Writing the World Wide Web (Preliminary Report)
Lesley Smith
16 February 1998

The Idea

In the Fall, 1997 semester, I expanded my teaching time in the computer classroom with English 101 from 3 - 4 classes to twelve classes. I divided these classes into three groups:

- basic e-mail, library research and internet, with the objective of familiarizing students with electronic communication and building a minimum skills base in the class (one class per week during the first three weeks of the semester)

- intensive internet evaluation, with the objective of instilling in students the intrinsic unreliability of any source (text or electronic) used indiscriminately and of sophisticating students' search and evaluation skills, using our access to the information-rich internet as an example; introducing techniques for effectively reading and researching hypertext (one class per week for three weeks in the middle of the semester)

- planning and scripting hypertext. Good hypertext is broken down into easily manageable text blocks, succinctly written and precisely linked together. I wanted to use these examples to sharpen the construction of arguments, develop transitions and encourage precise, concise writing. (one class per week for four weeks following the internet evaluation classes, plus two presentation days in the final week of the semester)


Go to Origins and Set-Up