LSU/SLIS LIS 7008 (Spring 2013, Section 01): Syllabus
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Session 1 (Jan 14): Computers
Session 2 (Jan 21 Asynchronous Online): Networking, FTP, Simple HTML
Session 3 (Jan 28): Structured Documents (HTML, XHMTL, CSS, XML)
Session 4 (Feb 4): Quiz, Multimedia
Session 5 (Feb 11): No Class, Mardi Gras
Session 6 (Feb 18): Relational Databases
Session 7 (Feb 25): Programming (Javascript); Mid-term Review
Session 8 (Mar 4): Mid-term Exam; Brief Project Discussion
Session 9 (Mar 11): Web Database Integration (PHP)
Session 10 (Mar 18): Human-Computer Interaction, Web Design
Session 11 (Mar 25): Web Characterization; Social Software
Session 12 (Apr 1): No Class, Spring Break
Session 13 (Apr 8): Information Retrieval and Search
Session 14 (Apr 15): Policy (Privacy and Security)
Session 15 (Apr 22): System Life Cycle; Final Review
Session 16 (Apr 29): Project Presentation, Project Due!
Session 17 (May 6): Final Exam
Note: the average life of a link on the Web is about 100 days. If any link to a reading is rot, please email me ASAP. Thanks.
Readings
- Required
- Shelly et al., Chapter 4: "The Components of the System Unit"
- Shelly et al., Chapter 7: "Storage"
- Recommended
Notes
- Lecture slides will be posted on Moodle.
- Important reminder: I will use your LSU email address to contact you.
I cannot use your non-LSU email addresses because they cannot be listed on Moodle. If you do not read emails
from your LSU email account very often, it is your responsibility to forward emails from your LSU account to
your non-LSU account.
Homework
- Homework 1 (due before the 2nd class session starts by email)
Project Activity
- Read the Project page, and start to look for a project client.
Introduce yourself to the class (in class and on Moodle) so that you can find team members whose skills complement yours.
- I may provide a couple of clients (who need a Website).
Useful Resources
(Note: Today is Martin Luther King Day. We will not meet in class, but we cannot cancel the class. Please read the
slides posted on Moodle and do Homework 2.
We will try to cover some of the slides of this session in Session 1 and 3.)
Readings
- Required
- Shelly et al., Chapter 2: "The Internet and the World Wide Web"
- Shelly et al., Chapter 9: "Communications and Networks"
- Huddleston: Chapter 1 (Tools of Web Design and Planning Your Site), Chapter 2 (Getting Started with HTML),
Chapter 14 (Publishing Your Site and Getting Noticed)
[Note: skim Chapter 1 and Chapter 14, but read Chapter 2.]
- Recommended
Notes
- Lecture slides with notes will be posted on Moodle.
Homework
- Homework 2 (due before the 3rd class session starts)
Project Activity
- Start to form teams based on common interests and complementary skills.
- Start to find a client for your team. See more on
the Project page.
- Distribute the faculty-client agreement, students-client agreement, and the project evaluation form on Moodle.
Useful Resources
Readings
- Required
- Huddleston: Chapter 3 (Creating Images), Chapter 4 (Formatting Your Pages), Chapter 5 (Advanced CSS), Chapter 6 (Laying Out Pages),
Chapter 7 (Adding Tables and Lists)
[Note: at least scan through these chapters before class; you will refer to them afterwards for your homework.]
- Dave Raggett, Getting Started with
HTML (read for detail, and then skim "Advanced HTML" and "Adding a Touch of Style" at the top of the page.)
- Erik Ray, Learning XML (Chapter 1, will be posted on Moodle).
- Recommended
Notes
- Lecture slides will be posted on Moodle.
Homework
Project Activity
- Find a client for your team. Only one client is needed for one project team. If your team does not have any client yet,
find one by browing the phone directory and talking to people (such as your colleagues, neighbors, the instructor, CCELL),
visiting non-profit organizations in your community, or soliciting client information from the SLIS mailing list. If your
team has more than two clients,
pick the one that best meets the goal of your project, and recommend the other clients to the class.
Useful Resources
Readings
- Required
- Shelly et al., Chapter 6: "Output Device"
- Huddleston, Chapter 9 (Adding interactivity and Multimedia)
- Huddleston's 2005 version has Chapter 13 "Adding Multimedia on Your Page" which is not included in the 2008 and 2010/2011 version (
will be posted on Moodle)
- Introduction to Streaming Media, Chapter 2 (Media Production)
(also available here in PDF)
- Recommended
Notes
- Lecture slides will be posted on Moodle.
- We will have a quiz today.
Homework
Project Activity
- Find a client if your team has not got one. Post and prepare the Collaboration Planning Guide.
Useful Resources
Project Activity
- Find a client if your team has not got one.
Readings
- Required:
- Shelly et al., Chapter 10: "Database Management"
- Brooks, Frederick P., "The Mythical Man Month", Chapter 2
(online book available from LSU Library Catalog or from here;
may be posted on Moodle)
- Recommended:
Notes
Homework
Project Activity
- Find a client if your team has not got one. Discuss copyright and information ethics issues that can emerge when
working with your client.
