Website Evaluation: Accuracy and User-Friendliness

Learn to separate trustworthy websites from questionable ones — a critical digital literacy skill for the CSEC exam!

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Why Evaluation Matters

The "Quality Control" Concept

Just because it is on the internet does not mean it is good or true. Anyone can publish a website, which means the internet contains a mix of reliable information, outdated content, biased opinions, and outright misinformation. As a CSEC IT student, you need to develop the skills to evaluate websites critically — this is essential for research projects, your SBA, and everyday life.

The Two Pillars of Website Evaluation

  • Content Quality (Accuracy): Is the information correct, reliable, and backed by evidence?
  • Technical Quality (User-Friendliness): Is the site easy to use, navigate, and access?
The 5-Second Test

A website has only 5 seconds to make an impression! Click "Start Test" — you will see a website screenshot, then answer questions about what you noticed.

TechReview Pro

Your Trusted Source for Technology News

Latest Reviews | Expert Analysis | Buyer Guides

5

What was this website about?

Where would you click to see product reviews?

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Evaluating Accuracy: The Digital Detective

When researching for your SBA or exam answers, you need to act like a detective. Look for clues that tell you whether a website can be trusted.

Authority: Who Wrote This?

  • Expert Authors: Look for qualifications, degrees, or professional experience
  • Reputable Domains: .gov (government), .edu (education), and .org (non-profit) sites are generally more reliable than .com commercial sites
  • "About Us" Page: Legitimate sites explain who they are and their mission

Currency: How Fresh Is The Information?

  • Publication Date: When was the article written or updated?
  • Outdated Info: In IT, technology changes rapidly — information from 2010 may be completely obsolete today
  • Copyright Dates: Look at the bottom of pages for the most recent update

Objectivity: Is There Bias?

  • Balanced View: Does the site present multiple perspectives or only one opinion?
  • Advertising: Is the site trying to sell you something while providing "information"?
  • Emotional Language: Extreme words like "shocking," "miracle," or "you must believe" signal potential bias

Citations and Sources

Trustworthy articles cite their sources with links to original research, official statistics, or expert interviews. If there are no sources, be skeptical!

The Fact-Check Challenge

Click on all the "Red Flags" in the suspicious blog post below. Compare it to the trustworthy medical journal article.

✓ Trustworthy Source

Published: January 15, 2024 | Journal of Medical Research

The Effects of Screen Time on Adolescent Sleep

Dr. Sarah Mitchell, PhD

Abstract: This study examines the correlation between evening screen use and sleep quality in teenagers aged 13-18...

Sources: Peer-reviewed study, interviews with 500 participants, funding from National Health Institute

⚠ Suspicious Source

No Date Anonymous

SHOCKING: Mobile Phones Are Killing Your Children!

You won't believe what doctors are hiding from you...

My cousin's friend's mother said that phones cause cancer and the government knows it!

Click HERE to buy the miracle detox solution that protects your family!

Too Many Ads ALL CAPS
Red Flags Found: 0/6
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User-Friendliness: The User Experience (UX)

A website can have perfect information but still be terrible to use. User experience (UX) focuses on how easy and enjoyable it is for visitors to accomplish their goals.

Navigation: Finding Your Way

  • 3-Click Rule: Users should find any information within 3 clicks or they get frustrated
  • Clear Menu: Navigation should be obvious — usually at the top or left side of the page
  • Consistent Layout: Every page should have navigation in the same place

Readability: Can You Read It?

  • Contrast: Dark text on light background (or vice versa) — never yellow text on white!
  • Font Size: Minimum 12px for body text, ideally 14-16px for comfortable reading
  • Whitespace: Empty space around text makes content easier to scan
  • Line Length: 50-75 characters per line is ideal — too wide or too narrow is hard to read

Load Speed: Is It Fast?

  • Optimized Images: Large images slow down pages — sites should compress images
  • Bounce Rate: Users leave if a page takes more than 3 seconds to load
  • Test Your Site: Tools like Google PageSpeed Insights can analyze loading performance

Accessibility: For Everyone

  • Alt Text: Descriptions of images for visually impaired users using screen readers
  • Keyboard Navigation: Users should navigate without a mouse
  • Color Blindness: Important information should not rely on color alone
The Friction Finder

This website has multiple usability problems! Click on all the "friction points" that make it difficult to use.

www/bad-design-example/com

Welcome To Our Website

We sell amazing products at great prices. Click around to find what you are looking for. Or not. Whatever.

