Frederick Goudy received an award for excellence in type design in 1936. Upon seeing the letterspaced blackletter script on his certificate, he declared that "anyone who would letterspace blackletter would steal sheep", meaning they took the easy way out rather than properly spacing the intricate blackletter forms. The document then provides an overview of typographic terminology like typefaces, fonts, ligatures, letterforms, and the anatomy of letters. It also discusses techniques like tracking, kerning, leading, and ragging to properly set and space type.
Web Typography for Front End DevelopersPascal Rettig
This document provides a primer on web typography for front-end developers. It covers CSS3 and @font-face for incorporating web fonts, where to find fonts from hosted platforms, free fonts, or by purchasing a license. It discusses how to choose fonts based on style, audience, and platform. The document also covers combining fonts, limiting emphasis techniques, using hierarchy and space effectively, and why designers should care about typography for readability and usability.
Need Help With Essay Writing. . Step-By-Step Guide to Essay Writing - ESL BuzzJean Henderson
How to Write a Great Essay Quickly! – ESL Buzz. Do You Need Help To Write Your Essay Writing?. Step-By-Step Guide to Essay Writing - ESL Buzz. Help with essay writing - College Homework Help and Online Tutoring.. Get Essay Writing Help For Experts - Write On Deadline. 10 Tips to Write an Essay and Actually Enjoy It. College Essay Format: Simple Steps to Be Followed. International Student Guide to Writing an Essay. Why Do You Need Financial Assistance Essay - Writing an Essay? Here Are .... essay about help.
TBEX15 North America Fort Lauderdale Emma SparksTBEX
This document discusses self-editing skills for bloggers. It explains that self-editing is necessary to ensure consistency, clarity and quality in writing. Bloggers should self-edit by following a checklist that examines structure, length, clarity, grammar, formatting, language, fact-checking, typos and more. The document provides tips for effective self-editing, such as stepping away from writing before editing and using style guides and other resources to develop editing skills.
This document discusses spelling errors and technologies that can help writers with spelling. It describes common types of spelling errors like real-word errors, phonetic errors, and garbage errors. It discusses assumptions about spelling errors like how the first letter is often correct and frequent words are better spelled. The document then introduces ClaroRead software which helps with spelling error identification, homophone identification and checking, and dynamic word choice prediction. It also mentions word banks as another technology to support spelling.
This document provides instruction on using apostrophes, brackets, speech marks, and complex sentences. It begins by explaining the use of apostrophes to show possession and omission. Examples are provided and the reader is asked to practice inserting apostrophes. The use of brackets to include additional information in sentences is then covered, with examples given of rewriting sentences to include brackets. Next, the document discusses using speech marks to indicate spoken words, and examples are provided for the reader to rewrite while properly punctuating speech. Finally, the document defines complex sentences as containing both a main and subordinate clause, and examples are given for the reader to identify the main clause.
Is poetry instruction still relevant in a time when we are preparing students for high-stakes testing in school while we read and write on cell phones, iPads, and laptops out of school? According to this study, the answer is, “Yes.” Digital poetry bridges new literacy skills with traditional poetry instruction in a collaborative environment. Any opportunities educators can build a bridge between out of school and in school literacies could increase student motivation and engagement to learn. I am confident that the affordances of digital poetry instruction can provide the collaborative digital environment students’ desire while meeting the academic demands of the CCSS.
Frederick Goudy received an award for excellence in type design in 1936. Upon seeing the letterspaced blackletter script on his certificate, he declared that "anyone who would letterspace blackletter would steal sheep", meaning they took the easy way out rather than properly spacing the intricate blackletter forms. The document then provides an overview of typographic terminology like typefaces, fonts, ligatures, letterforms, and the anatomy of letters. It also discusses techniques like tracking, kerning, leading, and ragging to properly set and space type.
Web Typography for Front End DevelopersPascal Rettig
This document provides a primer on web typography for front-end developers. It covers CSS3 and @font-face for incorporating web fonts, where to find fonts from hosted platforms, free fonts, or by purchasing a license. It discusses how to choose fonts based on style, audience, and platform. The document also covers combining fonts, limiting emphasis techniques, using hierarchy and space effectively, and why designers should care about typography for readability and usability.
