Internet / Web Page Development II: CIS233DA

Instructor: Phil Waclawski
email: waclawski@mail.mc.maricopa.edu
http://www.felitaur.com/ (Instructors home page)
http://www.felitaur.com/internet.html Course Home Page

Section: 3458 Tues 7:10-9:50pm Room BA1W
Lab and Office Hours See Schedule
Office: BPO 26
Office Phone: 480 461-7468

Materials
You need to have a USB flash drive. We use them for many of our classes, and floppy's are on the endangered species list.

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The Required Book(s):

"Web Development & Design Foundations with XHTML, 3rd Edition" by Terry Felke-Morris, pub by Addison Wesley

Rough Schedule (expect some modifications)
Week of: Topic Reading/etc
Jan 14 Set up email accounts, Review Internet, Web, URLs, start a template page Chapter 1, start 2
Jan 21 XHTML Basics, Links(Monday Martin Luther King Jr. Holiday) Chapter 2, start 3
Jan 28 XHTML Tables Chapter 3 Tables/Images
Feb 4 XHTML Color and Visual Elements, Graphics programs
Chapter 4, plus Gimp demo Tables/Images
Feb 11 XHTML Frames and why they are not used as much (ADA and other issues) Chapter 5 Frames
Feb 18 XHTML Forms (Monday Presidents Day Holiday) Chapter 6 Forms
Feb 25 XHTML continued ?
March 3 Website Design Chapter 7
March 10 SPRING BREAK WEEK
March 17 Cascading Style Sheets Chapter 9
March 24 Cascading Style Sheets-page layout Chapter 10
March 31 Website Development Chapter 8
April 7 Web Media and Interactivity Chapter 11
April 14 E-Commerce Overview Chapter 12
April 21 Promotion for Web Developers Chapter 13
April 28 A brief look at Javascript Chapter 14
May 6 Final Presentations (Attendance required to receive any grade for class)  

MCCD Official Course Competencies: CIS233DA

  1. Create and incorporate advanced web design features and enhancements. (I-III, VIII)
  2. Explain and use text editors, visual editors, and other tools for web development. (I-III, VIII)
  3. Explain the web development life cycle. (I-III, VIII)
  4. Explain steps and techniques for creating, publishing, and marketing web sites. (I, VIII)
  5. Describe features and uses of scripts, markup languages, and programming languages in the web development process. (IV)
  6. Explain web server types and management functions. (IV, VI)
  7. Maintain persistence through the use of databases and/or other methods. (IV, VI)
  8. Create multimedia and incorporate media technology into web pages. (V)
  9. Explain and use best practices for web page design and publishing. (VII)
  10. Explain international, social, technical, legal, and other issues related to web publishing. (VII)
  11. Describe careers in web development and e-commerce. (IX)

NOTE: Schedule and Assignments are Subject to Change
      I can change the above schedule and assignments as I feel is needed, in all cases ample warning will be given in class. In some cases, we end up covering the first book ahead of schedule, allowing us to start the html/web page portion early. If you fail to attend class and miss those notices, it's your fault. Always make sure to check with fellow students or the instructor when you get back for any changes to the schedule.

Open Lab Requirements
      As stated in the schedule, you are required to spend at least 1-2 additional hours in the open lab per class hour. There will be outside of class assignments and you will need to find time to do them. Expect to spend several hours a week on this course outside of class. I will be available during my lab hours for help, and possibly other times by arrangement.

Grading
      I grade on a straight scale based on percentage of total points. If you attend the classes, do the work, spend time every week in the open lab, you should do well in this course.
90%    A
80%    B
70%    C
60%    D
Below 60% is an F

Quizzes, Assignments and Final Website Project
      There will be several short "take to lab" quizzes, along with a variety of web page assignments that make up your grade, along with a final website project that will be roughly 50% of your grade.

**Important Course Policies**
      I assume everyone in class is a mature, professional person. While I feel confident no one will do any of the following, there are a few class policies to lay out.

      First, you CAN do some damage to our equipment in this course. Installing software on these machines is not permitted, and may lead to disciplinary action.

Attendance
      I will forever be continuing to build this class as we go. If you do not make attendance in class (and open lab) a priority, you will not do well in this course. I can't stress this enough. You knew when this class met when you signed up for it, so you have no excuse short of illness, death in the family etc. Please do everything you can to attend all classes.

Enrollment of District/College/Department Employees and their friends and relatives

      Are you a district employee, relative of a district employee or otherwise have a personal relationship with the instructor, instructors college etc? Please let the instructor know immediately so he can inform the district of any potential "enrollement irregularities".

