A study of just four users of the Bowling Green State University website finds “that parents received the message better than students, regardless of professed ability to use the computer, both students and parents have trouble finding the sections intended to carry their messages, even when directed to the areas intended to carry their messages, both students and parents feel the message is incomplete.” Mark A. Nordstrom —A Message in A Web Site: How Students And Their Parents Receive (or Don’t) What Is Sent
Similar:
Advent of Digital Humanities Will Make English Departments Pointless -- New Republic
Don't overreact to the headline, which i...
Academia
A Robotic Dog’s Mortality
Fascinating video journalism from the Ne...
Culture
R.U.R. (Rossum's Universal Robots) Artistic Prosperity Trailer
We rehearsed and recorded a Zoom recordi...
Art
The History of Typography Told in Five Animated Minutes
Open Culture.
Aesthetics
MLA In-text citations: Writing that got you through high school won’t do in college.
MLA In-text cita...
Academia
The Measure of a Man (ST:TNG Rewatch, Season 2, Episode 9)
Rewatching ST:TNG after a 20-year break....
Culture