Navigation Text Too Small
Yellow Text on White
Missing Home Button
Vague Content
No Clear Purpose
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Technical Performance and Compatibility

Broken Links: The Dead End Problem

  • What They Are: Links that lead to error pages (404 errors) instead of content
  • Why They Matter: Broken links frustrate users and signal poor maintenance
  • Testing Tools: W3C Link Checker and online tools can scan websites for broken links

Mobile Responsiveness: Phone-First Design

  • Mobile Traffic: Over 60% of web traffic now comes from mobile devices
  • Responsive Design: Sites should automatically adjust layout for different screen sizes
  • Testing: Use browser developer tools to preview how sites look on phones

Cross-Browser Testing

  • Browser Differences: Chrome, Safari, Firefox, and Edge may display sites slightly differently
  • Essential Testing: At minimum, test your website in Chrome (most popular) and one other browser
  • Progressive Enhancement: Core functionality should work everywhere, with enhancements for modern browsers
The Device Simulator

Drag the slider to resize the browser window. Watch how a "Good Site" adapts its layout, while a "Bad Site" breaks!

Good Site Bad Site
GoodStore - Online Shopping

Categories:

Electronics

Clothing

Books

Product 1
Product 2
Product 3
Product 4
BadStore
Electronics Clothing Books Games Movies Music Home Kitchen Garden Automotive
Product 1
Product 2
Product 3
Product 4
Product 5
Desktop View (500px)
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Evaluating the Interface (UI)

User Interface (UI) refers to the visual elements and controls that users interact with. A well-designed interface is intuitive and consistent.

Consistency: The Familiar Friend

  • Color Scheme: All pages should use the same colors for buttons, links, and headers
  • Typography: Headings, body text, and captions should use consistent fonts and sizes
  • Button Styles: All buttons should look the same — do not mix styles!

Intuitive Design: Predictable Placement

  • Logo: Usually top-left, clicking it returns to the homepage
  • Search Bar: Top-center or top-right — this is where users expect it
  • Navigation Menu: Horizontal across the top or vertical on the left
  • Icons: Use universally recognized symbols (house for home, magnifying glass for search)

Visual Hierarchy: What Stands Out?

  • Important First: Key information should be largest and most prominent
  • Grouping: Related items should be visually grouped together
  • Visual Cues: Colors, arrows, and size differences guide users' eyes
The UI Audit

Drag each element to its standard position on a webpage template.

🔵 Logo
🔍 Search Bar
📋 Navigation Menu
📄 Main Content
📋 Footer
Perfect! You placed all elements in their standard positions.
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CSEC Exam Prep: The Evaluation Report

Syllabus Objective

"Evaluate a website for accuracy, comprehensiveness, and user-friendliness" — This is a common short-answer question topic!

Practice Question

Identify three criteria you would use to evaluate the reliability of information found on a website.

Hint: Think Authority, Currency, and Objectivity!

Sample Answer

"To evaluate reliability, I would check: (1) Authority — who authored the content and are they qualified? (2) Currency — when was it published or last updated? (3) Objectivity — is there bias or is the information presented neutrally with sources?"

Terminology Check

Navigation

The menus and links that help users move through a website

Credibility

The quality of being trustworthy and believed to be accurate

Responsiveness

A website's ability to adapt its layout for different screen sizes

Accessibility

Designing websites so people with disabilities can use them effectively

The Evaluation Quiz

Test your knowledge with these quick questions!

Click "Start Quiz" to begin!
Score: 0/5

Quiz Complete!

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Summary: The Final Checklist

The Takeaway

A beautiful site is useless if it is inaccurate, and an accurate site is useless if it is impossible to navigate. Always evaluate both content quality AND user experience when assessing websites for your research.

Website Evaluation Checklist

  • Can you identify the author and their qualifications?
  • Is there a publication or update date?
  • Does the site cite sources for its claims?
  • Is the navigation clear and consistent?
  • Is the text easy to read (contrast, size, spacing)?
  • Does the site load quickly (under 3 seconds)?
  • Is the site mobile-friendly?
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