The usability study on April 9th at noon was different than the previous three studies for a variety of reasons.

 

First, we (Clara, David, Jenny, and Sarah) conducted the study at the Wildcat Den on the Downcity campus. Run by off-Campus Student Services, “The Den is a multifunction lounge space for commuting Wildcats.” While it is not clear if the students from previous usability studies live on or off campus (because we do not ask this question), the focused group of test 5 was comprised of students, many of them sophomores, who do not live on campus. This was our first usability study outside of the library.

 

The second difference is that we tested a rough-draft beta version of the library homepage that offers a side-menu navigation bar instead of tabs along the header. In addition to the header the beta page moves all content above the fold and provides an additional tab dedicated to textbooks.

 

Please let us know what you think in the comments or let us know directly.

 

The third difference is that we conducted multiple, simultaneous tests. With four librarians, four laptops, and two sets of headphone/microphones, we were able to conduct four usability tests in half the time by breaking into groups of two. This worked out well because The Den is a small space and its loud and busy during the day. Being able to go in for an hour, conduct four tests, and then leave, was time and effort efficient.

 

Takeaways

  • Students use the “everything” tab to search for everything- not only items that are searchable in our catalogs or databases, but information about library services.
  • Students use the tabs along the header (Get Help, Services, About, etc.) but don’t often find what they are looking for there. It was not clear to them what they would find in any of these drop down menus, but they went there anyway. This is good to know when thinking about the redesign: perhaps the header drop down menus are a good place to include information about the library and services, as long as the language is clear and makes sense to the user.
  • Students don’t seem to know about the FAQ’s (but when they used the beta site some users intuitively searched the FAQs through the left-hand quick answer search).