.
But wait, what if we write instructions on how to find things? People won't read them, Krug says. They'll scan the website, stop on the first word or phrase that looks remotely like what they came for, and muddle their way through until they are either too frustrated to continue or they find what they want. This is why, Krug says, we need to design websites like billboards, with as few words as possible and navigation choices made obvious. Backing up and getting to the home page should also be easy to do. Krug points out that people don't mind clicking several times, as long as the path forward is clear and there's an easy way to back up if they click on the wrong thing. In fact, Krug notes that the Back button is the most frequently used button in a web browser!
After establishing general usability principles, Krug reviews how to apply those principles to a website and check to be sure they are applied correctly. This includes usability testing. Krug points out that usability testing can be done quickly and easily by a few people without any training and should be done often in the process of developing a website. For faculty putting together a course website, whether in a learning management system or through their own webpage, this usability test can be easily done by the course TA or a student or faculty who hasn't seen the course page before. All you have to do is sit them down in front of the course site, give them a few key tasks to do (maybe finding and downloading the syllabus or finding and submitting an assignment), and watch them do it. Have them describe what they're doing as they do it, take note of what they have trouble with, and correct it to improve ease of use. Maybe the syllabus takes too much time to find or the link to upload assignments isn't clearly marked. Things that may be obvious to the course instructor who put the website together may be confusing or difficult for someone who has never interacted with the course site before.
In the Revisited edition, Krug adds some guidelines for mobile use and accessibility. These are great chapters to browse, since many students have poor internet access off-campus and may use a mobile device to access the course website. The course site should be just as accessible and usable on a mobile device as a laptop or desktop. Usability checks should include mobile devices as well. On the topic of accessibility, Krug states that allowing websites to be accessible to people with disabilities usually improve accessibility for everyone. This is a great point and not often made. However, things like larger font size, more separation between sections on a website, and explanations of what images are in alt text improve readability for all, not to mention the alt text explaining what an image is can be useful in situations where the image doesn't load properly.
