Web Design & Construction for Libraries Part 2: CSS and Javascript (intermediate)
OverviewAudienceWeb Teacher Web-Based ReadingsTuition & Registration

Web-based (Moodle) workshop - Register to work -at-your-own-pace anytime

Week 1: Review of  External Cascading Style Sheets (CSS Basics) and CSS Navigation Menus

Week 2. Designing with Javascript: Cute vs. Functional and Basic Forms

Week 3. Accessibilty Validation, and Usability Testing

>Week 4. Overview of Content Management Systems/Web Database Options and Designing with Multi-Media: Reviewing the Options

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Overview

Completion of part 1 or the consent of the instructor is a prerequisite. Consent of the instructor will require proof of a completed xhtml standard with CSS external page.

This workshop is asynchronous, allowing participants to work through course material at times convenient to them throughout each week. Participants may also choose to schedule online chat time with the instructor, as they feel necessary.

By the end of this course, you will be able to:

Participants will end the session with a form, a cute and/or functional Javascript handler, a navigation tool/menu, and preliminary plans for multi-media and/or cms added to page they created in Part 1.

On completion of the workshop each registrant will receive a certificate of completion for 30 Continuing Education Contact Hours*. *Note that some organizations calculate Web-based CE hours on 2 or 3-1 ratio - so for example this course may be evaluated as 15 or 10 'official' CE hours depending on the organization.

Web Design & Construction for Libraries Part 2: CSS and Javascript (intermediate)
begins where
Web Design & Construction for Libraries Part 1: XHTML and CSS (beginners)
ends.
Web Design & Construction for Libraries Part 3: Building Library 2.0 (advanced)
is under development.

Audience

Librarians and other information specialists who want to learn to design usable, accessible, standard Web pages that will attract the intended users and encourage and invite them to persist and return to the site.

Experience working with library patrons in any subject area chosen is assumed. Level of instruction is intermediate in regard to library experience, beginner in regard to XHTML/CSS and Web design experience.

Participants must understand paths -- directories or folders and where files are saved -- in a Windows or Mac OS environment. FTP or other experience uploading Web pages to a Web server will be expected.

Participants should know how to use e-mail and a current standard Web Browser Firefox, Netscape 7.0, Safari or IE 5.5 or higher is preferred. Some HTML/XHTML or HTML editor experience will be useful.

Registration & Tuition

Register anytime to work-at-your-own pace with an instructor through e-mail and Web. $225.

Recommended Course Material:

All of the required readings and activities for the course will be available on-line but it will be useful to have available the references in the Recommended Materials listed below.

*Strongly recommended for those students who come to class with no HTML experience.

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About the Web Teacher
Diane K. Kovacs Picture

Diane K. Kovacs is President of Kovacs Consulting - Internet  & Web Training. She has 15 years of experience as a Web Teacher and Consultant. Diane has been designing and teaching Web-based MLA CE courses since 2001. She also designs and teaches Web-based courses for UIUC GSLIS LEEP, the ACRL, and other organizations.

The Virtual Reference Handbook: Interview and Information Delivery Techniques for the Chat and E-Mail Environments
by Kovacs, Diane K. Neal-Schuman Publishers (2007) published concurrently in the United Kingdom by Facet Publishers (2007)
The Kovacs Guide to Electronic Library Collection Development: Essential Core Subject Collections, Selection Criteria, and Guidelines
by Kovacs, Diane K. & Robinson, Kara L. was published in 2004 by Neal-Schuman Publishers.
Genealogical Research on Web was published in 2002 . How to Find Medical Information on the Internet: A Print and Online Tutorial for the Health Care Professional and Consumer (2000) (Library Solutions Press) and Building Electronic Library Collections: The Essential Guide to Selection Criteria and Core Collections (Neal-Schuman) were both published in 2000.

Diane's first book The Internet Trainer's Guide , was published in 1995. The Internet Trainer's Total Solution Guide was published in 1997. She has also co-authored with her husband Michael Kovacs, Cybrarians Guide to Successful Internet Programs and Services  which was published by Neal-Schuman in 1997.

Diane Kovacs is the 2000 recipient of the "Documents to the People" award from the Government Documents Roundtable of the American Library Association.   She was also the recipient  of the Apple Corporation Library's, Internet Citizen Award for 1992 and was the University of Illinois Graduate School of Library and Information Science Alumni Association's first recipient of the Leadership Award in 1996. Since 1990 she has been the editor-in-chief of the Directory of Scholarly and Professional  Electronic Conferences.

Diane received an M.S. in Library and Information Science   from the University of Illinois in 1989 and an M.Ed. in  Instructional Technology from Kent State University in 1993. She has a B.A. in Anthropology also from the University of Illinois, 1985.