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The Libraries of The Claremont Colleges have a new web site: http://libraries.claremont.edu.
The product of an 18-month evaluation and redesign process, the
new site
- reorganizes existing content to make finding things easier;
- enhances navigation to help you have a better sense of where
you are in the site;
- provides reader-friendly page layout and options;
- adds many new features, including database-driven electronic
journal and database-by-title lists, a "print this page"
feature, and the ability to search our online catalog, Blais,
directly from the home page of our web site.
Reorganized content
Content is now organized in six major sections: eResearch Tools,
Hours & Locations, Need Help?, Getting Materials, Services &
Policies, and About the Libraries.
- eResearch Tools is where you will find resources that faculty
and students will use to do research, with an emphasis on electronically
available resources (hence the e at the head of the name), particularly
web-based resources.
- Hours & Locations is where you find information about our
individual libraries and service points, what hours they are open,
and directions for visitors coming to Claremont; of particular
interest in this section are links to our major web sub-sites,
including those for Special Collections, Asian Studies and the
individual libraries.
- Need Help?, our online help section, puts you into contact with
librarians online, via phone and email, and provides tips for
doing research, guides for specific courses, and a listing of
workshops and classes we offer.
- Getting Materials is the web gateway for getting the research
materials you need, whether books and other materials from our
collections, course reserves (both paper and electronic), electronic
books, or if we don't have what you need how to request what you
need via interlibrary loan.
- Services & Policies details the services the Libraries provide,
including reference and instruction services, the ways we provide
access to our resources (both on site and via the web), as well
as the services provides by The Copy Center; also here are all
the policies users should know.
- About the Libraries presents what is going on at the libraries
(lectures, exhibits, and events), contact information for librarians
and other staff, job opportunities at the Libraries, as well as
our publications, mission statement and goals, and other information
about the Libraries, our partners, and affiliations.
Enhanced navigation
The site now provides enhanced navigation features that are designed
to help you better orient yourself within the site and find what
you need faster than ever before. Each page (beyond the home page)
of the Libraries' web site has a menu with tabs for each of the
major sections as well as the local menu for the section where you
are. The tab and menu for the local section will be color coded
to match the look of that section each section has its own color
scheme to help contribute to that section's "sense of place" and
the inactive section tabs are shown in a lighter shade to distinguish
them from the active one.
Just below a page's main menu is a bar the "breadcrumb"
bar that shows you where you are within the site's hierarchy. At
the head of this is a link to the home page, followed by the section
title and, where needed, the linked titles of any sub-sections that
lie between the current page and its parent section. Using this
bar you can jump in the hierarchy back to the home page or any page
in between.
As an added feature, many pages have a right-hand "Also see"
menu that points out other items of interest related to the content
of the current page. "Also see" menus give you short cuts
to other parts of the site without always having to find them via
the site structure.
Finally, where a sub-section of the site has its own organizational
requirements in addition to the main navigation, a left-hand sub-menu
will be provided when it will save you clicks back to the section
menu.
Reader-friendly page layout
Though the new site menu takes up a bit more screen space than
the old we have tried to keep it to a minimum to leave as much screen
space as possible available for page content. Also:
- text now fills most of the width of a page to minimize scrolling
(the old site kept text within a 550-pixel center-aligned table);
- side menus are used only when they enhance navigation;
- all page tables use relative widths, again to maximize the content
area;
- almost all text also uses relative sizing if text is too small
for you to read, you can now use your browser's options to increase
its size;
- in our database-by-title lists, each database is now accompanied
by only a short one or two-sentence description limiting the amount
of scrolling required to reach the bottom of a page since each
database entry now takes up less space with a "more info
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link for each database in case you need additional details about
one.
New features
More and more parts of our site are becoming database-driven. What
this means for you, the user, is more consistency and accuracy of
information. When the information about a resource changes we can
now input this data into a back-end database and all pages drawing
on this database will reflect such changes.
Our "print this page" feature creates on the fly a printer-friendly
version (i.e. without menus or other extraneous page formatting)
of any page on our site. And as mentioned before you can now search
Blais, our online catalog, directly via a search box on our home
page.
More features are in the works. Currently only the alphabetical
lists of databases and the lists of e-journals draw on back-end
databases, but eventually the subject lists of databases will, too,
as well other resources that utilize information about our databases
and e-journals (e.g. research guides and course-specific help).
Soon these areas also will be searchable to provide even faster
access.
A "my library" portal option is also planned and, when
ready, will allow you to customize your access to our site.
So, as you can see, our site may be redesigned but there still
are many things that are coming that will further enhance the site
and your experience of it. Please let us know what you think of
the redesign and how we can improve it further.
James Otto
Web Administrator
james.otto@libraries.claremont.edu
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