“…Web design "is transitioning from a cutting-edge technology to a more accepted, more transparent technology" (Karper, 2004, p. 35), because of the Internet's presence in daily life; this sometimes means that computer literacy instruction presents Web design as software training, but more often these educators reclassify it as an advanced 'new literacy' that requires integration of not just technological skills, but the judgment and perspective of communication and composition skills in the Web medium (Karper, 2004;Krunić et al, 2006;Mackey & Ho, 2005;Royal, 2005;Turnley, 2005 It should be noted that many traditional computer literacy standards promote advanced intellectual skills, including problem solving and design, as "critical elements in technology education" (Jakovljevic, Ankiewicz, de Swardt, & Gross, 2004, p. 267), even while focusing on software or hardware training-these two ideas are not mutually exclusive (Ebersole, 1997;Niess et al, 2008). Accreditation standards for colleges and universities also mandate the integration of information literacy and technology as intellectual skills in higher education curricula rather than just software training (Mackey & Ho, 2005).…”