The document discusses instructional system design and provides information about an instructional system with the identifier MID7133. It appears to be detailing the design of an educational or training program dated March 24, 2012.
I am doing a fellowship with Americans for Informed Democracy. Our mission is to education, cultivate and mobilize students from across the national around challenges facing US global leadership and foreign policy issues. Specifically we focus on hunger, sex and justice, climate change, and security. In April we are hosting a big conference gathering hundreds of students and keynote speakers to discuss these issues broadly and in the context of the 2012 election. As a completely virtual organization, we use Twitter and Facebook a lot to promote events, hence my poster. The slogan for the conference is 2012: Challenge Accepted, and our hashtag is as shown.
Content Modeling: How to Structure Your ContentLacey Kruger
BIG Design 2015 conference session
Audio available for download via Google Drive: https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B-85b8hWuMLYNy1LQ3BPM1FqT0U/view?usp=sharing
In this talk, we’ll de-mysitfy the process of content modeling or defining the structure of content for a CMS website. You will see real-world examples and practical tips to help you with modeling your content.
We’ll cover:
Identifying unique content types needed for a website
Defining metadata for your content types
Writing authoring instructions for a delightful user experience for administrators
Designing display templates for each content type
Ensuring your content model is adaptive for various devices or channels
How to structure a content strategy that worksHandsOnWP.com
Nick and Sandi Batik led the April 18, 2016 Austin WordPress Meetup discussion — How to Structure a Winning Content Strategy. We reviewed a few tools to help you get the most from your pages and posts. We demonstrated some navigation tips and tricks and how an internal linking structure helps you build effective information architecture. We concluded with a 5-step system to write copy that consistently attracts your target clients and organically build SEO.
IA Summit 2015 presentation
Audio available via IA Summit Library: http://library.iasummit.org/speakers/lacey-kruger/
With the rise of responsive design, a content model and a CMS are necessities for any content-rich web presence. Once you’ve designed the front-end user experience, it’s important to consider the content structure that will support your design. Content models define:
the underlying structure of each type of content
the user experience for content authors and editors within the CMS
Luckily, designing a content model is a natural extension of IA for a front-end user experience. In this talk, we'll get into the details of HOW to content model. We'll dissect the content model for a single content type for a nonprofit website. The goals for this content model were:
to be adaptive and portable for any device or context
to contain a lot of content, yet display it in a simple way
a successful user experience for administrators creating and editing the content
a delightful user experience for end users of the content
In content modeling, there are often multiple approaches you could take so I’ll also cover the alternate models we explored and describe the process that led us to our end result.
Session Takeaways
Define a content model
Evaluate a content item and create a content model based on that item
Learn best practices for adaptive content models
I am doing a fellowship with Americans for Informed Democracy. Our mission is to education, cultivate and mobilize students from across the national around challenges facing US global leadership and foreign policy issues. Specifically we focus on hunger, sex and justice, climate change, and security. In April we are hosting a big conference gathering hundreds of students and keynote speakers to discuss these issues broadly and in the context of the 2012 election. As a completely virtual organization, we use Twitter and Facebook a lot to promote events, hence my poster. The slogan for the conference is 2012: Challenge Accepted, and our hashtag is as shown.
Content Modeling: How to Structure Your ContentLacey Kruger
BIG Design 2015 conference session
Audio available for download via Google Drive: https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B-85b8hWuMLYNy1LQ3BPM1FqT0U/view?usp=sharing
In this talk, we’ll de-mysitfy the process of content modeling or defining the structure of content for a CMS website. You will see real-world examples and practical tips to help you with modeling your content.
We’ll cover:
Identifying unique content types needed for a website
Defining metadata for your content types
Writing authoring instructions for a delightful user experience for administrators
Designing display templates for each content type
Ensuring your content model is adaptive for various devices or channels
How to structure a content strategy that worksHandsOnWP.com
Nick and Sandi Batik led the April 18, 2016 Austin WordPress Meetup discussion — How to Structure a Winning Content Strategy. We reviewed a few tools to help you get the most from your pages and posts. We demonstrated some navigation tips and tricks and how an internal linking structure helps you build effective information architecture. We concluded with a 5-step system to write copy that consistently attracts your target clients and organically build SEO.
IA Summit 2015 presentation
Audio available via IA Summit Library: http://library.iasummit.org/speakers/lacey-kruger/
With the rise of responsive design, a content model and a CMS are necessities for any content-rich web presence. Once you’ve designed the front-end user experience, it’s important to consider the content structure that will support your design. Content models define:
the underlying structure of each type of content
the user experience for content authors and editors within the CMS
Luckily, designing a content model is a natural extension of IA for a front-end user experience. In this talk, we'll get into the details of HOW to content model. We'll dissect the content model for a single content type for a nonprofit website. The goals for this content model were:
to be adaptive and portable for any device or context
to contain a lot of content, yet display it in a simple way
a successful user experience for administrators creating and editing the content
a delightful user experience for end users of the content
In content modeling, there are often multiple approaches you could take so I’ll also cover the alternate models we explored and describe the process that led us to our end result.
Session Takeaways
Define a content model
Evaluate a content item and create a content model based on that item
Learn best practices for adaptive content models