A Mostly Complete Guide

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The dos and don’ts. 1. Be sure to put the title of the text somewhere on the page where the reader will notice it. 2. Pull out 2 or more significant quotes.
Advertisements

Speech Analysis. j6LA Was this a good speech?
Incorporating Statistics, Graphs, and Illustrations.
D ESIGNING AND U SING V ISUAL I NFORMATION WHY AND WHEN SHOULD YOU USE VISUALS? “By offering powerful new ways of looking at data, visuals also reveal.
What are text features? Definitions:
Copyright © 2002 by Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Longman Publishers. All rights reserved. Chapter 9 Illustrations Professional Communication:
©M. Reber 9/19/2015 Graphics Any visual form of presenting information.
Grab you textbooks 4 th period! Effectively Incorporating Visuals into Your Documents 1.
Your Research Paper Guidelines
Graphics: Any visual form of presenting information Teco 61 M. Reber 11_05_03.
Special Features of Informational Text “A picture is worth a thousand words.”
Incorporating Statistics, Graphs, and Illustrations McGraw-Hill pgs
How to Do a Research Project The Roaring 20’s. Step 1: Narrow the topic Jot down ideas of all the subtopics you could cover. Jot down ideas of all the.
Unit 3 Overview Week 10 3/18- Intro to informative writing 3/20- Major Essay 3- Informative Article Week 11 3/23- Visual rhetoric strategies 3/25- Newspaper.
Research Paper: Design and Layout TWRIT SP09. Formatting the Document APA Format Parenthetical Documentation References Header/Abstract/Subs Visuals (figures.
18 Using Visual Aids “One picture is worth a thousand words.” ―Fred Barnard, 19th Century British illustrator.
The Rhetoric of Images Choosing and Appropriate Images to Enhance Your Argument Annotating Sources, Outlining, and Drafting.
Text Features: What You Should Know About Texts. Human beings have important elements in their bodies such as a heart, lungs, blood vessels, and a brain.
Professional Presentations. Is there a certain format and procedure to follow to achieve a professional looking Power Point presentation?
Incorporating Statistics, Graphs, and Illustrations.
Visual Rhetoric for Student Writers Purdue Writing Lab.
Week 7 Caleb Humphreys. Free Write (10 minutes)  Create a basic outline for your rhetorical analysis. Include your thesis statement and important points.
Objectives Understand when to use visuals
MLA Format, They Say, I Say Ch. 3, and Quote Sandwiches
A Quick Guide to: Avoiding Plagiarism
Inserting Images into Your Research Paper
Writing 101 for Nursing Students
In Concert: An Integrated Reading and Writing Approach by Kathleen T
Project Title Present information clearly Draw the eye
MLA FORMAT Get out a piece of paper for NOTES
A POCKET GUIDE TO PUBLIC SPEAKING 5TH EDITION Chapter 19
Understanding Visual rhetoric/Argument & interpreting graphic aids
Writing a good expository Essay
How to write a literary essay
How to write the rough draft
Project Title Present information clearly Draw the eye
Research Presentation
Giving instructions on how to do something
Writing a Scientific Research Paper
A Few Things to Think About
T e x t F e a t u R e s.
APA Style Tutorial.
Today’s Goals Introduce strategies for closed form prose body paragraphs Discuss ways to integrate source evidence into our writing.
Masque of the red death steps before beginning one pager
Title of Paper or Topic you are Teaching
READING STRATEGIES Previewing
PT1 – Upcoming Due Dates Today – Beginning of class Final draft of your individual research report. (Hard copy and turnitin.com) Late reports will loss.
USING CITATIONS.
Final Draft of Your IWA is Due Today
Plagiarism Damian Gordon.
Adding Secondary Sources and Conclusions
Because everything’s an argument
APPROPRIATE POINT OF CARE DIAGNOSTICS
APA Citations References & In-Text.
CS431 Technical Paper Guidelines
Research Paper Tips.
Using Different Modalities to Present Arguments
Put your Citations here. Make sure both sources are cited.
Create Interesting Title
A picture is worth a thousand words.
Citing SOurces.
Name Teacher Class: Hour Day Month Year
Text Features.
3 Minutes… How are the synthesis essay and rhetorical analysis essays similar to one another? How are they different form one another?
Title of Paper or Topic you are Teaching
Incorporating Statistics, Graphs, and Illustrations
Name Teacher Class: Hour Day Month Year
APA Citations References & In-Text.
CS4310 Technical Paper Guidelines
Research Presentation
Presentation transcript:

A Mostly Complete Guide Using Visuals A Mostly Complete Guide

Key Points to Remember Visuals should enhance your text by telling us something that words can’t. Every visual needs a caption that labels the visual (“Figure 1”), explains what it is, and gives the parenthetical citation. You should discuss your visuals in your paper, like so: Blah blah fact (see Figure 1). Visuals can come in the body of your text OR, if you’re having trouble with formatting, you can list them at the end before your works cited page. There are specific MLA and APA guidelines for using visuals. Make sure you cite them correctly.

Why use visuals in a paper? Visuals enhance your text To present information in a more salient way; research shows that the more ways we present information (audio, visual, etc.) the more likely it is to stick A picture is worth a thousand words 

Design is a Rhetorical Decision Don’t just throw crap in. Every picture, chart, or graph you include should be the result of a conscious, deliberate choice. Consider your audience: is this appropriate for an academic paper? Remember your purpose: your visuals should say something that your text can’t. Every picture/graph/etc. should support your thesis.

Clip Art From the Perdue OWL: https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/691 /04/ “Very little commercially-available clip-art looks good or has any type of sophistication…Clip-art is often cartoony and silly, or abstract and general to the point of being useless…Because clipart is often stylized and colored, it may be hard to find some that really works well with your design, and manages to pull off the kind of ethos you’re striving for.” Seriously? No. Just no.

Charts and Graphs Allow readers to make comparison Great for showing data, or change over time Can more effectively show a pattern in data or a change over time than just explaining something with words

Pie Charts Useful for showing parts of a whole If your data is not in percentages, then this might not be the most useful chart

Photos Make sure to use high quality (pixelated photos will bring down your ethos) Again, consider your audience and purpose. These two pictures of Lincoln say something different. Do you need permission to use a certain photo? When in doubt, give credit.

Drawings and Illustrations Often used in technical/scientific writing Usually needs labels You can use your own drawing, but again: consider your ethos. Is it professional-looking? Do you have software to create the drawing?

Using Visuals in Your Paper Your visuals need to SAY something your words CAN’T. Use a sandwich, just like with quotes: introduce the image, present the image, then explain it and how it relates to your thesis. You can think of it like a “picture frame.”

Citation MLA format for in-text citation: https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/747/14/

I’m watching you! Visuals enhance. Don’t rely on your visuals to carry the text—your words should do most of the work. Your image should take up no more than half a page.