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Class Project Yields Online Campus Map
Thanks to the senior capstone class of Duke's interdisciplinary
program in technology and information science, the university now
has a key piece of infrastructure that it long lacked: a user-friendly,
online campus map.
For years, visitors to campus and students alike had depended on
a variety of maps drawn up by different departments. But other
than a detailed facilities-management map that took a specific
browser and a special computer program to function optimally, all
were little more than uploaded paper maps that gave, at most, the
names of buildings. If you were looking for a department or facility,
but didn't know the name of the building it was in, good luck.
Enter Information Science and Information Studies 200, a project-based
seminar of seven seniors taught last spring by Casey Alt, ISIS's
administrative director, and Jessica Mitchell, project manager
in the Office of Information Technology.
Aware that there had been a discussion going at Duke for years
about what the ideal campus map would look like, the two instructors
latched onto the idea and presented it to the spring 2005 class
as a possible project. "At first, we thought we'd just do
our own map that would maybe appear on the ISIS website," Alt
says. "As it evolved, it became clear that administrators
really wanted to do this. It had the opportunity to be the Duke
map."
The students surveyed fifty-seven online campus maps from around
the world, ranging from static PDF files to three-dimensional flash
displays, and listed good and bad features. They focused on a number
of areas: usability, speed, scale, and information. With that as
their starting point, the students created mock-ups of what the
site might look like and put together a series of presentations
for administrators. Throughout the project, they worked closely
with campus services, the office of news and communication, and
OIT.
"Jess and I stressed that the hardest part of this [wouldn't]
be the programming. It [would] be the project management," Alt
says. "You don't learn that anywhere, but you spend 90 percent
of your time on it. That's what will make or break you." In
the end, he says, the group declined to select a project manager
but instead worked within a horizontal structure, with individuals
stepping into temporary leadership roles, as needed. That approach,
he says, was surprisingly successful.
One key to the group's success on the project was the diverse backgrounds
of its members, according to Alt and Mitchell. The class consisted
of students majoring in economics, political science, chemistry,
and mathematics, as well as computer science. Some students chose
to focus on programming the map; others on researching the campus
buildings, communicating with administrators, and putting together
project presentations.
The project bridged the gap between the students' academic and
professional careers figuratively--by giving them a real taste
of what their careers might be like--and literally: At the end
of the semester, five members of the class were hired by OIT to
remain in Durham over the summer and complete the map for an August
2005 launch.
The result is Duke's first dynamic, user-driven map. It's so successful
that many departmental websites and campus events announcements
have already linked to it. The map allows users to zoom in on different
parts of campus. In addition, it offers a powerful search function
that recognizes partial names as well as building descriptions,
and provides parking information, building histories, facility
and departmental information, and pictures of buildings from the
perspective of a person approaching on foot. It also happens to
be one of the few Duke maps that is geographically correct, not
having been manipulated to fit onto a page.
And because the site was built dynamically--the map image is not
saved anywhere, but instead recreates itself from programming code
whenever loaded--it can be continually updated to reflect new construction
or department moves as the campus continues to grow. The seven
2005 graduates involved in the project were Jane Bloomgarden, Eric
Buescher, David Eisinger, Nikhil Jariwala, Alberto Laverde, Mary
McKee, and Ann-Drea Small.
Alt says that after the success of the mapping project, administrators
haven't left him short on ideas for future class undertakings. "Everyone
who wants something done," he says, "it becomes the next
ISIS 200 project."
Explore the campus: www.map.duke.edu
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