Open beccagorton-1 opened 2 years ago
My question with this would be how this related to the proposition of GOV.UK (which therefore relates to the GOV.UK design system). A lot of these examples seem to relate to things that don't go on GOV.UK
What does not go on GOV.UK Your content or service must not go on GOV.UK if it:
I feel like some of these examples would be more appropriate for the standards for campaigns?
https://www.gov.uk/guidance/content-design/campaigns-on-gov-uk-standards-and-guidelines
I think this is definitely something worth talking about.
Our patterns, guidance and processes tend to focus on some use cases at the expense of others. For example -
Not to say that this is wrong - just that our patterns, guidance and processes emerged to help solve a specific set of problems, aligned to the GOV.UK proposition.
And that different solutions might work better for different use cases.
Hi - I'm a content designer and I work with @beccagorton-1.
@Vickyynz -the service we are building will sit on an education.gov.uk domain, and is built using the design system as it's a DfE service. It does, however, pass the "does it go on GOV.UK ?" test.
As @stephengill points out - it's just a different type of service to the ones that we usually associate with GOV.UK. It's not a transactional service. It's a non mandatory training course. The course is split into modules that are estimated to take an hour to complete.
We need users to:
These users work in early years education and are used to the colourful and stimulating resources they use with children. The standard design system/GOV.UK quote styles just weren't cutting it.
During our UR sessions we have repeatedly heard from users that they like elements like images, coloured boxes and the pull quotes shown here. They like them because they break up the page and are more visually interesting than plain text.
We've tested the same content without the visually stimulating elements and the pages don't hold user's attention as much as when they do have decoration.
When we've tested these quote styles in particular - users reacted positively to a style that emphasises the quote as something separate and different to the main content.
What
The DFE are building a training platform to upskill the early years workforce. In this training offer, there is a need for varying types of content, to help keep users engaged with the learning materials. We use pull quotes to highlight key theories and statements from frameworks.
The large blockquote style has a decorative speech mark, an outline and is indented from the body text. We use this for quotes that are a couple of sentences long.
The short quote is an adaptation of the inset text component, and is used for single sentence quotes.
Why