The College’s website, a banal combination of green, gold and khaki,
does not really inspire any great feelings of Tribe Pride. The website
is merely a necessary tool used by anyone interested in the school:
prospective students can look at admissions criteria, current students
can see which courses are required for a Black Studies major and alumni
can donate to the Fund for William and Mary.
The College has spearheaded an effort to give the website a completely
new look - an endeavor called “re.web” - and has just recently released
the three website design concepts in tandem with the design firm mStoner.
The goals of the re.web project, as stated on the project’s website,
include refocusing the site on users, making navigation across the site
easier and making the site responsive to all its audiences.
On Feb. 1, re.web announced the design concept for the College’s new
website. The change to the new website is expected to start in the
summer of 2008. The concept is heavily image-based and will feature a
special section entitled “W&M Impact” that will highlight current
research on campus.
The new site hopes to have a greater focus on individual users and to
feature stories of individual students. The design concept has a
pull-down menu leading to specific home pages for current students,
prospective students, faculty, parents and alumni. The concept also
features excerpts from student blogs.
The main impetus for a change of the site was a report assessing the
current site completed in 2006. The report compiled major complaints
about the site as a result of local focus groups and an online
submission form.
The ten most common complaints included difficulty in finding
information on specific majors and departments, admissions data,
information for students about to arrive at the college and current and
future events to happen on campus.
The report cites the websites of Harvard University, Swarthmore College
and the University of California at Berkeley to be model web sites, and
it takes into account specific features from each in outlining the new
site’s goals.
Final changes still need to be made to the design concept. While the
College’s home page will switch to the new design in the summer of
2008, the change will be gradual.
“[W]e won't wake up one morning to find that all W&M sites have a
brand new look from top to bottom,” said the re.web website. “It will
take many months to complete the move to the new design.”
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