Instructional Message Design: The Laws of Simplicity – Organize
In the previous post, I elaborated on Maeda’s (2006) law of simplicity as
it pertains to reduction, and connected that law to the complex processes and
website navigation at an institution I am very familiar. In this current post,
I’d like to elaborate on the same series of websites through another one of
Maeda’s (2006) laws – the law regarding organization. This law states that
proper/effective organization can help make a system of many things appear
fewer…..no, it’s not fraud/trickery lol😁.
As I thought upon this principle, it reminded me of the saying that “first
impressions count”……in my previous post I stated that when I encounter websites
that are complicated etc I simply close them down and continue searching for a
simpler site of instructions. This I’m sure is what many people do, especially
if you’re always on the go like me.
This week had a few members of faculty come to me for some one-on-one
training via a series of clinics on accessing the campus’s LMS and setting up
their online courses. Even though they were randomly from different departments,
fields, etc, they ALL had an issue relating to organization of online content.
While some complained that the campus’s websites were way too cluttered with an
abundance of unnecessary information and links etc, others created online
courses that were perhaps even more so cluttered with assignment instructions, announcements
etc….which I’m sure is off-putting to their students. So while they may find
the campus’s websites off-putting….their students sometimes find their online
courses rather off-putting....logging in, hit by the vast onslaught of disorganized content like a head-on collision with a truck, and left feeling like....

.....that's exactly what I feel as well when I visit those course sites as well.
As I relate this situation to me, I remember many times logging into the
faculty’s courses and immediately feeling overwhelmed by the information that
hits me upon entering their courses….so one can only imagine how their students
feel. That said, I think Maeda’s law of simplicity regarding organization is
necessary because it relates even to the layout and design of content on a
webpage. I think if this law were applied to my context, the websites (both
administrative and course/LMS sites) will be much cleaner, less cluttered, and persons
become more receptive to the web content when they visit the sites – as opposed
to leaving the site or ignoring the important announcements. Like me, I’m sure
no one wants something that is confusing and draining to read, let alone
understand….that’s why Maeda advises on keeping things simple….and this may
relate to the organization of web-content in my professional context....keeping it simple helps to keep it clean/well-organized...and to this end, planning is essential.
Plan Plan Plan! Good advice when it comes to design. I like how you integrated these visuals into your blog story.
ReplyDelete