... part of George North's and Teacher Explorer Center's Web site at UNO ... Updated: October 6, 1999
WWW Site Development for Educators EDCI 4993-604, Fall 1999
4:30 to 7:15, Wednesdays
Syllabus
and in class activities for October 6.
Why do you want to print this document? It is linked to many other important documents -- your printed copy is linked to the death of trees.

Your Home Page -- Links to Explore -- Search the Web -- more than visits.

Important Dates | eMail -- | George | Emma | Attendance | Check Your Mail |
| Top | Texts and Resources | Course Description | Objectives |
| Evaluation | Grading | Who is George North | Class Web Pages |

Date Description
Prior Weeks 10 class meetings left -- not counting this one!

This Week



Wednesday, October 6



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Questions?

Group Project Teams
  • College of Education
  • Helene Tucker, leader
  • Freddy Waguespack
  • Kellie Lee
  • Earl Hart
  • Foundations, Counseling & Administration
  • Tammy Marullo, leader
  • Janette Patterson
  • Tom Griffen
  • Joe Navis
  • Special Education
  • Sequau Adams, leader
  • Roy Wilhite
  • Diane Smith
  • Chip Farman
  • Curriculum & Instruction
  • Ann Sissac, leader
  • Walter Hingle
  • Linda Blakeley
  • Karen Babbitt
  • Malika Mahoney
  • House Keeping
  • Does everyone know that Thursday and Friday (Oct 8 & 9) are mid-semester break, no class, likely no faculty on campus, library open.
  • Our mid-term exam is next week -- check syllabus date Oct 13 for details.
  • You will have two written assignments due before class next week -- make sure you know what is expected.
  • Next week everyone will give an oral report to our class about their Individual WWW site project. Include in your report many of the following. Why you consider your site important? Who are the expected users of the site? How will they benefit? What tools will you use to do development? Why did you choose these tools? When will you FTP your progress to our web server?
  • Who is successful in using FTP to access our web server?
  • How are you doing with picking a Web authoring tool?
  • Netscape Composer is included free with Communicator -- and includes a FTP client.
  • Anybody remember the browser wars?
  • Ask me about complexity and reuse.
  • This week
  • Topic: Organizing files for a web site.
  • Why is it that html is constructed of ONLY ascii text -- yet web pages are multi-media.
  • Where do I keep the graphics for my web pages.
  • I have 4 books to loan -- they all deal with design and building web sites. You are expected to report to our class the week after borrowing a book -- what you found interesting (not interesting).
  • Tonight, we will pick our teams for the Group Semester Project
  • Lab Assignments
  • Practice using FTP in class to copy files to and from our Web Server. I expect everyone to let me know tonignt how they did.
  • Every week
  • Bring a floppy disk to class ... one that you use on your own computer at home, school, work ... from the computer you plan to use to develop your own web site.
  • Send me (gnorth@mac.com) an eMail message using this Attendance link. This is how I will know for sure you were in class. The text of this eMail should be your guess -- What is the picture of the week?

  • Assignment Due by 4:30, Sunday October 10:

    Keeping in mind your needs as a student at UNO, make yourself familiar with that part of our College of Education's Web Site that your project group will update during the remainder of our semester together.

    UNO's College of Education web site has five major components. One for each the four departments, and one for the college itself. You should notice that each has a different design theme. Visit every page of your project team's site -- not including external links. Draw yourself a map of the site. Make notes of what you like and dislike. Include information about what is missing or needs updating. Bring you notes to our next class.

    In an eMail to Emma, briefly describe your findings and insights about how to imporve our college's web presence.


    Thursday, October 7 Mid-semester break
    Friday, October 8 Mid-semester break
    Monday, October 11 Mid-semester examination period
    Tuesday, October 12 Mid-semester examination period
    Wednesday, October 13 Progress report -- a several paragraph description of your personal web site project, eMail'ed to Emma. This is your mid-term exam, check Evaluation for details.
  • A short description of the site.
  • Why you consider this site important?
  • Who are the expected users of the site?
  • How will they benefit?
  • What tools will you use to do development?
  • Why did you choose these tools?
  • When will you FTP your progress to our web server?

  • George will eMail your mid-term exam grade (0-10). Due date: before the end of class Wednesday, October 13.
    Wednesday, October 13 Mid-semester examination period
    Thursday, October 14 Mid-semester examination period
    Friday, October 15 Mid-semester examination period
    Wednesday, October 20 TBA

    John Dewey's Birthday
    Monday, October 25 Final Drop Date?
    Wednesday, October 27 TBA
    Friday, October 29 My Wife's Birthday, visit her Web Site
    Wednesday, November 3 TBA

    Phase 1 Registration for 2000 Spring Semester begins.
    Wednesday, November 10 TBA
    Monday, November 15 My Father's Birthday, visit his Web SIte
    Wednesday, November 17 TBA
    Saturday, November 20 Last day of Saturday classes
    Wednesday, November 24 TBA
    Thursday, November 25 Thanksgiving
    Wednesday, December 1 Our last regular class: Semester Project due at beginning of class (4:30 PM)
    Self-evaluations due
    Friday, December 3 Last day of regular classes
    Monday, December 6 Final Exams
    Tuesday, December 7 Final Exam

    Guess
    Wednesday, December 8 Our Final Exam: What will it be?
    Thursday, December 9 Final Exams
    Friday, December 10 Final Exams
    Tuesday, December 14 Final grades available on TOPS