Need Help With Essay Writing. . Step-By-Step Guide to Essay Writing - ESL BuzzJean Henderson
How to Write a Great Essay Quickly! – ESL Buzz. Do You Need Help To Write Your Essay Writing?. Step-By-Step Guide to Essay Writing - ESL Buzz. Help with essay writing - College Homework Help and Online Tutoring.. Get Essay Writing Help For Experts - Write On Deadline. 10 Tips to Write an Essay and Actually Enjoy It. College Essay Format: Simple Steps to Be Followed. International Student Guide to Writing an Essay. Why Do You Need Financial Assistance Essay - Writing an Essay? Here Are .... essay about help.
TBEX15 North America Fort Lauderdale Emma SparksTBEX
This document discusses self-editing skills for bloggers. It explains that self-editing is necessary to ensure consistency, clarity and quality in writing. Bloggers should self-edit by following a checklist that examines structure, length, clarity, grammar, formatting, language, fact-checking, typos and more. The document provides tips for effective self-editing, such as stepping away from writing before editing and using style guides and other resources to develop editing skills.
This document discusses spelling errors and technologies that can help writers with spelling. It describes common types of spelling errors like real-word errors, phonetic errors, and garbage errors. It discusses assumptions about spelling errors like how the first letter is often correct and frequent words are better spelled. The document then introduces ClaroRead software which helps with spelling error identification, homophone identification and checking, and dynamic word choice prediction. It also mentions word banks as another technology to support spelling.
This document provides instruction on using apostrophes, brackets, speech marks, and complex sentences. It begins by explaining the use of apostrophes to show possession and omission. Examples are provided and the reader is asked to practice inserting apostrophes. The use of brackets to include additional information in sentences is then covered, with examples given of rewriting sentences to include brackets. Next, the document discusses using speech marks to indicate spoken words, and examples are provided for the reader to rewrite while properly punctuating speech. Finally, the document defines complex sentences as containing both a main and subordinate clause, and examples are given for the reader to identify the main clause.
Is poetry instruction still relevant in a time when we are preparing students for high-stakes testing in school while we read and write on cell phones, iPads, and laptops out of school? According to this study, the answer is, “Yes.” Digital poetry bridges new literacy skills with traditional poetry instruction in a collaborative environment. Any opportunities educators can build a bridge between out of school and in school literacies could increase student motivation and engagement to learn. I am confident that the affordances of digital poetry instruction can provide the collaborative digital environment students’ desire while meeting the academic demands of the CCSS.
The document outlines an advertising campaign brief for promoting Australian cricket against England. It introduces the creative team of Sarah, Juno, and Nikki. The challenge is to make Australians feel their cricket team is stronger than England's and motivate fans to support the Australian team. The creative executions use exaggerated Australian and British slang terms and phrases to spark the rivalry between the teams and engage fans. The team found the experience enjoyable and confirmed their interest in working in the advertising industry.
Self-editing skills for travel bloggers - TBEX '15Emma Sparks
This document discusses self-editing skills for bloggers. It explains that self-editing is necessary to ensure consistency, clarity and quality in writing. Bloggers should self-edit by following a checklist that examines structure, length, clarity, grammar, formatting, language, fact-checking, typos and more. The document provides tips for self-editing, such as stepping away from writing before editing and using style guides and other resources to develop skills. Regular self-editing is important to improve writing and one's blog portfolio over time.
Using research to improve progress for lower attainersDianne Murphy
The document discusses research on improving outcomes for lower attaining students. It recommends using close assessment of small incremental skills rather than broad general goals. Vocabulary development, morphology, comprehension strategies, fluency, and applying research findings to instruction are highlighted. References are provided for further reading on effective practices for struggling readers.
This document provides an introduction to the concept of Lifeworth, which the authors define as peak experiences that provide meaning and purpose beyond financial networth. The authors, two brothers in their late 50s, began contemplating the transition from focusing on accumulating wealth to focusing on experiences that enrich one's life and help others. They interviewed individuals who have found fulfillment through challenging themselves or helping others. The book shares these stories to encourage readers to pursue Lifeworth experiences before limitations arise. It aims to create a reflective pool of diverse stories for readers to draw inspiration from.
The document contains information on various topics related to communication and language, including definitions of communication, examples of early communication methods throughout history, models of communication, readability formulas, and techniques for effective reading like SQ3R. It discusses dimensions of communication, defines readability based on average sentence length and multi-syllable words, and provides examples of applying spelling and punctuation rules for clarity.