The same usability principles for websites can be applied to instructions for assignments. Assume students won't carefully read the instructions from beginning to end but will scan them looking for specific pieces of information. Make the instructions as short and to the point as possible, preferably in bullet format rather than paragraph format. Make it easy for them to head in the right direction. Have someone look over the assignment and tell you what they think they're supposed to do. Correct as needed. In short, don't make them think about whether they are doing the assignment correctly. Instead, make them think about the course material, which is what they really should be thinking about in the first place.
《别让我思考,再访:网络可用性的常识方法》(第三版),史蒂夫·克鲁格著。2013.《新骑手》,ISBN:978–0321965516随着2020年课程向在线形式的巨大转变,并将持续到2021年,现在是了解数字形式课程各方面的好时机。这包括课程网站、教学大纲和作业。理想情况下,学生将能够在没有教练任何帮助的情况下快速轻松地浏览这些内容,找到他们需要的信息。在实践中,学生们经常迷失在错综复杂的超链接中,误解方向,在没有帮助的情况下找不到他们需要的东西。这些经历增加了课程的难度。心理学家Robert Bjork(国家研究委员会,1994年)创造了一个术语“合意困难”,它是指任何挑战大脑并导致信息长期保留增加的东西。另一方面,不良困难是占用认知空间,但不能增强学习的东西。令人不快的困难,如指令不清楚或课程网站难以导航,实际上可能会减少学习,因为它们会破坏在长期记忆中存储信息的过程(Chen et al.,2018)。我们可以通过为学生提供一个易于导航的课程网站和简短易懂的作业指导,帮助减少课程中的不良困难,尤其是在线课程中的困难。这还有一个额外的好处,那就是减少了学生询问网站上的内容或他们在指定作业中应该做什么的电子邮件数量!为了开始让我们的课程网站和作业更容易导航,我们可以查看当前可用的网络可用性信息。史蒂夫·克鲁格是一位可用性顾问,他有一本关于通过适当的设计实现网络可用性的优秀且相对简短的指南。克鲁格在他的书《别让我思考,再访》中回顾了网络设计的基本原则,包括移动设计。尽管这本书最初出版于2000年左右,修订版(第三版)于2013年出版,但一般原则仍然非常有用。人们仍然以同样的方式浏览网站,并且已经习惯了某些惯例,比如导航链接位于页面的顶部或左侧。别担心,你不必知道一行代码就可以充分利用这本书!这是一本快速阅读的书,有大量的插图和例子来解释所提出的观点。它也充满了幽默,这绝对有助于坚持要点。克鲁格从他所谓的可用性第一定律开始:不要让我思考。网站的设计应该让用户清楚地知道该去哪里做什么,以至于他们不必动用脑力就能找到自己的目的。例如,如果一个学生正在课程网站上寻找作业,那么到达那里的链接应该非常明显,他们可以点击、点击、点击并完成作业,而不需要花时间寻找。但是等等,如果我们写下如何找到东西的说明呢?克鲁格说,人们不会读它们。他们会扫描网站,停留在第一个看起来与他们想要的相去甚远的单词或短语上,然后蒙混过关,直到他们太沮丧而无法继续,或者找到了他们想要的东西。克鲁格说,这就是为什么我们需要设计像广告牌这样的网站,尽可能少地使用单词,导航选择也要明显。备份和访问主页也应该很容易。Krug指出,人们不介意点击几次,只要前进的道路是清晰的,并且如果他们点击了错误的东西,有一种简单的方法可以备份。事实上,Krug指出,后退按钮是网络浏览器中使用频率最高的按钮!在建立了一般可用性原则之后,Krug审查了如何将这些原则应用于网站,并检查以确保它们被正确应用。这包括可用性测试。Krug指出,可用性测试可以由少数人在没有任何培训的情况下快速轻松地完成,并且应该在开发网站的过程中经常进行。对于教师来说,无论是在学习管理系统中还是通过自己的网页,这个可用性测试都可以由课程助教或以前没有看过课程页面的学生或教师轻松完成。你所要做的就是让他们坐在课程网站前,给他们一些关键的任务(也许是找到并下载教学大纲,或者找到并提交作业),看着他们做。让他们在做的时候描述自己在做什么,记下他们遇到的问题,并进行纠正,以提高易用性。也许教学大纲花了太多时间找,或者上传作业的链接没有明确标记。 对于那些从未与课程网站互动过的人来说,那些对创建网站的课程讲师来说显而易见的事情可能会让人感到困惑或困难。在修订版中,Krug添加了一些关于移动设备使用和可访问性的指南。这些章节很好浏览,因为许多学生在校外的互联网接入很差,可能会使用移动设备访问课程网站。课程网站在移动设备上的可访问性和可用性应与笔记本电脑或台式机一样。可用性检查也应包括移动设备。关于无障碍主题,Krug表示,允许残疾人访问网站通常会提高每个人的无障碍性。这是一个很好的观点,但并不经常被提及。然而,更大的字体大小、网站上各部分之间的更多分隔以及对alt文本中图像的解释等都可以提高所有人的可读性,更不用说解释图像是什么的alt文本在图像加载不正确的情况下可能很有用。网站的可用性原则同样适用于作业指导。假设学生不会从头到尾仔细阅读说明书,而是会扫描它们以寻找特定的信息。使说明书尽可能简明扼要,最好采用项目符号格式,而不是段落格式。让他们很容易朝着正确的方向前进。让别人看一遍作业,告诉你他们认为应该做什么。根据需要纠正。简言之,不要让他们思考自己做作业是否正确。相反,让他们思考课程材料,这才是他们最初真正应该思考的。
期刊介绍:
The Institute of Food Technologists (IFT) publishes the Journal of Food Science Education (JFSE) to serve the interest of its members in the field of food science education at all levels. The journal is aimed at all those committed to the improvement of food science education, including primary, secondary, undergraduate and graduate, continuing, and workplace education. It serves as an international forum for scholarly and innovative development in all aspects of food science education for "teachers" (individuals who facilitate, mentor, or instruct) and "students" (individuals who are the focus of learning efforts).