Design and Development Tools II ET 703
Preparing a WWW LessonThe goal for this activity is to develop some pages that will provide information about a specific topic. Think of this as a lesson for your students or for a group of people at your workplace. You should develop your pages with the idea that your students will visit the pages and learn something about the topic you present.
You should post your lesson webpages on your own domain. If you followed the suggestion for the WWW Personal pages, then I suggest that you make another folder for your lesson.
Example for WWW Personal Pages- http://www.senn.com/ET703/PersonalPage/
Example for WWW Lesson Pages with the topic = Solar System- http://www.senn.com/ET703/SolarSystem/
Section 1: Title Page - 1 page
Preparing a WWW LessonThe goal for this activity is to develop some pages that will provide information about a specific topic. Think of this as a lesson for your students or for a group of people at your workplace. You should develop your pages with the idea that your students will visit the pages and learn something about the topic you present.
You should post your lesson webpages on your own domain. If you followed the suggestion for the WWW Personal pages, then I suggest that you make another folder for your lesson.
Example for WWW Personal Pages- http://www.senn.com/ET703/PersonalPage/
Example for WWW Lesson Pages with the topic = Solar System- http://www.senn.com/ET703/SolarSystem/
Section 1: Title Page - 1 page
- You must use the correct file name! Use <default.html>.
- Include information about yourself and your class. (The class you teach or the group for whom the lesson is designed)
- Indicate the title of your lesson.
- Have some introductory statement about your lesson.
- Make a link to the main part of your lesson (section 2).
- Make a link to a page of related sites (section 3).
- Make a link to your school or work page.
- Include at least one graphic.
- Use a line to separate this section from the information above.
- Center the URL and Date at the bottom of the file. Notice in the example below that the URL does not contain the file name, index.html
Example -- http://www.senn.com/ET703/SolarSystem/ (April, 2015)
- The file name is not critical here. For example "DwarfPlanets.html", "sec2_1.html"
- Include information about yourself and your class to provide some context for the lesson. (The class you teach)
- Indicate the title of your lesson.
- Include the "meat" of your lesson here. Remember that it should be something that would allow your students to learn about your topic. You are not limited to one page here and may have a series of pages if you like.
- Make a link to the title page (Section 1) and the related links page (Section 3).
- Include at least one graphic.
- Use a line to separate this section from the information above.
- Center the URL and Date at the bottom of the file. Notice in the example below that the URL does not contain the file name, index.html
Example -- http://www.senn.com/ET703/SolarSystem/DwarfPlanets.html (April, 2015)
- The file name is not critical here. To ensure no one else uses the same name, you might use the format <name.html>. For example "jones3.html" or "sect3.html".
- Include information about yourself and your class. (The class you teach)
- Indicate the title of your lesson.
- Include at least three related links. You should describe the sites and then make links to them.
- Make a link to the title page (Section 1).
- Include at least one graphic.
- Use a line to separate this section from the information above.
- Center the URL and Date at the bottom of the file. Notice in the example below that the URL does not contain the file name, index.html
Example -- http://www.senn.com/ET703/SolarSystem/Links.html (April, 2015)