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VIDEOS

All videos need titles. Only use a caption if you think it's needed to explain further. Keep them short and avoid using questions. Only use the name in the caption.

Use these kinds of titles as a guide:

Researching at Victoria’s Marine lab

Building games with industry experts

Studying where New Zealand law is made

Using IT to innovate

Caption - Professor Benoit Aubert, Head of School of Information Management, says organisational culture is the most important thing to enable innovation.

or if they don't quite work you can deviate.........

Fourth year student’s project— Too Crowded

Creativity in maths

Choose a still for the cover. Titles cannot sit over a face.


TRIPLE CROWN

This block has been approved by the powers.  You can tweak it slightly if you need to.

“You’ll be joining the Victoria Business School—one of just 72 business schools worldwide that hold the 'Triple Crown' of international business education accreditations. You can be confident your degree will stand up against the best around the world.

Find out more about accreditations and what they mean for you [http://www.victoria.ac.nz/vbs/about/welcome/accreditation]”
[insert three logos from uploads box on Economics and Finance About page]

 

QUOTES AND STORIES

Use the best quote you can find to illustrate/colour what you are writing about, regardless of whether you are using the person on the People and Stories page. 

HOWEVER you need to have at least one quote on the Topic /About page that does link to the P and S page.  Otherwise the reader may miss the P and S page altogether. 

If your quote came from a story you are using on the People and Stories page - add the text [Full story] (in square brackets) after the attibution so they know to add this link.

All staff quotes must link to either the full story on People and Stories, or if you aren't using them there, link it to the staff profile. (choose the best one and copy the link in). An example is

Professor Peter Whiteford, Lecturer in Media Studies 

[Linkto:http://www.victoria.ac.nz/seftms/about/staff/peter-whiteford] Staff profile

Remember to check whether the person has more than one staff profile and use the best one. Peter, for example, has a second that is empty except for contact details, despite it being the 'high' position.

All staff stories on the P and S pages must also link to their profile. This means that for a staff member quoted on the About page you might link to the full story and then from there to the profile. 

 

Naming conventions for quotes and stories.

 

HYPHENS

Use a hyphen when a noun follows:

an up-to-date collection

a state-of-the-art museum

BUT:

The collection is up to date.

Their studio is state of the art.

 

USE OF CAPITALS WHEN TALKING ABOUT SUBJECTS

Use caps when you are referring to anything which is an area of study or a subject. Use lower case when you are referring to the noun in a general sense.  It's true that sometimes it's not that clear which you are doing - in this case just use your best judgement!

eg

Geophysics explores the atmosphere and the ground beneath our feet—combining maths and physics with the outdoors. You'll get a solid grounding in the basics of Earth Sciences, Maths and Physics, and then choose to focus on either Meteorology or Solid Earth.

If you want to learn about the Earth and how it works, while working outdoors and honing your skills in maths and physics, Geophysics—Solid Earth is a good choice for you.


FUN FACTS - SOURCES

  1. We name sources for fun facts except those that don’t need it (eg the number of minutes it takes to walk somewhere)
  2. We include the date
  3. If there is a suitable site to link to, we just name the organisation the fact came from and then link to the page (or a pdf if necessary)
  4. If there is not a website, we include just the name of the organisation and the year,  or the publication as per APA style eg Tourism NZ, 2015, Tourism in Aotearoa Today (there will be very few if any of these)

Egs

One in fifteen

Number of working New Zealanders employed in the tourism industry

Tourism NZ, 2015

 

One in fifteen

Number of working New Zealanders employed in the tourism industry

Tourism NZ, 2015, Tourism in Aotearoa Today     (if no link)

  

30 to 50 trillion

The number of bacteria in a human approximately equals the number of cells in that body—about 30 to 50 trillion.

ScienceNews, 2016

 

30 to 50 trillion

The number of bacteria in a human approximately equals the number of cells in that body—about 30 to 50 trillion. 

ScienceNews, February 6, 2016                 (if no link)

 

Sources for rankings

We don't need to name teh source when talking about the PBRF rankings. i.e. Victoria is top in NZ for research quality. We do need to obviously name the source in teh body text when talking about QS rankings.

Decision note from Tania:

I’ve had a chat to Tash about this and then Alida. I think you just carry on as you are and don’t reference the ranking except in fun facts. We haven’t done so in the past on the website re body copy and that information is there to find if people want to look for it. I also don’t think adding PBRF (or in full) adds a lot of value, as most people have no clue what this is either way (especially our main audience of school leavers).

 

META DATA FOR PROGRAMME PAGES

Form now on please write a 160 character meta description for the degree pages. Try to include explore Vic Uni now but if you don't have enough space cut it out.

 

 

 

 

 


 

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