In addition to the selection criteria contained in the TCC
Selection Policy, the following criteria based on those developed by
the American Library Association
will apply to TCC library links to WWW resources. A site does not need to
meet every one of these criteria to be a great site, but the more of
them it does meet, the more likely it is to be a worthwhile place for
our students to spend time.
A. Authorship/Sponsorship: Who put up the site?
- The site should be attributable to a clearly stated and
reliable source (university, association, agency, publisher,
qualified individual, etc.)
- The creator should give a source for information in the site
where necessary.
- The web site author or manager should provide a way for users
to make comments or ask questions.
- The web site author or manager should be responsive to any
questions regarding copyright, trademark, or ownership of all
material on the site. Sites that knowingly violate copyright
statutes or other laws should not be linked, listed, or
recommended.
B. Purpose: Every site has a reason for being there.
- A site's purpose should be clear and its content should
reflect its purpose, be it to entertain, persuade, educate, or
sell.
- Advertising should not overshadow the content.
- A good site should enrich the user's experience and expand the
imagination. Sites promoting social biases (gender, racial,
religious, or other types) rather than enlarging the views of the
student should not be considered worthwhile sites.
C. Design and Stability: A great site has personality and
strength of character.
- The information on the site should be easy to find and easy to
use.
- The site design should be appealing to its intended audience.
- The text should be easy to read, and not cluttered with
distracting graphics, fonts, and backgrounds.
- Users should be able to get around the site easily.
- Pages consisting mainly of links should be well-organized, and
the collected links should be well-chosen and useful to students
exploring the subject.
- The site's design should be appropriate for the intended
audience.
- A game or recreational site should have a clear interface and
playing instructions.
- The page should load in a reasonable amount of time.
- The page should be consistently available and load without
problems; stability is important.
- Required "plug-ins" or other helper applications should be
clearly identified.
- The design elements and features on the site, such as
searchable databases, animations, graphics, sound files,
introductory and transitional pages, etc. should enhance and not
hinder the accessibility and enjoyment of the site.
- A user should not need to pay a fee before using the site.
- The interactive features should be explained clearly.
D. Content: A great site shares meaningful and useful content
that educates, informs, or entertains.
- The title of a site should be appropriate to its purpose.
- A site's content should be easy to read and understand by its
intended audience.
- There should be enough information to make visiting the site
worthwhile.
- If there are large amounts of information on the site, some
kind of search function should be provided. There should be at
least an outline of topics covered, allowing the users to find
topics and move among them easily.
- Spelling and grammar always should be correct.
- The information should be current and accurate, and if the
topic of the site is one that changes, it should be updated
regularly. A "last updated" date is a plus.
- Links to more information on the topic should be provided.
- Graphics on the site should be relevant and appropriate to the
content.
- The subject matter should be relevant to and appropriate for
the intended audience.
- The viewpoint presented should be comprehensible to the
intended audience.
- The skills required to use the site's features and structure
should be appropriate or appropriately challenging for its
intended audience.
- In informational sites, especially those used to support
school assignments, quality of content should be most important.
- Some sites, such as health and life-education sites, may
include mature content. Such material should be developmentally
appropriate to the information needs of students.
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