Web Design/Web design challenges

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Web Design Web design challenges
This page is part of the Web Design project.

These challenges are designed to be completed in around 3 hours, preferably as a small group activity (2-3) in a classroom situation where groups can compare their designs and coding during the review. The aim is that those people who are not confident can work together with those who are confident - even if it just means watching for the first few challenges - seeing a small project from idea to html/css prototype. Try to nurture each other and help each other learn wherever possible.

The challenges themselves are based around annual events so that they can be re-used while still remaining relevant. If you have any ideas, please add them!

Scope

Due to the limited time, the scope of the exercise will only include the following:

The following will be defined for you for each challenge:

After completion, prototypes will be reviewed in a meeting.

Project plan

A suggested time-plan was put together by some students as:

Resources

June Challenges

Drug Action Week - Local group awareness

When: End of June (In 2007 it's 18-22 June)

Background: Drug Action Week is a national event in Australia, but your local city is preparing it's own advertising/marketing on the councils website with local events, posts by local celebrities, etc.

Purpose: Engage local youth and business with local drug action week activities.

Example goals:

Targeted audiences:

How should users perceive the site

Content

September Challenges

Software Freedom Day - Your local city

When: 3rd Saturday of September (in 2007: 15th Sept)

Background: Software Freedom Day is a global, grassroots effort to educate the public about the importance of software freedom and the virtues and availability of Free and Open Source Software. Local teams from all over the world organise events on the third Saturday in September. The most recent event involved over 200 teams from all over the world.

Vision: The vision of software freedom day is: "to empower all people to freely connect, create and share in a digital world that is participatory, transparent, and sustainable."

Website goals:

Targeted audiences:

How should users perceive the site

Content

October Challenges

Pink Ribbon day

When: October each year (Pink Ribbon day is 20th Oct. in 2007)

Background: Breast cancer month is part of PinkRibbon, which is itself the official trademark of the National Breast Cancer Foundation.

Pink Ribbon Day is the signature day of the NBCF and is officially the fourth Monday in October. October is also internationally known as Breast Cancer Month.

Redesign Problem: The current Pink Ribbon site is excellent, but your client is keen to know whether it's possible to have a design that isn't so pink - perhaps being a little more vibrant (and perhaps not so similar to White Lady Funerals).

It's also been mentioned to your client on a number of occasions that the information/navigation of the site could be vastly improved to help people find what they're after when they hit the home page.

Redesign Goals:

Your team's task is to come up with a new home page design that incorporates the above goals. It must use the current branding (Pink ribbon logo, prominent link to national breast cancer foundation), but everything else is up to you.

Breaking down the tasks:

It's up to your team (your nominated leader) how you approach this challenge - you may all work together on each task or break up to get things done. The following task breakdown is just for reference.

November Challenges

November

When: During the month of November each year

Background: From What is Movember?: At the start of Movember guys register with a clean shaven face. The Movember participants known as Mo Bros then have the remainder of the month to grow and groom their moustache and along the way raise as much money and awareness about male health issues as possible.

Design problem: [Fictitious] As successful as Movember is for raising money, it is currently quite a one-sided affair. Where Pink-ribbon raises money for breast cancer and anyone can be involved, purchase/wear a pink-ribbon or organise fund-raising, in Movember only the males can actively participate. There is a page on the site devoted to 'Mo sistas':

Whilst growing a Mo is left to the guys, Mo Sistas (ladies that support their guys or just love Mo's!) form an important part of Movember by recruiting Mo Bros, helping to raise funds and attending the highly anticipated Gala Partés.

Mo sistas can take part by:

Helping your Mo Bro to raise some awareness and money for men's health

Hmm. Can the females among us call out if you want to be involved as a support? The board has realised this and is actively after a way to modify the 'Movember' concept so that those who can't or don't want to grow a mo can actively participate in raising money and awareness for prostate cancer and male-depression without being reduced to a support role.

Your task: In your medium-sized groups of 4-6 people:

  1. Develop a number of concepts for inclusively raising money and awareness of prostate cancer and male-depression. You might want to consider both complete re-brands (pros and cons) as well as adding or updating the current 'Movember' brand. It's important at this stage that everyone gets to express their ideas and is heard.
  2. Decide together on your winning concept (either take a democratic vote, or leave the decision to your group's leader).
  3. Work together to create a list of content/functionality that will enable your site to involve and encourage involvement from both those with mo's and those without. (The current site has a competition where mo-sisters can write why they are the best mo-sister to win a car).
  4. Next, individually take your group's content/functionality ideas and take 30 mins or so to group the content (keeping your target audience in mind) and then design sketches (paper is fine or photoshop if you prefer) for all your significant/interesting concepts (home page, competition page etc.).
  5. Coming back to your group, share and combine your ideas. Once decided you'll then create your final prototype (paper - large post-it notes or a photoshop prototype) for a number of your pages to communicate your concept back to the class.
  6. Finally, decide how you will present your concept. For example, one person might introduce the concept, another outline the detailed thinking behind the concept, another demonstrate the concept, another summarise the pros and cons or even potential risks etc.
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