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Functional-driven heuristic evaluation of administrative portal systems used in institutions of higher education

Published: 20 October 2005 Publication History

Abstract

Usability Evaluation Methods (UEM) are critical to both practitioners and researchers of the Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) community. UEMs are often used to evaluate interface usability, uncover functional problems and bring forth design defects. According to Olson and Moran, UEMs are likely to fall after needs assessment and before beta testing in the software life cycle [1]. UEMs are widespread and commonly used in evaluating interactive systems in industry setting more than in academic institutions.Administrative Portals (AP) used in institutions of higher education has gained very little attention, if any at all - in regards to usability testing. This paper however, will not examine why that is. It will rather focus on discussing a new method that was especially designed for evaluating APs of institutions of higher education. The method is called Functional-Driven Heuristic Evaluation (FDHE) as it expands the boundaries of the traditional usability heuristics to encompass a functional context by combining some of the concepts of a cognitive walkthrough. This paper will provide a quick summary and comparison of the traditional heuristic evaluation method and the cognitive walkthrough. Then explain the theoretical framework of the new FDHE and it benefits.Lastly, the paper will provide a synopsis of future work that is intended to put this new usability evaluation method into the test to validate its claimed benefits and confirm its efficacy.

References

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Olson, J., & Moran, T. P. (1995). Mapping the Method Muddle: Guidance in using methods for user interface design. Proceedings of a workshop on Human-computer interface design: success stories, emerging methods, and real-world context: success stories, emerging methods, and real-world context. Pages: 269--300.
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Gray, W. D., & Salzman, M. C. (1998). Damaged Merchandise? A Review of Experiments that Compare Usability Evaluation Methods. Human-Computer Interaction 1998, Volume 13, Pages: 203--261.
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Molich, R., & Nielson, J. (1990). Improving a Human-Computer Dialogue. Comminucation of the ACM, 33(3), Pages: 338--348.
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Nielson, J., & Mack, R. L. (1994). Usability Inspection Methods. New York: Wiley.
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Nielson, J., & Molich, R. (1990). Heuristic Evaluation of User Interfaces. Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing. Pages: 249-- 256. New York, ACM Press.
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Hornbaek, K., & Frøøkjær, E. (2004). Usability Inspection by Metaphors of Human Thinking Compared to Heuristic Evaluation. International Journal of Human-Computer Interaction, 17(3). Pages: 357--374.
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Spencer, R. (2000). The Streamlined Cognitive Walkthrough Method, Working Around Social Constraints Encountered in a Software Development Company. The Future is Here - CHI Letters. 2(1). Pages: 353--359.
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Lewis, C. & Polson, P., & Wharton, C. & Rieman, J. (1990). Testing a Walkthrough Methodology for Theory-based design of Walk-up-and-use Interfaces. Proceedings of CHI 1990, April 1-5. ACM, New York Press. Pages: 235--242.
  1. Functional-driven heuristic evaluation of administrative portal systems used in institutions of higher education

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    cover image ACM Conferences
    SIGITE '05: Proceedings of the 6th conference on Information technology education
    October 2005
    402 pages
    ISBN:1595932526
    DOI:10.1145/1095714
    • General Chair:
    • Rob Friedman

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    Association for Computing Machinery

    New York, NY, United States

    Publication History

    Published: 20 October 2005

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    Author Tags

    1. administrative portals
    2. cognitive walkthrough
    3. functional evaluation
    4. heuristic evaluation
    5. usability evaluation methods (UEM)
    6. usability testing

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