Choosing a Repository to Aggregate Your Work
Typically professors ask you to hand in a paper, or perhaps email it. This process alone deprives you of sharing your work with others, getting feedback besides that of your professor and being able to see your development over time. Sure, not every paper is something you want to share, or reflects your best work. Perhaps you don't want to make everything public. Where do you put the work you do want to share and reflect upon? What items should you put there?
Google. Google offers 200 free sites per account! Not everyone is comfortable with Google, or is willing to set up a gmail account. But it is highly recommended. Google offers the advantage of numerous other services and features, and it is an excellent choice as a repository for your work. You can control your privacy settings easily and once you are familiar with the themes and templates, Google sites is user friendly and a powerful solution.
For this unit we will use weebly.com, the site that you are presently on. Set up an account and look at the tutorials to begin creating your account.
Google. Google offers 200 free sites per account! Not everyone is comfortable with Google, or is willing to set up a gmail account. But it is highly recommended. Google offers the advantage of numerous other services and features, and it is an excellent choice as a repository for your work. You can control your privacy settings easily and once you are familiar with the themes and templates, Google sites is user friendly and a powerful solution.
For this unit we will use weebly.com, the site that you are presently on. Set up an account and look at the tutorials to begin creating your account.