Presenting Mathematical Concepts on the World Wide Web
Think Big: Designing a Web Site

Assist Your Audience:
A Sample Web Site

Get ready. It's almost time to go visit the University of Okefenokee Swamp.

But, first, three important notes:

  1. Since this is a fake setting, we will have to make a few compromises on how we get everything to link up. In particular:
    On the U O'Swamp pages, and only on those pages,

  2. The U O'Swamp pages are a self-contained little subset. There is nothing in them to link back here. Once you've reviewed them, you should use the Back Button or Go Menu of your browser to get yourself back here.
  3. The U O'Swamp pages are neither complete nor perfected. Partly that was due to time constraints on my part, but it was also very intentional. My idea is that workshop participants should consider how those pages might be improved and, if time permits, try to implement their suggested improvements.

    In fact, I'm willing to send a Geometry Center poster of your choice (KaleidoTile or Not Knot) to the person able to implement the best improvements to the U O'Swamp pages by the end of this workshop.
At last!
Go to the Department of Mathematics
at the University of Okefenokee Swamp.


Next: Assist Yourself
Back: More Departmental Considerations
Up: Think Big: Designing a Web Site


Presenting Mathematical Concepts on the World Wide Web. Copyright © 1997 by Carol Scheftic. All rights reserved. (This course is based on a workshop originally offered at The Geometry Center and adapted with permission.) Please send comments on this page, or requests for permission to re-use material from this page, to: scheftic@geom.umn.edu
Page established 1-Jun-97; last updated Sunday, 13-Jul-1997 19:37:43 CDT.