The passage discusses agency theory and how it can be applied to analyze the rise and downfall of the Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS). Agency theory proposes that the principal (shareholders) hire agents (managers) to pursue the principal's goals. However, there is a threat that agents may instead pursue their own goals, like high bonuses. This likely occurred at RBS, where managers pursued aggressive actions to maximize bonuses, though it damaged the long-term stability of the bank and ultimately led to its downfall. Applying agency theory can help identify measures to prevent future banking failures by better aligning the goals of principals and agents.
This document provides information about a book titled "Grandfather's Journey." It was written by Allen Say and is a historical fiction genre. The big question posed is "What can we learn about the United States as we travel?"
The document provides an overview of what students can expect to encounter on English exams for university entrance in Brazil. It indicates that the exams will include multiple choice and open-ended questions to test reading comprehension, grammar knowledge, and vocabulary. Specifically, it mentions that comprehension questions will focus on interpreting texts, identifying false cognates, and paying attention to question phrasing. It also lists some common grammar topics like the passive voice and conditional sentences. Finally, it provides some sample reading comprehension questions and answers from a prior exam.
This document discusses effective techniques for writing catchy headlines and slogans that attract attention and stimulate customers to buy products, including the use of puns, word play, rhymes, and memorable phrases. It notes that psycholinguistic characteristics like humor and plays on words can make ads more memorable. Rhetorical devices like puns, alliteration, and antithesis are believed to be most effective at creating resonance. The goal is to craft headlines that pass into common parlance through their catchiness. Various examples are provided to illustrate different types of word play.
This document provides an overview of lesson plans and activities for a week of instruction related to the story "The Ch'i-lin Purse". It includes:
1) Daily lessons that involve reading passages from the story, discussing vocabulary words, completing comprehension questions and activities, and practicing language conventions.
2) Lessons focus on comprehension skills like compare and contrast, identifying symbols, analyzing suffixes, and determining word meanings from Greek and Latin roots.
3) The week culminates in a review of these skills and concepts, and a weekly test and spelling test.
The document outlines the daily schedule and lessons to guide a week of instruction centered around the themes and skills presented in the story "The Ch
This document provides an overview of the six traits of writing: ideas, organization, voice, word choice, sentence fluency, and conventions. For each trait, the document lists some key aspects. For example, for ideas it notes that the ideas should be specific, original, and take a clear position. For organization, it discusses the importance of introduction, conclusion, logical flow. The goal is to understand and apply these six traits to improve writing.
How to Design a Killer Deck - 8 Essential Tips in Presentation DesignCarole Alalouf
Comprehensive presentation on how to design a killer deck, including 8 essential tips in presentation design, and plenty of freebies to keep for reference. Enjoy!
To see more of our presentations, visit <a href="https://www.exaltus.ca">https://www.exaltus.ca</a> or sign up to our email list (https://www.exaltus.ca/email) to receive actionable marketing tips in your inbox a couple of times per month!
The document summarizes an AP style and grammar workshop presented by Jennifer Cox. The workshop covered refresher lessons on grammar, learning to use the AP Stylebook, and was accompanied by comma and AP style cheat sheets. Common grammar obstacles like capitalization, subject-verb agreement, possessives, and passive voice were discussed. The workshop also covered the basics of AP style including capitalization rules, technology words, numbers and measurements, and key differences from general English grammar and style.
This document provides an agenda for a writing workshop. It includes discussions on common writing errors, eliminating passive voice, MLA style review, and peer review preparation. Students will work on revising drafts by eliminating passive constructions and highlighting key elements like their thesis in different colors for peer review.
The document discusses typography and readability factors such as legibility, tracking, leading, orphans, and combining different typefaces, and also covers techniques for embedding fonts on the web such as @font-face, hosted font services, font squirrel, and FOUT (flash of unstyled text) issues. It provides examples and explanations of how these various typographic concepts and techniques can impact readability and design.
“Design Basics,” a VPI CNRE guest lectureBen Capozzi
Twice now, I have been invited to speak with students in the Packaging Design curriculum in Virginia Tech's College of Natural Resources and the Environment. These are non-graphic design students who focus mainly on materials, and I was asked to give them an overview of design basics and some of the tools. I also included some general notes on creativity, observation, and resources, AND some in-class exercises to stimulate creativity adapted from Edward de Bono. I often include images of the Great Pacific Trash Gyres in my presentations in order to place the need for good design —from concept to execution in all phases of a product's life— foremost in student minds.
