With WIP-II course requirements mostly coming from, and being delivered through, COO the focus is now on subjects. This page (and it's children) are to document our analysis around subjects (whereas the analysis of courses is mostly in the COO workspace).
Two authoritative sources
The initial discovery identified two authoritative sources as contenders for our master list of subjects (note that this is distinct from the content about subjects).
Web subject listing
This is really an index of subject pages on our website and the analysis found the following:
- Accurate at a point in time: Therefore gradually becomes inaccurate. This is probably due to some process gaps and also lack of "rules" on what ought to be referenced as a subject.
- Subject data surfaces in different places: And does not always seem to be from the same master, leading to confusion and a poor impression.
- Different paths to subject give different results: Maybe the same as above.
- Alternative terms are not handled well (seems to be a hang-over from a paper listing, nit designed for the web.
- Related subjects seem to be manually entered and are used inconsistently (although consistency is higher with a faculty).
- Is sometimes a "hybrid" subject, leaving the reader uncertain if it is a subject with more than one term/focus, two subjects or something else.
All that said, this approach has merit and could be made to work.
Publication subject listings
Subjects are listed in many of our publications (sometimes split in to undergraduate and postgraduate). They are based around "explaining course codes", or at least the first four (alpha) characters. While there is usually a relationship to established subjects (and the nature of this relationship is usually clear upon reading) there is not always one (see this table for an example). The analysis also found:
- Organised alphabetically by code to support the above purpose, but creating challenges finding an entry if you have a subject in mind.
- Historic, as in set at a point in time and slow to change. For evidence of this note the modern subjects that do not have a code (e.g.Ecology and Biodiversity)
- This could means that a modern subect has less print exposure than more established subjects
- Updated inconsistently, as in all schools are given the same opportunity to update content but not all respond with the same energy.
- Poor link back to the web, because we have not reconciled the differences very well.
A challenging assumption
Background documents for WIP-II identified a statement that this project should "rationalise the subject listing for a web/online purpose". In treating this as an assumption (even before figuring out what was meant by "rationalise"?)