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today's schedule
1:00-2:00 OVERVIEW
Lloyd's spiel: your web project
Tom's talk: open source
discussion & questions
weblogs
2:00-2:10 break
2:10-3:00 INDIVIDUAL work
journal Q of the day
convert your essay to hypertext
upload to the server
3:00-3:15 photo op and break
3:15-3:55 GROUP work
looking at some of your pages
talk about possible gp. projs.
group project discussion
homework announcement
3:55-4:00 last microbreak
4-4:30 free period
play/gametime
get to know your
groupmates & TAs
you can see more pictures from yesterday's lab session here. the jpgs go from "1.jpg" through "18.jpg" -- just increment them by changing the jpg title at the end of the URL.
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important announcements
- when writing your e-mail journals, please be sure to include your real name somewhere in the body of the message. we've gotten quite a few e-mails which we can't match to individual students.
- always check the day's schedule page for the journal question and homework assignment for the next class.
today's links
- Tom's essay on Open Source
This link will bring you offsite to our course weblog. We'll talk a little bit about this intriguing technology in class today.
- journal question
The link above leads to the daily journal question page. to reprise what was said yesterday, plan on spending 10-15 minutes writing a response and e-mailing it to me. this aspect of the class is a very important one, which i'd like you to take quite seriously. as ATDP is in a school of education, we who work here are keenly interested in how students learn, what they are interested in, and what they think about many topics of interest.
- homework for Fri. 6.23
Think carefully about your website project in this class. Write a paragraph or two about the topic of your website. Who is your target audience? What elements would you like to use in your site? (Text, graphics, multimedia, data, etc.)
E-mail me (either from home or in class) this written statement. (lloyd@uclink4.berkeley.edu)
Make an outline of the structure of your site (draw this literally, on paper). A typical drawing outline includes a main page with sub-pages one level down, and sub-sub-pages two or more levels down. Your site doesn't have to be very complicated -- just well-organized and well thought-out.
Submit your drawing/outline in class on Friday.
NOTE: Your personal web page project will start with the drawing, and then you will proceed to build the pages, beginning with the home page. If your site will have many different pages, consider organizing each set of similar or related pages into separate directories or folders. If you plan to have a lot of images or multimedia files, consider placing all such files in their own separate image or multimedia folder.
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