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1. Define your Audience and PurposeSomewhere near the beginning of your Web project you should clearly
This will help your visitors decide if they want to spend time looking through your project, and it will also help them to properly evaluate and appreciate what you are trying to accomplish. State your Project Goals and ObjectivesWhat do you want to accomplish? Your project design will look quite different depending on the goals. A common mistake is trying to cover too many things, whereas the best projects focus on one or two specific areas. There are many goals from which to choose:
Identify the Learning Objectives
Standards & Frameworks
Identify your Target AudienceEvery project should be presented in some fashion to an audience. In fact, an interested, attentive audience is the cornerstone of any good writing The vast communication ability of the Internet and Web can tumble down your classroom walls and present an infinite number of different audiences to your students. Furthermore, this audience is interactive: they can become project allies and collaborators and dramatically change the learning experience. Therefore, if you intend to incorporate Networked projects or publish your project on the Web, you need to think about your audience. Some eighty million people currently have access to the World Wide Web. However, do not seek to address these undefined millions: a hallmark of all good writing is to identify and address a specific audience. And this need not be a huge audience... it simply has to be the right audience.
Identify Your Audience
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