TY - JOUR AB - Design prescriptions to create web‐based courses and sites that are dynamic, easy‐to‐use, interactive and data‐driven, emerge from a “how to do it” approach. Unfortunately, the theory behind these methods, prescriptions, procedures or tools, is rarely provided and the important terms, such as “easy‐to‐use”, to which these prescriptions refer are not defined. The empirical results reported here bring lighting on the meaning of several design prescriptions that contain qualitative attributes. This paper aims at clarifying the meaning of several web‐based course design prescriptions found in the literature in the context of two music web‐based courses. Two examples are presented and the results of the students’ assessment regarding several design prescriptions are given. First, what we learned while producing the first release of the web part of an undergraduate music course entitled Teaching and Music Technology is presented. Then, what else we learned when the second release was assessed by students is detailed. The next part concerns what we used while developing the undergraduate music course French‐Canadian folk which gives access to several music files and scores. Again the results of the students’ assessment are presented. The list of the various technologies that must be highly mastered to produce such musical content is given. VL - 1 IS - 4 SN - 1741-5659 DO - 10.1108/17415650480000026 UR - https://doi.org/10.1108/17415650480000026 AU - Boulet Marie‐Michèle PY - 2004 Y1 - 2004/01/01 TI - Using empirical data to clarify the meaning of various prescriptions for designing a web‐based course T2 - Interactive Technology and Smart Education PB - Emerald Group Publishing Limited SP - 239 EP - 252 Y2 - 2024/09/19 ER -