Who Am I Essay | Essay on Who Am I for Students and Children in English .... 002 Who Am I Essay Example Examples Personal Room Sample ~ Thatsnotus. Scholarship essay: Who am i essay. Who am i my college essay | What am i essay. 022 Who Am I Essay Writing Format In English Fresh Sample Introductions ....
This document provides guidance on delivering effective presentations. It discusses how presentations differ from written documents in being aimed at arousing interest, demonstrating competence, or persuading an audience. It emphasizes the importance of understanding the audience's interests and needs. It then provides specific tips for ensuring legibility in presentations, including using large bold fonts, sufficient line spacing, strong color contrast, thick lines, well-designed fonts, avoiding capital letters, and restricting the amount of text. It also discusses choosing an appropriate writing and presentation style and handling questions from the audience.
Here are two potential TV drama clips for analysis of gender representation:
1. Survivors (1975-77) - This BBC post-apocalyptic drama presented complex representations of gender in its portrayal of men and women struggling to survive in a world devastated by plague. It subverted stereotypes by showing female characters as capable and resourceful leaders.
2. Eastenders (1985-present) - One of the longest running soaps on British television. Gender is consistently constructed through archetypal portrayals of masculinity and femininity in working class London. Episodes often focus on domestic conflicts and tensions between patriarchal and matriarchal values.
Both clips could offer opportunities to analyse how gender is represented
This document consists of a collection of newspaper headlines from various decades that demonstrate how headlines have changed over time and can sometimes be misleading or humorous due to typos or wordplay. The headlines cover a wide range of topics from politics to sports to accidents and crimes. They illustrate the brevity required in historic headlines compared to modern ones and how missing or misplaced punctuation can alter a headline's meaning.
A presentation revised for the summer of 2002 regarding editing including dozens of examples of low-level editing (grammar, spelling, punctuation, style), mid-level editing (flow, word choice, story choice) and high-level editing (libel, ethics). By Bradley Wilson, Ph.D.
The document outlines an advertising campaign brief for promoting Australian cricket against England. It introduces the creative team of Sarah, Juno, and Nikki. The challenge is to make Australians feel their cricket team is stronger than England's and motivate fans to support the Australian team. The creative executions use exaggerated Australian and British slang terms and phrases to spark the rivalry between the teams and engage fans. The team found the experience enjoyable and confirmed their interest in working in the advertising industry.
Self-editing skills for travel bloggers - TBEX '15Emma Sparks
This document discusses self-editing skills for bloggers. It explains that self-editing is necessary to ensure consistency, clarity and quality in writing. Bloggers should self-edit by following a checklist that examines structure, length, clarity, grammar, formatting, language, fact-checking, typos and more. The document provides tips for self-editing, such as stepping away from writing before editing and using style guides and other resources to develop skills. Regular self-editing is important to improve writing and one's blog portfolio over time.
Using research to improve progress for lower attainersDianne Murphy
The document discusses research on improving outcomes for lower attaining students. It recommends using close assessment of small incremental skills rather than broad general goals. Vocabulary development, morphology, comprehension strategies, fluency, and applying research findings to instruction are highlighted. References are provided for further reading on effective practices for struggling readers.
This document provides an introduction to the concept of Lifeworth, which the authors define as peak experiences that provide meaning and purpose beyond financial networth. The authors, two brothers in their late 50s, began contemplating the transition from focusing on accumulating wealth to focusing on experiences that enrich one's life and help others. They interviewed individuals who have found fulfillment through challenging themselves or helping others. The book shares these stories to encourage readers to pursue Lifeworth experiences before limitations arise. It aims to create a reflective pool of diverse stories for readers to draw inspiration from.
The document contains information on various topics related to communication and language, including definitions of communication, examples of early communication methods throughout history, models of communication, readability formulas, and techniques for effective reading like SQ3R. It discusses dimensions of communication, defines readability based on average sentence length and multi-syllable words, and provides examples of applying spelling and punctuation rules for clarity.
