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Design to read: guidelines for people who do not read easily

Caroline Jarrett 29 November 2022 8 July 2010
Design to read: guidelines for people who do not read easily

These guidelines are co-authored by Janice (Ginny) Redish, Kathryn Summers, and Caroline Jarrett. Orignally published in the June 2010 issue of UXPA User Experience, our work orginated in the ‘Design to Read’  project. Design to read project archive This articleContinue reading… Design to read: guidelines for people who do not read easily

Online forms: saving work or causing stress?

Jane Matthews 3 December 2019 8 July 2010
Online forms: saving work or causing stress?

E-forms have benefits, but so do paper forms. To have a successful e-forms project, you need to choose the appropriate level of e-form. This 2010 talk to the International Professional Communication Conference also describes several indicators of e-forms project success.Continue reading… Online forms: saving work or causing stress?

The question protocol: how to make sure every form field is necessary

Caroline Jarrett 25 March 2021 7 June 2010
The question protocol: how to make sure every form field is necessary

What is a question protocol? A question protocol is a tool for finding out which form fields are required. It lists: every question you ask who within your organisation uses the answers to each question what they use them forContinue reading… The question protocol: how to make sure every form field is necessary

Tips for designing complex forms, UPA2010

Jane Matthews 28 June 2023 26 May 2010
Tips for designing complex forms, UPA2010

From tax returns to lasting power of attorney, some forms present both designers and users with a huge number of challenges. In this presentation to the 2010 Usability Professionals’ Association Conference, I highlight some of the pitfalls of designing complex forms –Continue reading… Tips for designing complex forms, UPA2010

How I got started in forms and usability

Jane Matthews 3 December 2019 25 May 2010
How I got started in forms and usability

These slides are from a presentation I made as part of the Usability Fundamentals Panel at the  UPA2010 conference, held in Munich in May. Getting started in forms and usability, UPA Munich 2010 from Caroline Jarrett

Embedded links and online reading accessibility

Jane Matthews 3 December 2019 20 May 2010
Embedded links and online reading accessibility

At the 2010 Society for Technical Communication conference in Dallas, Whitney Quesenbery and I were interviewed about the feasibility of removing links embedded directly within paragraphs. These have been described as “exit points” that confuse and disorient low-literacy readers. The interview wasContinue reading… Embedded links and online reading accessibility

UXLX: Label placement in forms – and other time-consuming controversies

Caroline Jarrett 20 May 2022 18 May 2010
UXLX: Label placement in forms – and other time-consuming controversies

Here’s a look at current research into where to place labels – the text that stands for a question – if you want your forms to be usable. This presentation to the 2010 User Experience Conference in Lisbon also examines someContinue reading… UXLX: Label placement in forms – and other time-consuming controversies

Label placement in forms and other time-consuming forms controversies

Jane Matthews 19 March 2020 17 May 2010
Label placement in forms and other time-consuming forms controversies

A presentation on Label placement in forms, at the Technical Communication Summit, the 56th Annual Conference of the Society for Technical Communication, Dallas, US, May 2010. Amongst the time-consuming controversies we look at are left and right alignment, labels aboveContinue reading… Label placement in forms and other time-consuming forms controversies

Surveys That Work: Using Questionnaires to Gather Useful Data, Seattle 2010

Caroline Jarrett 19 March 2020 30 April 2010
Surveys That Work: Using Questionnaires to Gather Useful Data, Seattle 2010

This presentation to the Society for Technical Communication 2010 conference in Seattle, US, compares survey processes and looks at some of the detail of designing surveys – including how to avoid survey error. Surveys That Work: using questionnaires to gatherContinue reading… Surveys That Work: Using Questionnaires to Gather Useful Data, Seattle 2010

Avoid putting a reset button on your web forms

Jane Matthews 3 December 2019 12 April 2010
Avoid putting a reset button on your web forms

The history of RESET HTML 2.0 appeared in 1995. At that time, I was working in usability of forms – and I still am. But I didn’t have email or an internet connection. So I think it was remarkably niceContinue reading… Avoid putting a reset button on your web forms

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