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                                                                 Syllabus 
                                              •  Web Page Design 1  •  IMED 1316 50
                                                        ------------------------------------
                                                      Cisco Junior College - 2007 
                                                        Teacher: Robert C. Gates  
  
                                             Abilene Center Office #: 30. Office hours: 
  
                                                   •  Monday, Wednesday 8:30 - 9:30 am
                                                    •  Monday, Wednesday 2:30 - 3:30 pm
                                                     •  Tuesday, Thursday 8:30 - 9:30 am 
                                                      •  Tuesday, Thursday 11:15 am  - 12:30
                                               
Work Phone:  325 794 4400 extension 4427 during office hours only! Please do not leave voice mail.
 
Web Page: www.rcgates.com
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CIP CODE AREA: 11.0801 
COURSE LEVEL: Introductory 
COURSE NUMBER: IMED 1316 
COURSE TITLE: Web Page Design 1 
CREDIT HOURS: 3 - Lecture Hours: 1: Lab Hours: 4 
 
Course Description: Instruction in web design and related graphic design issues including 
mark-up languages, web-sites, and browsers. 
 
Prerequisite: none             Transferability: NA 
 
Course Structure: This course will meet for 1 hour a week for 16 weeks. As this is a hybrid 
course the four hours laboratory work required per week will be done at the student's discretion. 
 
Required Textbooks & Materials: FrontPage 2003 for Dummies ISBN 0-7645-3882-9
 
Recommended Optional Materials & Library Resources: Internet search for current concepts 
 
Learning Outcomes/Objectives: Identify how the internet functions with specific attention to the World Wide 
Web, e-mail, and file transfer: apply design techniques in the creation and optimization of graphics and other 
embedded elements for use in a web page: demonstrate the use of lists, tables, frames, and forms to create 
interactive web pages; create, design, test, and debug a web site, and identify the benefits and limitations of
various web page development software. 

 
SCANS (Secretary’s Commission on Achieving Necessary Skills) competencies: 
 
•   RESOURCES (Identifies, organizes, plans, and allocates resources): 
  
          C1 - Time: Selects goal-relevant activities, ranks them, allocates time, and prepares 
          and follows schedules. 
 
•  INFORMATIONAL (Acquires and uses information): 
  
          C5 - Acquires & evaluates Information 
          C6 - Organizes & maintains Information 
          C7 - Interprets and communicates information 
          C8 - Uses computers to process information 
•  INTERPERSONAL (Works with others):  None for this course 
 
•  SYSTEMS (Understands complex interrelationships):  None for this course 
 
•  TECHNOLOGY (Works with a variety of technologies):  None for this course 
 
•  BASIC SKILLS (Reads, writes, performs arithmetic and mathematical operations, listens, and speaks): 
  
          F1 - Reading: Locates, understands, and interprets written information in prose and in documents such as 
manuals, graphs, and schedules. 
          F2 - Writing: Communicates thoughts, ideas, information, and messages in writing; creates documents such 
as letters, directions, manuals, reports, graphs, and flow charts. 
          F3 - Arithmetic: Performs basic computations; uses basic numerical concepts such as whole numbers, etc. 
          F4 - Mathematics: Approaches practical problems by choosing appropriately from a variety of mathematical 
techniques. 
 
•  THINKING SKILLS (Thinks creatively, makes decisions, solves problems, visualizes, knows how to learn, 
and reasons): 
  
          F7 - Creative Thinking: Generates new ideas. 
          F8 - Decision making: Specifies goals and constraints, generates alternatives, considers risks, evaluates 
and chooses best alternative. 
          F9 - Problem solving: Recognizes problems and devises and implements plan of action. 
          F10 - Mental visualization: Seeing Things in the Mind’s Eye: Organizes and processes symbols, pictures, 
graphs, objects, and other information. 
          F11 - Knowing how to learn: Uses efficient learning techniques to acquire and apply new knowledge and skills. 
          F12 - Reasoning: Discovers a rule or principle underlying the relationship between two or more objects and 
applies it when solving a problem. 
 
•  PERSONAL QUALITIES (Displays responsibility, self-esteem, sociability, self-management, integrity, and honesty): 
  
          F13 - Responsibility: Exerts a high level of effort and perseveres towards goal attainment. 
          F14 - Self-Esteem: Believes in own self-worth and maintains a positive view of self. 
          F15 - Sociability: Demonstrates understanding, friendliness, adaptability, empathy, and politeness in group settings. 
          F16 - Self-Management: Assesses self accurately, sets personal goals, monitors progress, and exhibits self-control. 
          F17 - Integrity/Honesty: Chooses ethical courses of action. 
 
Methods of Assessment / Grading Policy
 
    •  Average of monthly assessment of progress grades: 90%     •  Final: 10% 
 
   •  The student will be sent an e-mail within a week of the assessment cutoff date. The e-mail will give the monthly 
assessment grade along with comments & suggestions on the work done. 
   •  There is not, nor will there be made any provision for extra credit work in this class. 
 
Attendance Policy
 
  Prompt and regular class attendance is considered necessary for satisfactory work. It is the responsibility of the instructor 
to keep an accurate and comprehensive record of attendance. 
 
Cisco Junior College recognized that absence from class may occur due to illness, death or illness in the immediate family, 
observance of a religious holiday, or participation in a College-sponsored activity. (Absences due to participation in a 
college-sponsored activity must be authorized by the Dean of Instruction.) 
 
When absences occur due to the above, the student is allowed to make up work missed; the instructor may require the work 
to be made up within two weeks. 
 
•  If the instructor deems the student failing due to excessive absences and/or failure to make up work due to absences, the 
student WILL be dropped from class after 9 absences in this course. 
 
The student will receive a grade of “W” for the course if withdrawn before the “last day to drop with a “W” & “F”if withdrawn after 
the first day to drop with a W.” 
 
Three tardies may constitute an absence. Absences immediately before or after a holiday may be counted as double absences. 
 
Major Units of Study 
 
•  Structure of the internet, web site design, web site implementation, & web site maintenance. 
 
Academic Integrity:
 
    It is the intent of Cisco Junior College to foster a spirit of complete honesty & a high standard of integrity. The attempt of 
students to present as their own any work they have not honestly performed is regarded by the faculty & administration as a 
serious offense & renders the offender liable to serious consequences, possibly suspension. All student conduct will support 
academic honesty. Any student who is cheating on an exam or uses thoughts or words or works of others without proper 
citation will receive an F or zero for that work & may fail the course. The instructional goal is that each student completes 
his or her own work in order to master the skills needed to compete in the job market. 
 
Student Conduct    
 
    Students are expected to take responsibility in helping to maintain a classroom environment that is conductive to learning. 
In order to assure that all students have the opportunity to gain from the time spent in class, students are prohibited from 
making offensive remarks, reading material not related to the class, sleeping, having cell phone conversations, beepers 
(not on vibrate) or engaging in any kind of distracting behavior. Inappropriate behavior in the classroom shall result, at a minimum, 
in a request to leave class. A more detailed list of inappropriate behaviors is found in the current student hand book. 
 
Students with Special Needs   
 
   Students who qualify for specific accommodations under the Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA) should notify their instructor 
the first week of class. It is the student's responsibility to provide the necessary documentation to the Special Populations 
Coordinator. 
 
Changes to the Syllabus  
 
    The above procedures are subject to change if deemed appropriate by the instructor. 

 

  This site was created by Robert C. Gates - 02/11/07