The passage discusses agency theory and how it can be applied to analyze the rise and downfall of the Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS). Agency theory proposes that the principal (shareholders) hire agents (managers) to pursue the principal's goals. However, there is a threat that agents may instead pursue their own goals, like high bonuses. This likely occurred at RBS, where managers pursued aggressive actions to maximize bonuses, though it damaged the long-term stability of the bank and ultimately led to its downfall. Applying agency theory can help identify measures to prevent future banking failures by better aligning the goals of principals and agents.
This document provides information about a book titled "Grandfather's Journey." It was written by Allen Say and is a historical fiction genre. The big question posed is "What can we learn about the United States as we travel?"
The document provides an overview of what students can expect to encounter on English exams for university entrance in Brazil. It indicates that the exams will include multiple choice and open-ended questions to test reading comprehension, grammar knowledge, and vocabulary. Specifically, it mentions that comprehension questions will focus on interpreting texts, identifying false cognates, and paying attention to question phrasing. It also lists some common grammar topics like the passive voice and conditional sentences. Finally, it provides some sample reading comprehension questions and answers from a prior exam.
This document discusses effective techniques for writing catchy headlines and slogans that attract attention and stimulate customers to buy products, including the use of puns, word play, rhymes, and memorable phrases. It notes that psycholinguistic characteristics like humor and plays on words can make ads more memorable. Rhetorical devices like puns, alliteration, and antithesis are believed to be most effective at creating resonance. The goal is to craft headlines that pass into common parlance through their catchiness. Various examples are provided to illustrate different types of word play.
This document provides an overview of lesson plans and activities for a week of instruction related to the story "The Ch'i-lin Purse". It includes:
1) Daily lessons that involve reading passages from the story, discussing vocabulary words, completing comprehension questions and activities, and practicing language conventions.
2) Lessons focus on comprehension skills like compare and contrast, identifying symbols, analyzing suffixes, and determining word meanings from Greek and Latin roots.
3) The week culminates in a review of these skills and concepts, and a weekly test and spelling test.
The document outlines the daily schedule and lessons to guide a week of instruction centered around the themes and skills presented in the story "The Ch
This document provides an overview of the six traits of writing: ideas, organization, voice, word choice, sentence fluency, and conventions. For each trait, the document lists some key aspects. For example, for ideas it notes that the ideas should be specific, original, and take a clear position. For organization, it discusses the importance of introduction, conclusion, logical flow. The goal is to understand and apply these six traits to improve writing.
How to Design a Killer Deck - 8 Essential Tips in Presentation DesignCarole Alalouf
Comprehensive presentation on how to design a killer deck, including 8 essential tips in presentation design, and plenty of freebies to keep for reference. Enjoy!
To see more of our presentations, visit <a href="https://www.exaltus.ca">https://www.exaltus.ca</a> or sign up to our email list (https://www.exaltus.ca/email) to receive actionable marketing tips in your inbox a couple of times per month!
The document summarizes an AP style and grammar workshop presented by Jennifer Cox. The workshop covered refresher lessons on grammar, learning to use the AP Stylebook, and was accompanied by comma and AP style cheat sheets. Common grammar obstacles like capitalization, subject-verb agreement, possessives, and passive voice were discussed. The workshop also covered the basics of AP style including capitalization rules, technology words, numbers and measurements, and key differences from general English grammar and style.
This document provides an agenda for a writing workshop. It includes discussions on common writing errors, eliminating passive voice, MLA style review, and peer review preparation. Students will work on revising drafts by eliminating passive constructions and highlighting key elements like their thesis in different colors for peer review.
The document discusses typography and readability factors such as legibility, tracking, leading, orphans, and combining different typefaces, and also covers techniques for embedding fonts on the web such as @font-face, hosted font services, font squirrel, and FOUT (flash of unstyled text) issues. It provides examples and explanations of how these various typographic concepts and techniques can impact readability and design.
“Design Basics,” a VPI CNRE guest lectureBen Capozzi
Twice now, I have been invited to speak with students in the Packaging Design curriculum in Virginia Tech's College of Natural Resources and the Environment. These are non-graphic design students who focus mainly on materials, and I was asked to give them an overview of design basics and some of the tools. I also included some general notes on creativity, observation, and resources, AND some in-class exercises to stimulate creativity adapted from Edward de Bono. I often include images of the Great Pacific Trash Gyres in my presentations in order to place the need for good design —from concept to execution in all phases of a product's life— foremost in student minds.
