








CompuScholar Web Design Course
Build real websites, not just skills. This beginner-friendly high school course teaches HTML, CSS, and JavaScript—giving your teen a full credit, two polished sites, and portfolio-ready experience.
$120
Quantity:

Online Course

Consumable

In a Curriculum Kit

Nonreligious

2025 Ninth-Grade Curriculum Kit
Web Design by CompuScholar
Web Design by CompuScholar is where your teen stops scrolling and starts building. This full-credit high school course turns them from passive browser to digital creator—armed with the power of HTML, CSS, and even a dash of JavaScript and jQuery. Two semesters, two polished websites, and one proud parent later, you'll wonder why all school isn't this useful.
- No textbooks to lug, no quizzes to grade—everything's online, and all the tests and quizzes are auto-graded.
- Each chapter comes with coding projects that you'll grade using a ridiculously simple rubric.
- Because this course is designed for beginners, your teen doesn't need a techy background—just a keyboard, some curiosity, and a willingness to press refresh a lot.
Along the way, he'll wrangle text styles, links, menus, videos, image editing, tables, spacing, positioning, and page design like a pro. He'll build two high-quality websites and finish off the course with personal projects that let his personality (and new skills) shine.
Whether your teen wants to start a freelance business or just show off a killer online portfolio, this course opens the door. Web Design is hands-on, practical, creative, and—dare we say—pretty fun.
Find answers to the most frequently asked questions about this product below:
CompuScholar courses assume the student is already familiar with using a keyboard and mouse to select and run programs, navigate application menu systems, and generally interact with their operating system.
Programming students should understand how to store and retrieve files on the hard disk and how to use built-in operating system applications (Windows/File Explorer, Mac OS Finder) to navigate a file system and directory structures. It is helpful to also have some familiarity with text editors and using web browsers to find helpful information on the Internet.
We teach students how to program a computer from the ground up, but they should already know the basics about using one!