Useful Resources
- Tutorials for MS-Office, OpenOffice, PHP/MySQL/Perl: inpics.net
- MS-Access 2000/2003 Tutorial
Readings
- Shelly et al., Chapter 3: "Application Software"
- Shelly et al., Chapter 13: "Programming"
- Huddlestion: Chapter 9 (Adding interactivity and multimedia), Chapter 11 (Adding forms to your site)
[Huddleston's 2008 version has Chapter 11 (Adding Forms), Chapter 12 (Javascript)]
Notes
- Lecture slides will be posted on Moodle.
Homework
Project Activity
- Discuss team collaboration issues and the man-month mythical theory.
- If anybody still has not joined a team yet, please contact me ASAP. Every team will discuss their project plan right after the mid-term exam.
- If any team still has not got a client, pleast contact me ASAP.
- Distribute the Project Reflecive Essay, and the team member Self-evaluation and Cross-evaluation form on Moodle.
Useful Resources
Notes
- We will have a mid-term exam today. It takes two hours.
Project Activity
- Each project team will discuss their project plan after the exam.
You must have a client and a project manager now, and you must have started to work on your project now.
- Due: Collaboration Planning Guide, Student-Client Agreement, and Faculty-Client Agreement!
Project managers: please submit these documents by email, fax, or hard copy.
- Solicit information needs from your client, have your client make the initial requirements for the Website,
collect information content.
Readings
Notes
- Lecture slides will be posted on Moodle.
- Read Javascript Talk.
This may help you apply Javascript into your project design.
Project Activity
- Solicit information needs from the client, have your client make the initial requirements for the Website,
collect information content.
- Important issue: discuss with your client where to host the Website.
- Start to design the architecture (layout and navigation) of your Web site.
Useful Resources
Readings (Required)
- Shneiderman, Ben, Designing the User Interface: Strategies for effective human-computer interaction, 3rd ed.
(Addison-Wesley, 2005), Chapter 1 (an electronically reserved copy will be posted on Moodle)
- You may want to refer to Huddleston's text for your project. Read the chapters you have not read.
Notes
- Lecture slides will be posted on Moodle.
- Please read Javascript Talk (in Session 6) if you have not read it.
Project Activity
- Reflect how the man-month mythical theory works in your team.
- Design the information architecture of your Website,
build a rapid prototype with the information you have already collected.
Useful Resources
Readings (Required)
- Edward T. O'Neill, Brian F. Lavoie and Rick Bennett, Trends in
the Evolution of the Public Web, D-Lib Magazine, vol 9, no. 4, April 2003
- Coffman, Steve, We'll
Take It from Here: Further Developments We'd Like to See in Virtual Reference Software,
Information Technology & Libraries 20(3), 149-153, September 2001.
Notes
- Lecture slides will be posted on Moodle.
Project Activity
- Collect the faculty-client agreement, students-client agreement.
- Build a rapid prototype Website, solicit feedback from the client, revise your design or collect more information.
- Reflect how copyright and information ethics issues are involved when working with a real organization.
Useful Resources
Project Activity
- Please continue to work on your project.
Readings
- Required:
- Ricardo Baeza-Yates and Berthier Ribeiro-Neto, Modern Information Retrieval, Addison Wesley Longman, 1999,
Chapter 1 (Read up through Section 1.4)
- Recommended:
Notes
- Lecture slides will be posted on Moodle.
Project Activity
- Solicit feedback from the client and the users, revise your design, fix bugs, or collect more information.
- Discuss with your client where to host the Website, and start to test your prototype Website on the client's server.
Useful Resources
Play with the following search engines. Do not be surprised if they change their names or even go out of business.
Readings
- Required:
- Shelly et al., Chapter 11, "Computer Security, Ethics, and Privacy"
- Recommended:
Notes
- Lecture slides will be posted on Moodle.
Project Activity
- Solicit feedback from the client and the users, revise your design, fix bugs.
- Host your Website on your client's server, fix bugs.
- Distribute the Project Survey.
- Start to prepare the Website Maintenance Manual and the Project Reflective Essay.
Readings
- Shelly et al., Chapter 12, "Information System Development"
Notes
- Lecture slides will be posted on Moodle.
Project Activity
- Solicit feedback from the client and the users, revise your design, fix bugs.
- Reflect what software/system design model your team has used.
- Host your Website on your client's server, fix bugs.
- Prepare the Website Maintenance Manual (for your client) and the Project Reflective Essay.
Project Activity
- Project is due today!
Each team will present their project in front of the class.
- Please submit the project report, Project Evaluation Form (signed by your client), the Self-evaluation and Cross-evaluation form, and the
Project Reflective Essay, and the Project Survey.
- Please submit the Website Maintenance Manual (and send a copy to your client).
Notes
- We will have an in-class final exam today. It takes two hours.
- Required course evaluation will be announced by LaToya.
- The earlier final exams are available on the course Website,
see LSU/SLIS exams.
- All of your project Websites will be posted at
http://www.csc.lsu.edu/~wuyj/Teaching/7008/sp13/proj_sp13.html.
We will archive your Website for some period of time before your SLIS Web account is removed, so
you are advised to transfer your content to your client ASAP (if you have not done so).
- Please post final exam questions on Moodle before the final exam is posted. Once the final exam is
posted, I cannot answer questions that are in the final exam, even if you have not opened the exam file or you
paraphrase my questions.
- You may remove your Homework 3 from your course website if you do not want to publish that page on the Web for any reason.
Yejun Wu