Web Development and Design

Web Development and Design

Certificate

Learn to develop, build and maintain websites and online marketing platforms and expand your career opportunities through GCC’s web development and design certificate program.

Program Contacts

Martha Field
(413) 775-1421
field@gcc.mass.edu

Jeffrey Galbraith
(413) 775-1483
galbraith@gcc.mass.edu

Upcoming Events

AI Club GCC event

AI Club

Tuesday May 13 - 12:00pm

GCC’s web development and design certificate program provides the technical and design skills needed to develop, implement,and maintain a functional website for a variety of business or non-profit applications. Graduates of this program can build on their skills with additional study to acquire an associate degree in Business Administration General.

27

credits

Certificate

Certificates are typically completed in one (1) year and designed for immediate workforce entry

Program requirements have been newly updated to include the most industry-relevant courses and content. The revised curriculum addresses evolutions in web development methodologies, browser, server, and web platform updates, and the growing demand for online marketing skills. Program electives enable students to expand their skills with a focus on design, development, or business.

Prepare yourself for employment in the business environment as a web developer or begin working as a freelancer! Job and freelance opportunities will be local, regional and national as the need for individuals with strong computer and web development skills continues to grow, in businesses across all sectors. Graduates of this program can also build on their skills with additional study to acquire a degree in Business Administration with concentrations in Marketing or Computer Information Systems.

  • Apply the various functions of an organization including management, marketing, accounting, finance and information technology to real world situations
  • Demonstrate an understanding of the trade-offs of a market-based economy and evaluate the impact of current economic conditions on efficiency and equity in organizations and society
  • Demonstrate critical thinking, problem-solving and communication skills necessary to be a successful participant in an organization
  • Develop the skills necessary to work in teams and to collaborate to achieve a common objective in a diverse, equitable, and inclusive environment
  • Demonstrate effective use of basic IT skills in the areas of information search, word processing, spreadsheets, presentation software and database design

Gary Ackerman

Director of Teaching and Learning Innovation

Teaching, Learning and Innovation Center

B.S., University of Vermont
M.Ed., Castleton University
Ph.D., Northcentral University

E132N 1-413-775-1867 AckermanG@gcc.mass.edu

Martha Field

Faculty, Department Chair

Business and Information Technology

A.S., B.S., M.S., University of Massachusetts
Ph.D., University of Connecticut

N416 1-413-775-1421 Field@gcc.mass.edu

Professor Martha Field teaches primarily economics and enjoys giving some pizzazz to “the dismal science.” She is passionate about discussing current events with students and encourages students to see the “flip-side” or trade-offs of policies that affect their lives. Martha is a co-author of the textbook Environmental Economics An Introduction (now in its 9th edition) with her husband, who is Professor Emeritus at UMass–Amherst. She started college by earning her associated degree from the Stockbridge School of Agriculture and alternated between college and work until finally earning her Ph.D. in economics from the University of Connecticut. She enjoys running, walking, algebra, reading drama and using her passport.

Jeffrey Galbraith

Faculty

Business and Information Technology

A.A., St. John's College
B.A., Concordia Senior College
M.Div., Th.M., Harvard University Divinity School
M.B.A., University of Massachusetts
Ph.D., Boston University

N415 1-413-775-1483 Galbraith@gcc.mass.edu

My interest is in all things management. My areas of research include management control systems, statistical quality control, business strategy, and managerial communication. I am a member of the Institute of Management Accountants. For me teaching is the name of the game. I love the dynamics of the classroom. I regularly teach management, concepts of financial accounting, management accounting, and business law. My class motto is that "Your success is my business." I believe that teaching and learning go hand in hand. Therefore, I seek to create a classroom that makes learning fun and where all are heard and respected. William Butler Yeats once remarked that "Education is not the filling of a pail, but the lighting of a fire." I try to keep this foremost in my mind whenever I am teaching in person or online. I also have an interest in the history of philosophy, animal behavior, history, and more. So that I do not sit around all of the time, I find time for table tennis and lots of walking.

Ryan Rucker

Adjunct Faculty

Business

B.S., University of South Carolina
M.B.A., Columbia Southern University
Ed.D., Valdosta State University

RuckerR@gcc.mass.edu

Thom Simmons

Adjunct Faculty

Business

B.S., Hofstra University
J.D., Hofstra Law School

SimmonsT@gcc.mass.edu

Doug Wilkins

Adjunct Faculty

Business

B.Ed., Colorado State University
M.Ed., Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts

1-413-775-1480 Wilkins@gcc.mass.edu

Kathryn Woods

Associate Director of Marketing

Marketing and Communications

A.S., Greenfield Community College
B.S., University of Massachusetts
M.P.S., Maryland Institute College of Art

N213 413-775-1445 woodsk@gcc.mass.edu

Z Zinter

Faculty

Business and Information Technology

B.A., Mount Holyoke College
M.B.A., Western New England University
M.A.P.P., University of Pennsylvania

N420 1-413-775-1451 zinterc@gcc.mass.edu

A primary goal in each class I teach is to help my students see the relevance and usefulness of the course material for real world situations. I believe that the course content is a set of tools rather than a set of absolute knowledge. The concepts covered in each course are part of a larger toolkit we can use for navigating the world. I encourage my students to consider how the course information applies to their own individual lives and I stress the importance of applying these ideas. I invite my students to become partners in their learning experience—to connect their personal interests and goals to class discussions and assignments. I teach across the business curriculum including introduction to business and entrepreneurship. Beyond the classroom I enjoy a variety of activities including keeping honey bees, practicing martial arts, swimming and running ultra marathons.