Home Page for the First Web Site project in Web Publishing
by B. E.
Sweetwater High School
Learning How To Create Web Pages
My name is J. C., and I am a student at Sweetwater High School. I am enrolled in a Web Publishing class and learning how to create Web pages or Web
sites on the World Wide Web.
Web publishing is teaching me how to design, create, and publish Web pages on the Internet.I will create several web sites to deminstrate what i have
learned in Web Publishing for period 2.
For this First Web Site project, I will learn how to design and create three Web pages for this Web site. In order to complete this web site project,
I will need to do the following.
Steps for Designing and Creating a Web Site
Plan the Web site.
Using pen or pencil and a paper create a storyboard that shows the Web site.
Using pen or pencil and a paper create a layout for the Web pages that shows where the different pieces of information will go.
Create and save Web pages using XHTML.
Create an account with a Web Hosting service to upload and publish the Web sites.
A URL (Uniform Resource Locater) or Internet address will then be created for your Web site; you can then share the address with the World Wide Web.
What Have I Learned in Web Publishing
I have leraned several things over the past two weeks in this class. Some of the things I have learned so far are:
I've learned how to create a web page.
I've learned what the internet means.
I've learned what the browser is used for.
I've learned how to use a browser.
I've learned what some of the tags mean.
I've learned that how to define words like the World Wide Web.
I've learned how to bookmark things in Mozilla Firefox.
I've learned how to put things in favorites on Internet Explorer.
I've learned how to use webspiration.
I've learned how to look at a web pages source.
Examples of lists
To create list with XHTML for a Web page, I have to use the following.
The tag "ul" stands for unordered list; this creates a bulleted list.
This second li will show a 2nd bulleted list item; li stands for"list item". The li will create a bulleted or number for the list.
This is an example of an unordered list; this means the the order of the list does not matter.
Bulleted list item 2.
Bulleted list item 3.
The "ol" is used for ordered lists; this means the order does not matter and number appear in the list.
Number list item 2.
Number list item 3.
Web Site designed by B. E.
First Web Site Project
Web Publishing Class
Sweetwater High School
Last modified: 12 August 2010