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MA C105: Accessibility and Usability

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Scheduled Course Offerings

Spring 2008

  • Online Course
    Jan. 21 - May 16, 2008
    CRN 30295

Course Information

This course examines Web usability and accessibility and provides students with the skills to analyze and critique Web content for those issues. Students will learn the critical service that the internet provides in the lives of disabled individuals, they will learn how these individuals access and navigate Web content, and they will learn how to design Web sites that accommodate them. No prior knowledge of HTML or Web design is required. *This course satisfies Cerro Coso's Diversity graduation requirement*

To do well in this class you should plan to dedicate between 8-12 hours per week to class activities, homework, and assignments (This assumes a 16-week Fall or Spring semester. Summer semesters are of a shorter duration, which increases the weekly workload.)

Course Objectives:

Upon successful complete of this course, the student will be able to:

  • Explain how readers access and comprehend information chronologically on a Web page.
  • Identify and analyze the obstacles to accessibility, usability, and readability in Web design.
  • Demonstrate a willingness to view circumstances from another person’s point of view.
  • Articulate multicultural considerations for designing Web sites to be viewed internationally.
  • Identify the challenges faced by a disadvantaged or under-represented group of people.
  • Implement behavioral changes that are a result of the willingness to view circumstances from another person’s point of view.
  • Articulate the societal contributions that disadvantaged or under-represented people provide.
  • Establish goals for correcting obstacles that disadvantaged or under-represented people are faced with.
  • Identify the technological solutions for making web sites usable and accessible.
  • Demonstrate leadership and effective communication skills with peers through collaborative projects.
  • Identify the laws that benefit disabled individuals and articulate what their rights are.

Course Requirements

Students must have their textbook(s) the first day of class. If you anticipate any shipment delays from a particuluar retailer, you should find an alternate source that has the product in stock and ships overnight.

Requisite Skills

Students should have strong skills in computer and internet use, however. This includes, but is not limited to, the following:

  • opening, saving, and managing files and directories
  • installing software, plug-ins, and fonts
  • troubleshooting operating system errors
  • navigating the Web
  • researching the Web
  • sending and receiving e-mail with attachments

Take this quiz to see if you are ready for an online course.

Textbooks

  • Krug, S. (2000). Don’t Make Me Think – A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability. Indianapolis: New Riders Publishing. ISBN 0-7897-2310-7
  • Brinck, T., Gergle, D., Wood, S. (2002). Usability for the Web: Designing Web Sites that Work. Elsevior Science & Technology Books. ISBN-13: 9781558606586.

Assignments

An online class entails 4 required asynchronous student activities:

  • Completing textbook reading assignments
  • Reading text-based lectures
  • Completing tutorials, quizzes, assignments, and project
  • Participating on the class discussion board, including several collaborative critiques

The Academy of Media Arts at Cerro Coso Community College offers Associate of Science Degrees in Web Design and Digital Animation. For more information about the Digital Animation program, visit http://www.coyote3d.com.

Copyright © 2000-2008 Suzanne Ama. All rights reserved.
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