BNFO 300 |
How to Write a Web Site Map (for those translating articles) |
Fall 2018
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By the midpoint of the semester, you will already have established a working relationship with your mentor. With your mentor's advice, you will have chosen a specifi article to translate. You will have gone through the article, listing the different experiments in it and making note of the methods that will require special attention. You will soon choose one of those experiments, one focused on molecular biology, and write a summary of it. In the end, your translation will be completed and presented on a website.
It is time to organize your website, deciding on its main features. To make this exercise as straightforward as possible, I've provided an outline of the pages that might be present on your site, each of which you should describe. For each page either provide the content (including graphics) to the extent you can or describe what that content will be. You may take inspiration from the structure of the original article, but in the end the format you adopt will be guided more by the logic of the story you are telling and the needs of your target audience. As you encounter holes in your knowledge you need to fill or other tasks that remain undone, note them in the map. Remove them as you do what you need to do. You might be interested in an example of a website map. OUTLINE Front Page
Abstract
Introduction
(Simple title of experiment) (for each experiment)
(Pages linked to from earlier pages)
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