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Internet & Social Media   

  • Artificial Intelligence: What are Chatbots?
  • Fee: $30.00
    Dates: 8/7/2025 - 8/7/2025
    Times: 6:00 PM - 8:30 PM
    Days: Th
    Sessions: 1
    Location: Northside Learning Center - Bldg C
    Instructor: Mariano Salazar
    Join us for an exciting class exploring artificial intelligence and chatbots like ChatGPT and others! Discover how these tools work, get hands-on experience, and see their potential in everyday life. Perfect for beginners and anyone curious about the future of tech!

 

  • Artificial Intelligence: What are Chatbots?
  • Fee: $30.00
    Dates: 8/9/2025 - 8/9/2025
    Times: 9:00 AM - 11:30 AM
    Days: Sa
    Sessions: 1
    Location: Northside Learning Center - Bldg C
    Instructor: Mariano Salazar
    Join us for an exciting class exploring artificial intelligence and chatbots like ChatGPT and others! Discover how these tools work, get hands-on experience, and see their potential in everyday life. Perfect for beginners and anyone curious about the future of tech!

 

 

 

  • Creating Web Pages
  • Fee: $129.00

    When?
    Class begins on 7/16/2025.

    Where?
    This is a fully online course.

 

  • Creating Web Pages
  • Fee: $129.00

    When?
    Class begins on 8/13/2025.

    Where?
    This is a fully online course.

 

  • Designing Effective Websites
  • Fee: $129.00
    Item Number: 2501ILC37019002
    Dates: 6/11/2025 - 8/30/2025
    Times: 7:00 AM - 12:00 AM
    Days:
    Sessions: 0
    Location:
    Room:
    Instructor:
    This class is already in session.  Contact our office at 210-397-8100 for additional information. 

    Learn powerful graphic design techniques and build websites that are both attractive and wickedly effective.


    These days, creating a website is so easy almost anyone can do it. But with all the competition on the web, creating a site that's effective is more challenging than ever. Regardless of your current skills or level of knowledge, in this course you'll master the basics of web design and learn how to build sites that are better and more effective.

    You'll examine the tension between form and function, explore the six major states of the website development process, and learn the basics of user-centered design. You'll also look at the five basic steps to organizing information, find out how site design themes can be used for information delivery, and review website design considerations. Along the way, you'll learn about effective type and graphics and explore the idea of making a website fully interactive. This course is a must for web designers, giving the tips and tools that will help them establish a solid career.


    Requirements:

    Hardware Requirements:

    • This course can be taken on either a PC or Mac.

    Software Requirements:

    • PC: Windows 8 or later.
    • Mac: macOS 10.6 or later.
    • Browser: The latest version of Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox are preferred. Microsoft Edge and Safari are also compatible.
    • An imaging program, such as Photoshop or Paint Shop Pro, is recommended (not included in enrollment).
    • A web page authoring tool, such as Adobe Dreamweaver or Microsoft Expression Web, is recommended (not included in enrollment).
    • Adobe Acrobat Reader.
    • Software must be installed and fully operational before the course begins.

    Other:

    • Email capabilities and access to a personal email account.

    Instructional Material Requirements:

    The instructional materials required for this course are included in enrollment and will be available online.



    Form Versus Function

    This course is different from most web creation courses you'll find because it's not designed to teach you the mechanics of creating a web page or how to use a particular software program. Instead, it's designed to help you take your website creations to the next level by enhancing both design and functionality. You'll discover what attracts visitors to a website, and how to use design tools such as typography, Cascading Style Sheets (CSS), and multimedia to captivate visitors and keep them coming back.

    Website Planning Process

    Visitors are attracted by good design, but content is what keeps them at the site longer and motivates them to return. Learn how to use two tools to attract and retain visitors: design critiques and a content inventory. Explore the six major development stages that yield expert design and smart content. Then study the three parts of web design and the skills you'll need for each.

    Interface Design

    By now, you probably understand that an interface is the screen visitors see and use when they visit any page of your site. Designing an interface is easy. Designing an effective interface, however, is more challenging. There are four main elements that you'll need to consider to make your site user-centric: usability, visualization, functionality, and accessibility. Explore each of these elements to see the thought that goes into effective interface design.

    Site Structure

    Even if your basic content is accurate, attractive, and well written, your site won't function well without a solid and logical organizational foundation. Review the five basic steps involved in organizing information and four essential structures that you can use to build a website. Then learn how to create a flowchart for the pages you want to include on your site.

