Last changed
14 Nov 1998 ............... Length about 900 words (6000 bytes).
This is a WWW document maintained by
Steve Draper, installed at http://www.psy.gla.ac.uk/~steve/resources/aboutls.html.
Web site logical path:
[www.psy.gla.ac.uk]
[~steve]
[resources]
[launchpad]
[this page]
Related pages:
[main launchpad]
[about the launchpad]
[more links]
[example searches]
This page is about the design of the launchpad page.
At the moment, the launchpad is designed to suit me, and what I think I'll
find useful for literature-related searches.
The longer term aim is to modify it to suit student needs.
The aim of any "launchpad" page is to be like a browser's "Home page": a page
that loads as fast as possible, that users come back to frequently, and that
contains a lot of much-used links that are good starting points for that user
and task. Thus I want to keep the page small by including only heavily used
links; and with very small explanations of what they are, since anyone who
uses the launchpad much will soon know what the links mean.
In fact, I've compromised. In my private launchpad I have got it down to a
single screen (no scrolling), which I haven't managed for this launchpad. To
get it down, I pack much more on one line, and reduce descriptions of links to
about 5 letters each and have no section headings. In this launchpad, I've
used headings and blank lines, and mostly have only one logical item per line.
This is clearer for new users, but means not everything can be seen at
one time.
The idea of a launchpad is to be designed around a task (literature searches),
rather than a logical structure. I have followed this task-orientation in
dividing the launchpad into sections. Thus I haven't put everything to do
with Strathclyde library together, but put all the catalogues together, and
all the opening-hour information together, because I expect users to need
these kinds of information at different times. The tasks I have identified
are:
- Finding a paper's details i.e. that it exists, and what its bibliographic
details are.
- Finding whether a book (or a volume of a journal) is in a library we can use.
- Finding whether a book exists at all. This is for when you wonder if you
have the right details of a book, or enough details. For this, it would be
nice to have a catalogue of all books that exist. Failing that, the
catalogue of really big academic libraries are a help, and of really big
bookshops for books in print.
- If you know a book is in a particular library, then you need to know where
the library is (do YOU know where the chemistry dept. library is?) and when
it is open. This can be found online too. Since the opening hours on the web
could be out of date, using the phone numbers given there is useful too.
- Searching the web. This is subdivided into:
- General search engines
- Searching university sites
- Electronic journals; TV; Newspapers
Perhaps,however, it should have been divided into something more like
subtasks:
- Finding people (i.e. academic authors)
- Finding sites / labs / units
- Finding papers
- Finding by topic (general search by words)
I've included both telnet and WWW interfaces to databases, where available,
because I find the telnet ones are often considerably faster (at least from my
office computer) than the WWW ones, even though they are less good looking.
Advice on
critical reviews, including
advice on searching.
Stephany's introduction to web searching.
Example searches are provided on a companion page (link at top of this
page).
APA guide for students to lit. searches
Send me feedback by emailing me:
steve@psy.gla.ac.uk
or some other way.
I could use feedback of many kinds:
- Praise: if no-one says they like it, I will let the page go away after a
while.
- Specific errors of spelling or broken links (easy to fix)
- The ideal constructive suggestion is to say what link I should include,
complete with a case of how you used it in a specific task
- A complaint without a solution e.g. "I need a way to find PhD students in
an area" (maybe I'll find a good link for this one day).
- A really general complaint -- "searching makes me depressed, and your page
makes it worse" (maybe eventually I'll come across a solution e.g. pictures,
cartoons, a fun tutorial, ....)
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