Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Document Design: Guidelines for Effective Information Layout Dr. Shelley Thomas.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Document Design: Guidelines for Effective Information Layout Dr. Shelley Thomas."— Presentation transcript:

1 Document Design: Guidelines for Effective Information Layout Dr. Shelley Thomas

2 Rhetorical Situation Audience Purpose Context

3 Levels of Design Intra Inter Extra Supra

4 Levels of Design Intra  Controls local variation of the text Type size, font, expanded or condensed text, punctuation marks

5 Levels of Design Inter  Helps readers understand the text within a given field Hierarchy shown by type size (heading levels) Text divided into units (columns); hierarchy shown by placement (centering) Separates information (bullets in lists, lines between columns)

6 Levels of Design Extra  Operates outside the main text as autonomous entities with their own visual vocabulary and conventional forms  Includes pictures, data displays, icons, symbols

7 Levels of Design Supra  Includes top-down design elements that visually define, structure and unify the entire document Consistent chapter pages Page orientation Page bleeds, color, unifying logos

8 Functions of Design Provides access to information Aids comprehension Enhances recall Motivates readers Meets readers’ expectations Facilitates ongoing use

9 Provide Explanations  Charts  Illustrations

10 Think you know the world? Projections Pop-Culture Moment

11 Original Underground Map

12 London Underground Simplified

13 Conciseness Conciseness—designs that are appropriately succinct Charts are too concise to communicate effectively

14 Conciseness Information consolidated Be careful of those stray fish.

15 Parts of Illustrations Labels Numbers Titles Callouts

16 Parts of Illustrations Column/Row Headings Legends Captions Footnotes

17 Figure 2.4 EPA National Priorities List www.epa.gov

18 Rhetorical Impact of Data Displays Interdependence of Design Elements  Closely related to each other, a tight- knit family  Elements work in concert, not in isolation, balancing and complementing one another  One strategy impacts other strategies and must be constantly monitored

19 Document Design Decisions Do I use text or a visual representation? Where do I place text, visuals? How many columns should I use? How do I group common elements? What type styles and sizes should I use? How do I accommodate different types of readers?

20 Advantages of Effective Document Design Accommodates different types of reading Points readers to most important material Promotes comprehension Enhances recall GOAL: Instant and lasting communication


Download ppt "Document Design: Guidelines for Effective Information Layout Dr. Shelley Thomas."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google