The course is offered tuesdays and thursdays at 8:00am in room PB4-101. The instructor is Ted Shaneyfelt. His office is room CH-3D. There are no expensive books at the bookstore for this class. Instead, a series of booklets for the course will be made available in class. We also make use of various free resources from the web.
Your course grade is based on your performance. Ten percent of your grade is awarded for participation in class (Regular attendance is part of that 10%). The remainder of your grade is divided evenly between tests (45%) and satisfactory completion of regular lab assignments (45%). Labs are normally graded at the end of each class, but if you cannot complete it in class, you may continue in the CH-11 lab and grade it the following day in which lab work graded. 90% and above is at least A-. 80% and above is at least B-, 70% and above is at least C-. D's and F's are below that.
All work must be your own. You are expected to create your own artwork, rather than copying images from the web. If you feel that you must use other material, you must obtain prior approval from both the owner of intellectual property and from the instructor. You will also need to give proper credit on your website.
Any student with a documented disability who would like to request accommodations should contact the University Disability Services Office - Hale Kauanoe A Wing Lounge, 933-0816 (V), 933-3334 (TTY), shirachi@hawaii.edu - as early in the semester as possible.
Advising is a very important resource designed to help students complete the requirements of the University and their individual majors. Students should consult with their advisor at least once a semester to decide on courses, check progress towards graduation, and discuss career options and other educational opportunities provided by UH-Hilo. Advising is a shared responsibility, but students have final responsibility for meeting degree requirements.
Watch for new features and announcements on the course web site as the course progresses. Also try a few examples of Dynamic HTML: the image map, the bouncing tiger, the tiger grid, the frogs, the coins, and the card. Quickly experiment with HTML with the super-duper dynamic web page. The URL address of this course web page is
http://cs.uhh.hawaii.edu/cs/courses/cs200
Do the tidy assignment with the malformed quicktables.html document.
A Tentative schedule is now online.
Read about style and alternate style.
The Harmless XHTML article is available for reading
See the table example.