Who Am I Essay | Essay on Who Am I for Students and Children in English .... 002 Who Am I Essay Example Examples Personal Room Sample ~ Thatsnotus. Scholarship essay: Who am i essay. Who am i my college essay | What am i essay. 022 Who Am I Essay Writing Format In English Fresh Sample Introductions ....
This document provides guidance on delivering effective presentations. It discusses how presentations differ from written documents in being aimed at arousing interest, demonstrating competence, or persuading an audience. It emphasizes the importance of understanding the audience's interests and needs. It then provides specific tips for ensuring legibility in presentations, including using large bold fonts, sufficient line spacing, strong color contrast, thick lines, well-designed fonts, avoiding capital letters, and restricting the amount of text. It also discusses choosing an appropriate writing and presentation style and handling questions from the audience.
Here are two potential TV drama clips for analysis of gender representation:
1. Survivors (1975-77) - This BBC post-apocalyptic drama presented complex representations of gender in its portrayal of men and women struggling to survive in a world devastated by plague. It subverted stereotypes by showing female characters as capable and resourceful leaders.
2. Eastenders (1985-present) - One of the longest running soaps on British television. Gender is consistently constructed through archetypal portrayals of masculinity and femininity in working class London. Episodes often focus on domestic conflicts and tensions between patriarchal and matriarchal values.
Both clips could offer opportunities to analyse how gender is represented
This document consists of a collection of newspaper headlines from various decades that demonstrate how headlines have changed over time and can sometimes be misleading or humorous due to typos or wordplay. The headlines cover a wide range of topics from politics to sports to accidents and crimes. They illustrate the brevity required in historic headlines compared to modern ones and how missing or misplaced punctuation can alter a headline's meaning.
A presentation revised for the summer of 2002 regarding editing including dozens of examples of low-level editing (grammar, spelling, punctuation, style), mid-level editing (flow, word choice, story choice) and high-level editing (libel, ethics). By Bradley Wilson, Ph.D.
This document discusses color modes used in design, including CMYK, RGB, hexadecimal, and HSB. It provides information on when each color mode should be used and what they are used for. CMYK is used for printing and is a subtractive process. RGB is used for screens and is an additive process. Hexadecimal is a renumbering of RGB values. Additional summaries from designers recommend working in RGB and converting to CMYK for print, as RGB has a larger color gamut and files are smaller. Colors can also have symbolic meanings associated with them.
This document provides an overview of design principles for publications. It discusses concepts like consistency, contrast, modular design, grids, fonts, and color. It emphasizes creating an internal consistency within a design while also using external contrasts. Modular design encourages grouping related visual elements together in rectangular blocks. The document provides guidelines for column widths and outlines best practices for layout, headlines, images, and white space. Overall, the document is an instructional guide for designers, outlining key foundational concepts to consider for an effective publication design.
This document provides an overview of photography techniques and considerations during the COVID-19 pandemic. It discusses following science and safety protocols, as well as technical photography skills like composition, lighting, and capturing meaningful moments. Specific topics that could be photographed are also presented, such as elections, the environment, and an evolving society. Resources for student journalists are shared.
Every political election — city, local, state, national — makes for good visual coverage. Get in on the action. Take viewers where they could not ordinarily go. Get to know the politicians. Get to know the issues.
The document provides guidance for sports photographers, discussing techniques such as getting close to the action, following the rule of thirds, knowing the sport being photographed, and playing with light. It includes examples of sports photographs taken by students and professionals that demonstrate these techniques, showing athletes in action, coaches, fans reacting, and moments on the sidelines. The document concludes by providing additional resources for sports photographers to continue improving their skills.
A presentation of various Pulitzer Prize-winning images, the stories behind them and some of the impact they had on American society. The presentation was created by students in the master's degree program at Kent State University for students looking to get a degree in teaching scholastic journalism. https://www.kent.edu/csj/online-masters-degree-journalism-educators-0 All images remain copyrighted by the original photographer.
A short presentation for the AJEMC Scholastic Division Teach-in, Aug. 5, 2020 — "Ideas That Will Help Now." 1) Make use of government images and other public domain or Creative Commons images; 2) Think outside the box with your coverage focusing on issues and people; 3) Make use of consumer-generated content.