Withdrawing From Class
       If you "disappear" without informing me, you will be withdrawn with a "W" or a "Y". I will only assign an "F" if you have attended the majority of the class, and you request that grade. It is YOUR responsibility to make sure you are properly withdrawn, or ask for a grade, if that is your wish. Unless prior arrangements are made, I will not give a "W" during the final week of class.

Class Fee Refund Policy
Please see the college handbook for refund policies and dates. Note that there is usually a VERY short period of time where you can drop and get any refund, let alone a full refund. It's your responsibility to keep track of these dates. For the summer they are just short of non-existent.

Change In Class Refund Policy

      Beginning Spring 2008, students will be charged tuition and fees when dropped from classes after the 100% refund period (whether through the purge process for non-payment or instructor removal for failure to attend).

Requesting your final Grade Early
      In accordance with FERPA (Federal education records privacy act) I can only give out grades to the student who earned them. So, if you want to request your grade by email (because you just will die if you have to wait for it to be available online ;), it MUST be done via the campus email system (username@mail.mc.maricopa.edu). Requests from any other email will be ignored.

Plagiarism and Cheating
      Check the college catalog for official school policies. Again, I don't expect this to be a problem, but if it does become a problem, I'll push for the most severe punishment the administration allows. Remember, using more than 4 words in a row without quoting (and including a source) is plagiarism.

Cell Phones, Pagers
      These have become a horrendous problem of late. ALL cell phones should be turned off during class time. You will get at most one warning. After that, I may consider either taking points away, or if it continues, withdrawing you from the class. You can live for a couple of hours without your phones (Just 3-4 years ago, hardly anyone had these blasted things, and yet civilization didn't collapse, so you can live without it for an hour or two). There may be periodic breaks for you to go outside and call if you need to do so. Pagers should be put on vibrate, but only if they are quiet when they buzz. Note, anyone actually ANSWERING the phone in class will be asked to leave immediately, and not to come back that day, or possibly ever.

Disciplinary Standards
      Students who violated the disciplinary standards of MCC (2006 college catalog) will be removed from class, and if appropriate, withdrawn. Misconduct for which students are subject to disciplinary action falls into the general areas of:

  1. Cheating on an examination, laboratory work, written work (plagiarism); falsifying, forging or altering college records.
  2. Actions or verbal statements which threaten the personal safety of any faculty, staff, students, or others lawfully assembled on the campus, or any conduct which is harmful, obstructive, disruptive to, or interferes with the educational process or institutional functions.
  3. Violation of Arizona statutes, and/or college regulations and policies.

General Standards Governing Use of Maricopa County Community College District Computer Resources Handbook:
      Maricopa's computing resources specifically prohibits: "Transmitting, storing or receiving data, or otherwise using computer resources in a manner that would constitute a violation of state or federal law, including (but not limited to) obscenity, defamation, threats, harassment and theft.

Violations of ANY provisions of the Standards, which are detailed in the Handbook, could result in immediate termination of a user's access to Maricopa's computing resources, as well as appropriate disciplinary or legal action.

Sexual Harassment Policy for Employees and Students
      The policy of the Maricopa Community Colleges is provide an educational, employment, and business environment free of unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual favors, and other verbal and/or physical conduct or communications constituting sexual harassment as defined and otherwise prohibited by local, state and federal law.

Sexual harassment by and between employees, students, employees and students, and campus visitors and students or employees is prohibited by this policy.

Violations of this policy may result in disciplinary action up to and including termination of employees, sanctions up to and including suspension or expulsion for students, and appropriate sanctions against campus visitors.

This policy is subject to constitutionally protected speech rights and principles of academic freedom. Questions about this policy may be directed to the Maricopa Community Colleges Equal Employment Opportunity/Affirmative Action (EEO/AA) Office.

Special Accommodations
      MCC complies with the ADA. Anyone who needs special accommodations should let the instructor and disability services know immediately to insure you have full and adequate opportunities to succeed in this course .

Murphy's Law of Computers
      Things go wrong and will. :) I have put in quite a few hours in the past developing course material. I will continue to put a great number of hours into the course (outside my scheduled hours). I want this to be a fun course, and a very useful one. However, I can't guarantee that everything will work, or that we will be able to do everything. I will do my utmost to test out material and assignments thoroughly before they are passed out, but things happen, web sites disappear, software doesn't work on the new computers, so things will be altered, edited, added and deleted from the above schedule. Changes will be put on the web pages as time permits, but they will be announced in class. Therefore, attendance is crucial.