Lecturers: |
Dr. Alan Dorin Rm. 184, Bldg. 75 (1st floor) |
Lecture time & location: |
Clayton campus, Mondays S5, 12-1pm, Thursdays C1, 12-1pm, semester 2, 2004 |
Tutorial times: | http://www.csse.monash.edu.au/~cema/courses/CSE3325/labTimes.html |
Semester consultation times: | Monday mornings 10.00-12.00 noon or at a mutually convenient time. All consultations are by appointment only. |
Assessment: |
3hr
examination 70%, assignment excercises 30% The assessment is different for 2nd and 3rd year students. Students taking CSE3325 will be required to answer more questions in the final examination than students in CSE2325. Also, the standard required for a pass is higher in CSE3325 than in CSE2325. The exact difference in pass grade is determined following a decision on standardization made at the examination committee after the course is completed. Hence, in general, a pass in CSE2325 will not count as a pass in CSE3325 as the two units have different assessment criteria. The decision as to whether or not to take CSE2325 or CSE3325 will be based on the course maps of individual students. Online project group selection closing date: Assignment
Due Dates: Peer-assessment
Task Dates: |
URL: http://www.csse.monash.edu.au/~cema/courses/CSE3325/index.html
This course is aimed at those students wishing to produce innovative web-based multimedia. The World Wide Web provides an international audience for multimedia developers and has become a vital global resource. Students successfully completing this course will have an understanding of the practical and theoretical issues relevant to web site design and the online presentation of information using multiple media.
Practical assignments and excercises provide ample scope for creative expression and utilization of the theory presented in lectures. Students will be assessed on their ability to think and design innovatively, as well as on their understanding of the theoretical issues presented in lectures.
|
|
|
|
|
|
A full lecture-by-lecture topic listing is available.
If you would like to consult specific technical manuals on some of the topics covered in this course, the remaining technical manuals are recommended. Be sure to consult the latest editions. Those listed here will probably be out of date before you read this document! The WWW is frequently the best source of information on itself, if nothing else.
Highly Recommended...Lynch,
P.J. Horton, S., "Web Style Guide: Basic Design Principles for Creating Web
Sites",
Yale University Press, 1999 (now available
in 2nd edition)
Investigate
this online resource for information.
Suggested reading....
|
Additional technical reading material....
|
Anderson-Freed, Susan, "Weaving a Website: Programming in HTML, JavaScript, Perl and Java", Prentice Hall, 2001, ISBN: 0-13-028220-0 OR
the older but still OK... AND also... Holzschlag,
M. E., "Web by Design: The Complete Guide", |
Goodman,
D. "Dynamic HTML : The Definitive Reference" Rosenfield,
L. & Morville, P. "Information Architecture for the World Wide Web",
|
* Students should consult University materials on cheating, in particular:
©Copyright Alan Dorin 1999-2004