Welcome to my website. It was originally only tentative but seems to have become more permanent. But as I get more information to add, changes will be made.
When I first thought of setting up a website, I went to a (free!) hosting service and registered. I then prepared a site using one of the many templates provided. The basic layout of the present home page, with the background colour, the layout of the various frames is a result of the template I chose.
Later, I had the bright idea of actually re-creating this same website from scratch using HTML code. If you want to see what this code looks like, right click on your mouse then click "View page source" (if your browser is Google Chrome) or "View Source" (if your browser is Internet Explorer.) So, I set about teaching myself HTML, and gradually used it to create a site on WebStarts that was as close as I could get to the original template I had used. This was actually more difficult that just creating any site as it was necessary to ensure that all measurements and colours were the same. To a large extent, I was successful.
The "navigation bar" above shows the names on the pages in the website. Three web pages were included in the original version - Links, World Weather and Guestbook - only because they were part of the original template. As I have not been able to reproduce them exactly using HTML code, and as they are npt of much use anyway, I have deleted them. The six pages under "My Life" have just recently been added and contain quite a lot of the material I prepared for my autobiography, which has its own web page.
By clicking on a link in the navigation bar, the page of that name will open. From this page you can also navigate to any other page by clicking on any other link on the navigation bar.
The notes in the frames below briefly summarise the contents of some of the links in the navigation bar.
The original web pages were created in about 2010 using an early version of HTML code, namely XHTML 1.0, which goes back to the early 1990s. In February, 2015, I updated it using the latest versions of HTML. This includes HTML5 and XHTML 1.0 Transitional, with the former being released in October 2014. A major purpose of HTML5 is to have a code that is suitable for mobile applications and devices, which have trouble using the older versions. Fortunately, Internet browsers, which use software to view an HTML document, will tolerate many errors and cyberspace is full of documents with badly written HTML; mobile devices are not so forgiving. More than half of my updated pages are written in HTML5 (including this "Home" page) with the others written in XHTML 1.0 Transitional (e.g. the "Middle HK years" page).
During the updating, I attempted to eliminate coding errors that existed in the originals; for some of the pages, there were well over 100 errors! There are a number of "HTML validators" available on the Internet that can be used for checking the code in URLs. The W3C (World Wide Web Consortium, founded in 1994 by Tim Berners-Lee, the creator of the world wide web) has one such validator.
If you would like to test any of my webpages using a validator, click on the link below. You can then add an URL or upload a file.
Click to open a webpage validator
At the bottom of this webpage, I show an HTML5 icon and the number of errors (in this case zero!). If you check this HTML5 page in the above validator, you will find that the validator indicates no HTML5 errors. At the bottom of the webpages written with XHTML 1.0 Transitional code, an XHTML 1.0 icon is shown.
Note: The validator does not seem to be 100% reliable; in some cases it shows no errors, but on other occasions for the same webpage, it may say there are some errors. To help overcome this: (1) Return to the original validator website each time you do a test. (2) Click "More options", and check the two boxes for "Only if missing".
Articles
Working at a university requires both publishing as well as teaching. This link lists and describes a few of the articles I wrote while at the university. It also comments on my PhD dissertation which linked my fields of the teaching and learning of Chemistry with the psychology of learning and teaching. The picture here is from the cover of the International Journal of Science Education, a journal some of my work has been published in. Click on the image to open the link to "My Articles" (or, alternatively, click on the link in the navigation bar above.) |
Sailing on a felucca on the Nile |
Travels
From the time of my arrival in Hong Kong, I travelled widely, mainly in the school summer holidays, starting with the Philippines and Japan in 1967. The most recent was to Egypt in 2005. Some travels were by myself; others were with the family. The picture here is of a journey I made along part of the Nile during the trip to Egypt. Click on the picture to see a short video clip of a Nubian dance during a dinner for our group in the city of Aswan. |
A note on viewing photos and videos in the websites: The websites contain many videos and photos. These may be stored on the service provider or on external providers such as Google. The hosting service provider used here is AwardSpace (see the logo below). Unfortunately, it provides me with a maximum of only 1 GB of storage space, which is nowhere near enough. So, what I could not store here, has been stored on Google Drive. Further, the host only allows a maximum file upload size of 15 MB, which means that large files, including most of the videos, are stored externally.