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Website Proposal

Due Dates: First Draft, Oct. 19th; Final Draft, Oct. 24th

Submission Name: <lastname-proposal> (Word document); <lastname-prototype>(site folder)

For this assignment, you and a partner will be proposing plans for an extensive website project that will be your focus for the remainder of the course. Working with your partner, you will design a site for a real-world client, though this can include employers, friends, and relatives, as long as they have need for a website. When working with a partner, collaborative technologies will be available to support your work together.

Your audience for the proposal will be both me and your project client. You've already learned a great deal about website architecture and organization so far this semester, and with each passing week, you'll be learning more and more about HTML coding and website design. But right now, you have all the skills you need to draw up a proposal for constructing a fairly extensive website.

Like the rhetorical and structural analyses assignments, the main part of your proposal will be written in Word or some other word processing program, though you will also submit a rudimentary website prototype that demonstrates to your client the basic layout, design, and structure of the site for your final project. It doesn't have to be anything fancy; just enough for the client to visualize the direction your design is taking.

As in the previous assignments, you should focus on how you are constructing your client's digital ethos via the elements of audience anlaysis, site architecture, visual layout and design, and HTML code.

Evaluation Criteria

You and your partner will be evaluated for your group effort on this project, though some part of evaluation will include individual critera to prevent people from coattailing on the efforts of others. The criteria for group evaluations are somewhat like those for the earlier assignments. However, a much more balanced emphasis will be placed on all four criteria and how your team has satisfied them to create an organized, readable document that will persuade your client to hire you as their webmeister of choice:

These are all questions you should be asking yourself as you draw up your proposal and construct your accompanying prototype website. After submitting your proposal, you and your partner will meet with me in conference to discuss future work on your site.

The task before you may seem daunting when first reading this description, but if you print off this page, break down the task into discrete elements, and make a schedule of how and when you are going to finish them, you'll find this assignment is really not that difficult.

Format

Your proposal should be 6-8 pages of double-spaced, 12-point type and should use the standard print document format you used for earlier assignments. Your proposal should be named lastname-proposal (only one of your names is needed). The web prototype should be contained within a folder called lastname-prototype and should include a "homepage.html" file that is the main page of your overall site (you can use "index.html" if the final project will reside on a non-ISU server). Images and extensive secondary sections of the site should be contained in individual subfolders, with relative paths of all links reflecting the structure of these subfolders.

We'll be walking through this assignment description in class, but if you have any questions after our discussion, feel free to email me privately.