Work Time & Intro to Info- Graphics Friday, January 22, 2016 Honors MYP.

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Work Time & Intro to Info- Graphics Friday, January 22, 2016 Honors MYP

Objective, Agenda, & Homework Objective: Students will – create logos and pathos mind maps of the information they found through research to support their argument, and – identify the elements of an info-graphic and brainstorm their own. Agenda: – Logos Mind Map & Pathos Mind Map – Info-Graphics with Planning Homework: – Annotated articles and & mind maps due Mon. 1/25 – Latin roots 6-10 sheet due Mon. 1/25 – Info-graphic due Tues. 1/26

Logos Mind Map Block off 2 pages of your “Research Notes” section (say pages 62-63). They should be pages that face each other. Write “Logos Mind Map” in the center. Create 4 lines, boxes, circles, or whatever out from the center. Label the sections: Victim, Perpetrator, Bystander, & Advocate. You must fill in at least 7 SPECIFIC facts, statistics, etc. that support your argument about your problem IN EACH SECTION. Be sure to include the source (just title or author) of each fact.

Pathos Mind Map Block off 2 pages of your “Research Notes” section (say pages 64-65). They should be pages that face each other. Write “Pathos Mind Map” in the center. Create 4 lines, boxes, circles, or whatever out from the center. Label the sections: Victim, Perpetrator, Bystander, & Advocate. You must fill in at least 5 SPECIFIC details, stories, personal accounts, etc. that support your argument about your problem IN EACH SECTION. Be sure to include the source (just title or author) of each detail.

Work Time With the 3 highlighters, highlight examples of logos, pathos, and ethos in the remaining articles your printed last week. You will tape these into your notebook into the RESEARCH NOTES section. Or work on your mind maps.

Info-Graphic Notes (Pg. 49) Form: Info-Graphic Definition: a visual presentation of information in the form of a chart, graph, or other image accompanied by minimal text, intended to give an easily understood overview, often of a complex subject. Use: Logos

How To

Example #1

Example #2

Brainstorming Look at your own logos mind map. Choose at least one fact from each box to include in your info- graphic. – These should give the reader of your project background information. – Circle, star, or otherwise make note of which facts you are using. – Remember that once you use these facts, you won’t be able to use them in any other genre. Go to your “Drafts of Writing Section” and sketch out a draft of what your info-graphic might look like.