    Site Design

    Websites exist to inform, educate, persuade, or entertain. Take this opportunity to concentrate on site design themes that pay attention to information delivery. Learn how to organize elements in order to enable visitors to accomplish their own goals. Explore usability, content, and design.

    Page Design

    Discover how you can use visual and graphic design, page layout, and grids to take your designs to the next level. At the same time, become familiar with design considerations like visual hierarchy, page dimensions, and white space.

    Typography on the Web

    Typography plays a dual role by providing both verbal and visual communication. Almost any type of font will do to transmit information to others. But to convey the right type of mood along with the information takes a special type and color of font. Learn all the secrets here!

    CSS and Font Embedding

    Find out how you can use Cascading Style Sheets to modify fonts. Become familiar with inline, document-level, and external (linked) style sheets, and learn how to create an external CSS file to control the formatting of any or all pages on your site. You'll also take a look at some early font embedding techniques and explore two popular Flash-related options currently in use.

    Writing for the Web

    Before you write for the web, you should take the time to understand how people read online. Become familiar with the use of titles, headlines, and subheads to assist readers in navigating your site. Discover the advantages of using a web content management system. Learn how you can communicate more easily and informally with web visitors by adding a blog to your site.

    Images, Colors, and Layers

    You can use images to add interest to your site and to help with navigation. Early designers were limited graphically by HTML attributes, and later designers discovered they could use tables to place images. Today's designers also use CSS to add styles to their text and images. As fun as CSS can be, you also have to take accessibility into account so that users with older browsers or screen readers can still navigate your website.

    CSS Positioning: More Layers

    The combination of HTML, CSS, and JavaScript allows you to create intensely interactive web applications similar to any game or presentation built with traditional programming languages. This interaction of HTML, CSS, and JavaScript is known as Dynamic HTML or DHTML. Become familiar with the basics of DHTML, including code you can use to enhance your designs by adding layers to your pages.

    Web 2.0 and Beyond

    Early websites were created by a few to be read by many. Over the years, developers added interactivity to websites through discussion forums, chat rooms, and shopping carts. These features are part of what might be called "web 1.0". Today the focus has shifted from the sponsor of the site to the visitor, and sites like Flickr and YouTube are popular. They're examples of web 2.0 sites. Examine several popular web 2.0 sites, and take a look ahead to web 3.0.


    What you will learn

    • Learn the fundamentals of effective website design
    • Discover the relationship between website design themes and information delivery
    • Explore the six major states of the website development process
    • Learn how to effectively reach an online audience and stand out from the fierce competition

    How you will benefit

    • Learn about the elements and principles of design and how they can be applied to a number of career fields
    • Gain confidence in your ability to communicate and market to a specific audience
    • Open the door to new career opportunities
    • Gain a greater understanding of modern, forward-thinking website design

    Richard Blum

    Richard Blum has been an IT industry professional for over 20 years, working mainly as a network and systems administrator. During this time, he has worked with Microsoft, Novell, Unix, and Linux servers, and has created websites using a variety of different programming languages. Blum is the author of several programming and systems administration books, including Professional Assembly Language, C# Network Programming, PostgreSQL 8 for Windows, Sendmail for Linux, Postfix, and Network Performance Open Source Toolkit.


 

  • Creating Web Pages
  • Fee: $129.00
    Item Number: 2501ILC37014702
    Dates: 6/11/2025 - 8/30/2025
    Times: 7:00 AM - 12:00 AM
    Days:
    Sessions: 0
    Location:
    Room:
    Instructor:
    This class is already in session.  Contact our office at 210-397-8100 for additional information. 

    Learn the basics of HTML as you design, create, and post your very own website.


    Create and post your very own website using HTML. You will learn the best strategies for planning the content, structure, and layout of your website as well as creating pages with neatly formatted text, building links between the pages, and more! This course will also cover search engine optimization and powerful no-cost or low-cost web marketing strategies.


    Requirements:

    Hardware Requirements:

    • This course can be taken on either a PC or Mac.

    Software Requirements:

    • PC: Windows 8 or later.
    • Mac: macOS 10.6 or later.
    • Browser: The latest version of Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox are preferred. Microsoft Edge and Safari are also compatible.
    • Adobe Acrobat Reader.
    • Software must be installed and fully operational before the course begins.

    Other:

    • Email capabilities and access to a personal email account.

