WEEK | TOPIC | READINGS, DUE DATES, AND ASSIGNMENTS |
WEEK 1 | ||||
Tuesday Aug. 21 |
Course Overview
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WEEK 2 | ||||
Tuesday Aug. 28 |
Researching and Drafting Text; working with editors; intro to file management.
Share ideas and inspirations |
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WEEK 3 | ||||
Tuesday, Sept. 4 |
Image research and licensing. Image referencing.Review draft 1 (peer edits in class) |
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WEEK 4 | ||||
Tuesday, Sept. 11 |
NO FORMAL CLASS MEETING. Instead, please meet in small groups (Rod) or individually to learn:
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WEEK 5 | ||||
Tuesday, Sept. 18 |
Prototype tools: Sketch, XD, Invision, Dreamweaver. Webydo Webflow Developing a style guide Design work in Illustrator
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Friday, Sept. 21 |
Four Amazing IDS Grads | ![]() |
WEEK 6 | ||||
Tuesday, Sept. 25 |
Video for the web
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WEEK 7 | ||||
Tuesday, Oct 2 |
In class: design draft 3 in Illustrator
Review AWWWards |
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WEEK 8 | ||||
Tuesday, Oct. 9 |
File Managment Draft 3 Review (everyone will be reading everyone else’s Draft 3) Illustrator Output: development.pdf/preview.pdfFinish early to attend Clohesy Series |
WEEK 9 | ||||
Tuesday, Oct. 16 | P&T CSS Developing CSS to match Style Guide |
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WEEK 10 | ||||
Tuesday, Oct 23 |
Bootstrap using P&T Press kit;
Dissect code in Chapter TBD Flexgrid |
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WEEK 11 | ||||
Tuesday, Oct. 30 |
Bootstrap positioning practice Collin to troubleshoot? |
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WEEK 12 | ||||
Tuesday, Nov. 6 | Optimization: images, SVGs, and video |
WEEK 13 | ||||
Tuesday, Nov. 13 | Parallax animation |
WEEK 14 | HAPPY THANKSGIVING! |
WEEK 15 | ||||
Tuesday, Nov. 27 |
Converting SVGs onto a path |
WEEK 16 | ||||
Tuesday, Dec. 4 |
Alt Tags and accessibility/JAWS |
WEEK 17 | |||
Tuesday, Dec. 11 5-6:50 |
Presentations of final project |
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ASSIGNMENTS | |||
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ABOUT | |||
COMM 3557: Advanced Digital Visualization. Intensive work in specialized digital visualization concepts and practices. No single topic may be repeated although the course may be repeated for maximum of 6 hours. Prerequisite(s): junior standing. Prerequisite(s): COMM 2555; junior standing or consent of instructor.
Objectives:
AMOUNT OF WORK EXPECTED: The College guideline is that one semester hour of credit is the equivalent of approximately three hours of work (class time + out-of-class preparation) each week over the course of a whole semester. In a typical lecture/discussion course, each hour of class normally entails at least two hours of outside preparation for the average student. That means that for every week students should set aside 6 hours/week outside of class to work on classwork. This standard is the basis on which the Registrar’s Office assigns hours of University credit for courses. LATE ASSIGNMENTS ATTENDANCE POLICY As noted in the UNI Catalog, “Students are expected to attend class, and the responsibility for attending class rests with the student. Students are expected to learn and observe the attendance rules established by each instructor for each course. Instructors will help students to make up work whenever the student has to be absent for good cause; this matter lies between the instructor and student. Whenever possible, a student should notify the instructor in advance of circumstances which prevent class attendance.” This idea is neither novel nor unreasonable. Students should realize that an hour missed cannot be relived, that work can seldom be made up 100%, and that made-up work seldom equals the original experience in class. A note on missing classes: It is NOT the instructor’s responsibility to re-teach material to students outside of class. Office appointments are for questions and clarifications. Students missing class are responsible for making up all class instruction and activities and for finding out from peers what they missed. ACADEMIC MISCONDUCT Plagiarism, cheating, improperly sourced work, and other academic misconduct will not be tolerated. The UNI Catalog is clear on this: “Students at the University of Northern Iowa are required to observe the commonly-accepted standards of academic honesty and integrity. Except in those instances in which group work is specifically authorized by the instructor of the class, no work which is not solely the student’s is to be submitted to a professor in the form of an examination paper, a term paper, class project, research project, or thesis project. Cheating of any kind on examinations and/or plagiarism of papers or projects is strictly prohibited. Also unacceptable are the purchase of papers from commercial sources, using a single paper to meet the requirement of more than one class (except in instances authorized and considered appropriate by the professors of the two classes), and submission of a term paper or project completed by any individual other than the student submitting the work. Students are cautioned that plagiarism is defined as the process of stealing or passing off as one’s own the ideas or words of another, or presenting as one’s own an idea or product which is derived from an existing source.” See the UNI Catalog for full details. Disability Services Academic Learning Center’s Free Assistance with Writing, Math, Reading and Learning Strategies |