An in-depth usability evaluation of the Massachusetts Court System section of mass.gov, focused on the experience of jurors and self-represented litigants.
Mass.gov/courts is the visited by 4.7 million users annually. The web team at mass.gov was aware that the users' experiences could be improved for self-represented litigants and citizens responding to a jury duty summons.
MY Role
User interviews, research synthesis, presenter
Methods
Expert review, usability testing
Client
Mass.gov/courts
TEAM
John Amir-Abbassi, Jen Kent, Wendy Look, and Natalie Wadia
Expert review: Each team member conducted an independent usability evaluation using the Structured Heuristic Evaluation of Online Documentation by Kantner et al. (2002). We then combined our findings, identified themes, and wrote a full report and presentation for our counterparts at mass.gov/courts.
Usability testing: Based on the expert review findings, we developed a within-subjects, formative usability study, including a test plan, screener, and moderator guide. 14 participants completed eight tasks in a 60-minute, moderated, in-person session. Half of the tasks focused on self-represented litigants, and the other half on responding to a jury summons. We tallied cumulative results and identified qualitative trends, as well as task completion and difficulty metrics.
Of all the usability issues identified, the most critical issue is difficulty with PDFs. PDFs used throughout the site were hard to search and navigate because they were optimized for print. Users expressed frustration and were unable to complete tasks related to finding information in a PDF, with some users giving up completely. Additionally, users expressed frustration when PDFs wouldn’t open.
Recommendations:
We also found instances of confusion with the site’s information architecture stemming from information scattered across multiple pages and organized in non-intuitive ways, requiring participants to read and consume information they did not always find relevant.
Recommendations:
Our findings presentation to the mass.gov/courts web team was well received and provided recommendations for both quick wins and long-term issues to address. While issues related to broken PDFs stemmed from larger technical problems, they immediately implemented some of our recommendations around content organization. From here, we recommend they do a card sort study to further clarify information architecture issues.
Access to the court system is an inalienable right as a resident of Massachusetts. Throughout my work, I want to have an impact in ways that matter and improve people's lives, and this project fulfilled that.
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