Principles and practices for designing, developing, and evaluating interactive desktop and mobile Web pages. Theories and models for color, styles, and interactive page elements, such as forms.
Principles and practices for designing, developing, and evaluating interactive desktop and mobile Web pages. Theories and models for color, styles, and interactive page elements, such as forms. Students create and evaluate Web pages using current technologies, such as XHTML/HTML5, CSS, JavaScript, AJAX, and Adobe Flash.
As a premier research and education program for the 21st century field of information, the School of Information is changing the future by engaging the present and preserving the past.
What is an iSchool?
We are living in an Information Age. Information systems and technologies are fundamentally shaping the behaviors of individuals, organizations, and society — impacting how we interact and connect, learn and develop new knowledge, conduct business, engage with culture, participate in politics and government, and much more.
Research and teaching at the School of Information explore:
the interactions of people and information
the processes of managing and organizing information for meaning and use
the impact of new technologies and behaviors on individuals, organizations, and society
Our students learn to design new tools, analyze human activities, organize information, and ensure technology serves its intended users.
This course explains the basic tools needed to create a website, including HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. It also discusses source control using Git and its workflow, as well as basic concepts related to designing a site for user experience (UX), including accessibility concerns.
You will learn the theory of web design and user experience, writing for the web, navigational elements as well as work on advanced projects for learning how to produce websites.
During this 2-day training, Nathan Ingram will explain the process of creating a recently launched web site step by step. We'll discuss the conversations with the client, technical decisions, and actual development that led to the final product.
Web designers use skills from graphic design and computer programming to create websites that are easy to use and aesthetically appealing.
This program provides an appropriate entry point to a future career in technology and assumes some hands-on experience or training but does not assume on-the-job experience.
© 2025 coursetakers.com All Rights Reserved. Terms and Conditions of use | Privacy Policy