    Prior Dates Description
    Wednesday, August 25 see Old Syllabus
    Wednesday, September 1 see Old Syllabus
    Monday, September 6 Labor Day
    Wednesday, September 8 see Old Syllabus
    Friday, September 10 Final date to drop courses or resign and not have courses recorded.
    Saturday, September 11 Rosh HaShanah
    Monday, September 13 Final date to change from credit to audit.
    Wednesday, September 15 see Old Syllabus
    Monday, September 20 Yom Kippur

    Final date to resign and get 50% refund.
    Wednesday, September 22 see Old Syllabus
    Monday, September 27 My son Denny's birthday, visit his web site
    Monday, October 4 Final date to resign and get a 25% refund.
    Wednesday, September 29 see Old Syllabus




    Texts & Resources | Top | Important Dates | Course Description | Objectives |
    | Evaluation | Grading | Who is George North | Class Web Pages |


    Required reading for this class will be selected World Wide Web sites as indicated each week in the syllabus. These will be found using the link at the top of this page titled "Links to Explore." From time to time we will mention and discuss some of the available texts covering this topic. You are encouraged to bring to class any books you find interesting and share these with the rest of us. Bring books and other recourses to class is one way to satisfy the class participation requirement.



    Course Description | Top | Important Dates | Texts & Resources | Objectives |
    | Evaluation | Grading | Who is George North | Class Web Pages |


    Prerequisites:
  • Knowledgeable in the use of computers
  • An eMail address
  • Good work ethic
  • This course is intended to help educators acquire a working knowledge of electronic Information Networks. Begun in 1989 by Tim Berners-Lee, the World Wide Web (WWW or W3) didn't appear in popular culture until after 1995. Today, web site addresses seem to be everywhere. Do you really know what -- http://www.ed.uno.edu/index.html -- is?

    We will discuss how teachers can use WWW sites in curricula development. Especially, we will attempt to show how developing WWW sites themselves will make teachers more productive. There is a substantial initial investment in building your own web sites, but once started, it will be easier for you and "for others" to reuse your work. It may be "for others" is most significant. Not only do educators directly benefit from their own work, they benefit from all the other educator built web sites. One example of a great web site to link to you own site is: http://ed.uno.edu/. This is the hyper linked part of WWW.

    We will learn that the WWW is just one example of a hyper linked environment ... that the web is the best known prototype of an information network. It is my expectation that you will come to understand that no one benefits from information networks more than educators.

    Most of this class will be conducted as a business, we will be web publishers. We will be planners, copy writers, editors, graphic artists, and technologists. We will learn what is a web server, how to build one, what is needed to start a web site from scratch. We will also discuss what are the future WWW trends.

    Information Networks:
  • provide educators with access to abundant resources;
  • provide students with new ways to participate in knowledge creation;
  • provide simultaneous access to information and publishing;
  • bring us closer to the goal of Universal Education;
  • empower students, decreasing the roll of teachers as purveyors of knowledge;
  • make teachers and students partners in learning;
  • join together teachers, students, parents, and community members;
  • build Communities of Learners in a single location (the classroom);
  • join learning scenarios with abundant resources;
  • The goal is learning -- taking place in a social context where knowledge is created from information with action guided by pedagogy.

    We will build information networks!




    Objectives | Top | Important Dates | Texts & Resources | Course Description |
    | Evaluation | Grading | Who is George North | Class Web Pages |


    Helping educators develop the skills needed to build WWW sites for themselves (home pages), for their classrooms, and for their schools are the foundation for the objectives of this class.

    Students will be given the opportunity:
  • To develop the vocabulary needed to understand the terminology found in web site development.
  • To improve competency in identifying appropriate uses of WWW in their classroom.
  • To improve conceptual understanding of all the skills and technologies needed to operate a WWW server.
  • To improve the computer skills needed to aid in classroom management.
  • To build the skills needed to teach other educators about WWW site development.
  • To demonstrate competency in a broad range of the above skills.




  • Evaluation | Top | Important Dates | Texts & Resources | Course Description |
    | Objectives | Grading | Who is George North | Class Web Pages |


    Please note that it is possible to earn more than 100 points. Read carefully each of the six evaluation areas below. Hint ... follow the links to details of each area.

  • 30 points - Individual WWW site project -- Build a personal WWW site
  • 10 points - Mid-semester exam -- Who will be first to ask me about it?
  • 30 points - Group semester project: rebuild College of Education WWW site.
  • ------------ Final exam -- "In class presentation"
  • 20 points - Participation -- attendance and contributions to in class activities.
  • 20 points - Emma -- Weekly written assignments posted to our list server.

  • Final grade will be based in large on student's self-evaluation. Remember, evaluations are due at the beginning of our last class -- see important dates above for exact date.



    Grading | Top | Important Dates | Texts & Resources | Course Description |
    | Objectives | Evaluation | Who is George North | Class Web Pages |


  • A = 90 - 100 points
  • B = 80 - 89
  • C = 70 - 79
  • etc.




  • Who is
    George North
    | Top | Important Dates | Texts & Resources | Course Description |
    | Objectives | Evaluation | Grading | Class Web Pages |


    Today, I am Ph.D. candidate in the College of Education, Curriculum & Instruction. In my past life, for 30 years, I was a systems analyst, programmer, Information Systems manager, and computer consultant. I earned a B.S. in Liberal Arts from the University of the State of New York, and a M.S. in Computer Science from the University of New Orleans. My goal is to teach at the college level ... to help educators integrate Information networks into their daily lives as teachers and learners.

    George North
    Office: ED 308A
    Phone: 280-6523
    Home: 834-1891
    eMail: gnorth@mac.com
    Web Site: http://georgenorth.net/~george/georgeHome.php
    Office Hours:
    Monday: 3:30 - 4:30
    Monday: 7:15 - 8:15 PM
    Also by appointment



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