I saw an article on WaSP a few days ago, which was an interview with Tim, the director of the electronic communications department at Queen's University in Canada. The article starts from the standardization construction of the Queen's University website. Interested friends can read the original article.
This reminds me of the standardization status of domestic university websites. I did a simple comparison/survey. I selected the top 10 universities in the country (according to the "2006 Chinese University Evaluation" published by Wu Shulian et al.) and conducted a survey on their homepages (only the homepage, excluding other pages). Validation of HTML and CSS, with some other parameters, the results are as follows:
This is the gap, and the gap behind these pages is often overlooked. But what puzzles me is why is the gap at the front of the page so big? Ugly is just one word! Take Peking University as an example. Its homepage is like a campus version of hao123, listing a lot of website addresses of various departments within the school, nothing more. It does not reflect the history of Peking University, the humanities of Peking University and the status of Peking University in the minds of countless students in China. At this time, if you look at the website of Queen's University, you will understand what a "world of difference" is!