    Instructional Material Requirements:

    The instructional materials required for this course are included in enrollment and will be available online.



    Getting Started

    Get started by learning where the web is and how it works. In this lesson, you will learn some important concepts and terminology, and hopefully clear up some buzzwords you may have heard but not quite understood. Then, get started creating your first website.

    Create Your First Web Page

    In this lesson, you'll create your first web page. You'll learn how to add tags and content to your page, view your page in a browser, reopen it in an editor to make additions and changes, save those changes, and then view the updated page in a web browser. These skills will apply to every web page you ever create, and they'll get you started on creating any page you can imagine.

    Formatting Text

    In this lesson, you'll learn to beef up your pages with the design elements that you see on most websites. First, you will learn how to add headings, paragraphs, numbered lists, and bulleted lists to your pages, and the secrets to adding special characters like © and &trade. Finally, you'll discover how to add links to other peoples' pages and to other pages within your own site.

    Fun With Pictures

    Here's your chance to add some visual excitement to your website! This lesson covers the basics about adding pictures to your web pages. You'll discover how to download pictures right off the web, and you'll also learn how to prepare and use your own pictures from a digital camera.

    Creating Tables

    Tables are a terrific way to neatly organize content into rows and columns. You've no doubt seen tables used in other websites and countless other forms of publication. In this lesson, you'll learn how to use HTML to create tables in your own web pages!

    HTML, XHTML, and CSS

    If you've been involved in web development at all during the last 20 years, you may have heard about HTML, XHTML, HTML5, and CSS. If you're new to all of this, it's a confusing mess of alphabet soup. In this lesson, you'll learn the who, how, what, when, where, and why of these technologies—and what you should use now so your website is in sync with current specs and future trends.

    Getting Started With CSS

    Virtually all modern websites use CSS style rules for all their website styling. In this lesson, you'll learn what a style rule is, and you'll get some hands-on practice creating your own style rules. You'll learn how to center and align pictures and text and discover the secrets to jazzing up your site with colors (and how to choose from the millions of color options available to you).

    Creating a Page Layout

    This lesson will introduce you to more advanced HTML and CSS topics, including how to create a page layout with a navigation bar. You will learn how to create a page layout using div tags, how to style your page divisions, and some style rules.

    Building Your Site

    Most websites consist of multiple pages with some common content on each page. This lesson will teach you to use a layout page as a template so you can build multipage websites more quickly. You'll learn how to start with liquid layouts, how to design a layout from scratch, and how to use your layout to easily build additional pages. This will help you to develop more professional-looking pages using the same modern coding techniques that seasoned professionals use!

    Getting Noticed

    Getting a site on the Internet is one thing. Getting people to notice it is quite another. In this lesson, you'll learn about Internet directory services, search engines, web-crawling infobots (not as creepy as they sound), and things you can do to make your own site stand out in the crowd!

    Publish Your Website

    In this lesson, you'll learn how to publish your website for the whole world to see. Best of all, you'll learn how to keep your site on the Internet forever!

    Authoring Systems

    In this lesson, you'll learn about authoring systems like Dreamweaver and Expression Web, and how they can make web development quicker and easier. You'll also learn a couple of ways to get an online presence without creating your own website!


    What you will learn

    • Learn the fundamentals of web design
    • Plan the content, structure and layout of your website, create pages full of neatly formatted text, build links between the pages and to the outside world
    • Learn to add color, backgrounds, graphics, and tables to your website
    • Understand the best possible location in search engine listings and powerful no-cost or low-cost web marketing strategies

    How you will benefit

    • Learn to build your own website using HTML
    • Gain confidence in your ability to write proper HTML code
    • Open the door to new career opportunities as you will have a good understanding of HTML code, how to build a site, and fix problems that may be occurring in others' code

    Alan Simpson

    Alan Simpson is an award-winning author with over 100 published books on computers, technology, and the internet, translated into more than a dozen languages. With extensive experience across nearly every aspect of the computer industry—including web development, operating systems, programming, networking, and security—he is widely regarded as a leading expert in the field.

    Alan's journey in tech began in the 1980s as an author, teacher, consultant, and software developer. His work in app development and web design sparked a deep interest in cybersecurity. This passion led him to pursue formal studies, and in 2007, he earned his Security+ certification from CompTIA, demonstrating his broad knowledge of the computer security field. The insights he shares in his courses reflect his years of experience and his commitment to building safe, secure applications and websites.


 

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