Respondents in a 2017 Gallup poll said they have little confidence in the public schools today with only 36 percent having a “great deal” or “quite a lot” of confidence in the schools. While the rising tide of mediocrity so often mentioned in educational research pushes for more funding— smaller class sizes and higher teacher salaries, this research and that of others shows money may not be the leading factor in success in a scholastic media environment. When 310 of the most successful scholastic broadcast, yearbook, newspaper and online programs were examined, the qualifications of the teachers, the location of the school and the racial diversity of the school were more likely to predict success than per pupil revenues or low student/teacher ratios.
A discussion of what makes a good tweet, some ideas for how scholastic media can use Twitter, how to schedule tweets and how to analyze success using Twitter.
The document provides an overview of Twitter, including:
- Twitter is a microblogging platform that allows users to post updates of up to 280 characters and share photos, videos, and links.
- It was originally limited to 140 characters but was expanded to 280 characters.
- Twitter sees billions of tweets sent per year and is used for spot news, general news, updates, and sharing useful information.
This article summarizes trends in high school yearbooks, including more in-depth coverage of issues beyond people and events. It discusses how yearbooks have evolved from historical records produced by senior classes to more journalistic publications with sections and themes. Modern yearbooks focus on community identity and standards while dealing with issues like decreasing sales and population changes. Experts note the importance of yearbooks as tangible mementos that can be looked at for decades to come. The article also briefly outlines trends for 2018-2019 like unique feature stories, increased color and photo quality, and attention to professional design standards.
Basic yearbook design is all based on the basic column design. Learn the fundamentals of dominance, consistency and contrast. Then modernize designs from there.
An overview of the Texas University Interscholastic League Current Issues and Events competition. Bradley Wilson, PhD., state director. This presentation was used at the 2017 Capital Conference in Austin.
Photographers at a university student media organization report to either the photo editor or editor. Photographers may work for more than one media outlet and are given assignments by editors. The director of photography or photo editor is in charge of discipline. Staff photographers must maintain at least a 2.0 GPA, be full-time students, regularly attend training and critique sessions, attend weekly assignment meetings, and maintain enthusiasm for photojournalism. The student media owns copyright to photos taken on assignment for 18 months before shared ownership with the photographer.
Elevate Your Nonprofit's Online Presence_ A Guide to Effective SEO Strategies...TechSoup
Whether you're new to SEO or looking to refine your existing strategies, this webinar will provide you with actionable insights and practical tips to elevate your nonprofit's online presence.
How to Download & Install Module From the Odoo App Store in Odoo 17Celine George
Custom modules offer the flexibility to extend Odoo's capabilities, address unique requirements, and optimize workflows to align seamlessly with your organization's processes. By leveraging custom modules, businesses can unlock greater efficiency, productivity, and innovation, empowering them to stay competitive in today's dynamic market landscape. In this tutorial, we'll guide you step by step on how to easily download and install modules from the Odoo App Store.
Andreas Schleicher presents PISA 2022 Volume III - Creative Thinking - 18 Jun...EduSkills OECD
Andreas Schleicher, Director of Education and Skills at the OECD presents at the launch of PISA 2022 Volume III - Creative Minds, Creative Schools on 18 June 2024.
Philippine Edukasyong Pantahanan at Pangkabuhayan (EPP) CurriculumMJDuyan
(𝐓𝐋𝐄 𝟏𝟎𝟎) (𝐋𝐞𝐬𝐬𝐨𝐧 𝟏)-𝐏𝐫𝐞𝐥𝐢𝐦𝐬
𝐃𝐢𝐬𝐜𝐮𝐬𝐬 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐄𝐏𝐏 𝐂𝐮𝐫𝐫𝐢𝐜𝐮𝐥𝐮𝐦 𝐢𝐧 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐏𝐡𝐢𝐥𝐢𝐩𝐩𝐢𝐧𝐞𝐬:
- Understand the goals and objectives of the Edukasyong Pantahanan at Pangkabuhayan (EPP) curriculum, recognizing its importance in fostering practical life skills and values among students. Students will also be able to identify the key components and subjects covered, such as agriculture, home economics, industrial arts, and information and communication technology.
