The International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences has named the Voice of America Special English service’s Web site an “Official Honoree” in its 10th annual Webby Awards. “Our Web site is extremely popular with people around the world,” said Rochelle Gollust, chief of Special English. “We’re very proud that it’s been recognized.”
The Web site, www.VOANews.com/SpecialEnglish , is a tool for non-native speakers to practice and improve their American English. It acts in concert with VOA’s Special English radio and television programs. The Web site provides both transcripts and audio of radio programs, downloads of television programs, English language learning links, word games, and a dictionary of the words used in programming. It is one of the most popular destinations within www.VOANews.com , receiving an average of 500,000 visits per month.
The Special English service helps VOA listeners and viewers around the world learn American English through coverage of world news, science, and American life and history. It uses a 1,500-word vocabulary, simple sentence structure, and a slower pace when read on air. Television programs also feature slow scrolling captions.
The Webby Awards, hailed by Time magazine as the “online Oscars,” were created by the Academy in 1996 to honor “excellence in Web design, creativity, usability and functionality.” The Academy consists of 500 leading Web experts, business figures and others. In the past, the Academy has recognized Amazon.com, eBay, Google, BBC News, PBS and CNN.
This year, the Academy received a record number of entries from all 50 American states and over 40 other countries. Of the more than 5,500 entries, fewer than 20 percent were named Official Honorees. The judging criteria included “content, structure and navigation, visual design, functionality, interactivity and overall experience.”