Final project
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Now you are ready to build your final project.
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Find information on the Internet and build a page, using a table to position
the information. It should contain the following areas:
- First row: Title on the left, and your name on the right.
- Second row: Table of contents linking within the page, on the left, and
A short introductory paragraph on the right.
- The following three to five rows should contain information, including:
- Sightseeing
- Transportation
- Accommodations
- perhaps one or two other topics of interest
Make the web page look good.
The following link goes to an example of a page, that is good enough to earn poor C
grade:
sample
Some of the things you could do to earn an A grade include:
- Put some nice images in your page. Do NOT use more than one image
from a site. Give a link to the site, so I can see where you got
the image. If the image did not come from a web site, say where
you got the image. Store the images on your web site, so they will
load quickly.
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Plan to spend about 9 hours on your project.
Do not spend much more time on the project than that.
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Provide some good text. Tell why it would be interesting to visit
your vacation site.
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Use the project as a review of the important elements and styles in the course.
Use important elements and styles you learned in your final project.
For example, you might use a list.
Look for other elements and styles to use in your project.
- You can give web references that tell about your vacation site.
- Make the page reasonably short, and quick to load.
- Include a link to your index page.
- Include any additional material needed in a good page.
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Load the page on your web site. Put an entry in your index.html page,
with a link to your final project page.
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Do not request the instructor to review the final project until it is complete.
Unlike lab assignments, which may sometimes be reworked, the final project is only graded once.
Submit your final project on Canvas when it is ready for grading.
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