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Welcome to art education online!

When planning an art-centered school or classroom website, content should be the first component you plan and develop. The subsequent structure and graphic design then support the content and contribute to a site with which you will be pleased.

Begin by Reflecting on the Following Questions:

* What is the purpose of your proposed website?

* Who is the intended audience?

* What content do you need to meet your purposes?

* How might this content best be organized?

* Who will be responsible for updating and monitoring the site?

Determine/Organize the Content of Your Site

Once you have decided your purpose and audience, begin to outline the content materials you plan to use. Determine how the content best fits and plan a structure to accommodate growth and change. Use only photographs and/or and/or  
conj.
Used to indicate that either or both of the items connected by it are involved.

Usage Note: And/or is widely used in legal and business writing.
 artwork crucial to the content of your pages. Use only images that are sharply focused and clear in color and contrast.

Be sure to find out your school or district's policies about posting student art or written work, names, and photographs of students online. You will need written permission from parents to reproduce re·pro·duce
v.
1. To produce a counterpart, an image, or a copy of something.

2. To bring something to mind again.

3. To generate offspring by sexual or asexual means.
 their child's photograph or artwork. If you want to use images of artwork from art museums or artists, you will need to secure permission from the holder of the copyright of the work

Visit These Sites for More Information:

Copyright and Fair Use Resources for the Art Educator http://grove.ufl.edu/~rolandc/copy_fair.html

Parent/Guardian Form for Internet Internet

Publicly accessible computer network connecting many smaller networks from around the world. It grew out of a U.S. Defense Department program called ARPANET (Advanced Research Projects Agency Network), established in 1969 with connections between computers at the
 Permission http://www.cyberlearningworld.com/internet/howto/pslip2.htm

Arts Wire Spider School http://www.artswire.org/Artswire/spiderschool/1997/plan/ index.html The default name for a home page in a Web server. The page is appropriately named, because the home page is an index to the entire Web site. When you type in a URL such as www.computerglossary.com, it is the same as entering www.computerglossary.com/index.html. INDEX.  

Website Advisor's Guide http://www.asd2.com/resources/advisor.html

walkup walk·up also walk-up  
n.
1. An apartment house or office building with no elevator.

2. An apartment or office in a building with no elevator.
@unt.edu See .edu.

(networking) edu - ("education") The top-level domain for educational establishments in the USA (and some other countries). E.g. "mit.edu". The UK equivalent is "ac.uk".
 NEWalkup@aol.com America Online's Internet domain address. When sending e-mail to an AOL subscriber via the Internet, the aol.com is the last part of the address; for example: jjones@aol.com.  
COPYRIGHT 2001 Davis Publications, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:art education online
Author:Walkup, Nancy
Publication:School Arts
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Apr 1, 2001
Words:288
Previous Article:Robert McCall: Visual Space Historian.
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