Web Page Production Class
10:30 to 12:00, Monday and Wednesday
weeks of June 16, 23, 30
Day 1
1. Discuss what students know about web pages, and computer experience to date.
2. Go over what an URL is and what each part of the address means.
3. Go over file types for the Internet: gif, jpg, html - what is a gif, jpg, html?
4. Pass out the page on DDITP, the code and the parts.
Call up the file on the screen. Show them the parts and have them put in place.
5. In the beginning, straight code was used. Since then, we have used wysiwyg web editors. The common ones are Dreamweaver, Front Page, Adobe Go-Live.
6. Websites require: address, place to sit, program to upload with.
Tripod, freeservers.com, geocities.com
7. Sign up for a free website.
Day 2
1. Make a folder in My Documents. Call it Web Class. Open that folder and make another folder. Call it images.
2. Show the structure of the page
www.inetarena.com/~kittycl/dditp
Have them build that page using Pagemill.
3. Scan images and download off of camera
4. Learned caveats: always use lower case in file names, and no spaces in file names. If spaces are needed, then use underscores.
 Day 3
1. Make a sketch of the first page (index.html) of the website.
James has started.
2. Start to build that page.
3. Go over taking a large picture and fixing it with Photoshop or Elements.
4. Upload the index.html to the Internet.
5. See progress so far. Chris James Nathan
  Day 4
1. Make a sketch of the first page (index.html) of the website.
James has started.
2. Start to build that page.
3. Go over taking a large picture and fixing it with Photoshop or Elements.
4. Upload the index.html to the Internet.
5. See progress so far. Chris James Nathan
  Day 5
1. Make a sketch of the first page (index.html) of the website.
James has started.
2. Start to build that page.
3. Go over taking a large picture and fixing it with Photoshop or Elements.
4. Upload the index.html to the Internet.
5. See progress so far. Chris James Nathan
  Day 6
1. Make a sketch of the first page (index.html) of the website.
James has started.
2. Start to build that page.
3. Go over taking a large picture and fixing it with Photoshop or Elements.
4. Upload the index.html to the Internet.
5. See progress so far. Chris James Nathan
 Homepage | Web Page Production Class | Science | Philosophy | Resources | Tutoring Schedule | Contact Us