𝐄𝐱𝐩𝐥𝐚𝐢𝐧 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐍𝐚𝐭𝐮𝐫𝐞 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐒𝐜𝐨𝐩𝐞 𝐨𝐟 𝐚𝐧 𝐄𝐧𝐭𝐫𝐞𝐩𝐫𝐞𝐧𝐞𝐮𝐫:
-Define entrepreneurship, distinguishing it from general business activities by emphasizing its focus on innovation, risk-taking, and value creation. Students will describe the characteristics and traits of successful entrepreneurs, including their roles and responsibilities, and discuss the broader economic and social impacts of entrepreneurial activities on both local and global scales.
Leveraging Generative AI to Drive Nonprofit InnovationTechSoup
In this webinar, participants learned how to utilize Generative AI to streamline operations and elevate member engagement. Amazon Web Service experts provided a customer specific use cases and dived into low/no-code tools that are quick and easy to deploy through Amazon Web Service (AWS.)
This document provides an overview of wound healing, its functions, stages, mechanisms, factors affecting it, and complications.
A wound is a break in the integrity of the skin or tissues, which may be associated with disruption of the structure and function.
Healing is the body’s response to injury in an attempt to restore normal structure and functions.
Healing can occur in two ways: Regeneration and Repair
There are 4 phases of wound healing: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. This document also describes the mechanism of wound healing. Factors that affect healing include infection, uncontrolled diabetes, poor nutrition, age, anemia, the presence of foreign bodies, etc.
Complications of wound healing like infection, hyperpigmentation of scar, contractures, and keloid formation.
Temple of Asclepius in Thrace. Excavation resultsKrassimira Luka
The temple and the sanctuary around were dedicated to Asklepios Zmidrenus. This name has been known since 1875 when an inscription dedicated to him was discovered in Rome. The inscription is dated in 227 AD and was left by soldiers originating from the city of Philippopolis (modern Plovdiv).
This presentation was provided by Racquel Jemison, Ph.D., Christina MacLaughlin, Ph.D., and Paulomi Majumder. Ph.D., all of the American Chemical Society, for the second session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session Two: 'Expanding Pathways to Publishing Careers,' was held June 13, 2024.
4. PostScript
Standard for print output; Mac standard; screen and printer versions
TrueType
PC standard; problematic on some output devices
OpenType
More expensive but contains more characters; becoming international standard under
ISO; a collaboration between Microsoft
and Adobe in 1996
8. OPENTYPE
OpenType Advantages
Character encoding is based on Unicode
Can have up to 65,536 glyphs
Allows for advanced typographic features
Font files are cross platform and can be used without
modification on Macintosh,Windows and some Unix systems
14. TERMINOLOGY
Serif
Body copy is generally set in serif fonts.
The serifs give the eye something to follow.
Readable at text sizes and large sizes.
This is a serif.
16. TERMINOLOGY
Script fonts
•Informal; often used to simulate hand-writing
•Formal; used to give a formal look to a
publication
•NEVER used in all caps
•Samples: 44th President, Cursive Handwriting, Santa Fe,
Hand of Sean, Inola Handlettered
21. • Underline
• ALL CAPS
• SMALL CAPS
• Reverse
TERMINOLOGY
• Roman
• Bold
• Italic
• Outline
STYLE
22. WEIGHTS
Avenir Next Condensed Ultra Light
Avenir Next Condensed Ultra Light Italic
Avenir Next Condensed Regular
Avenir Next Condensed Regular Italic
Avenir Next Condensed Medium
Avenir Next Condensed Medium Italic
Avenir Next Condensed Demi Bold
Avenir Next Condensed Demi Bold Italic
Avenir Next Condensed Bold
Avenir Next Condensed Bold Italic
Avenir Next Condensed Heavy
Avenir Next Condensed Heavy Italic
23. • Font sizes are measured in points.
• There are 72 points in an inch.
TERMINOLOGY
MEASUREMENT
24. • The space between the lines is called
leading.
• Leading is also measured in points.
• More leading = more space.
TERMINOLOGY
LEADING
25. We’ve crunched it, stretched it,
smooshed it and whooshed it. We’ve
trampled it, filled it, curved it and
twisted it. We’ve shattered it,
splattered it, squashed it and twirled
it. We’ve even been very creative
with it, but in doing so, we have
sometimes caused it to be totally
unreadable. Along the way, we seem
to have forgotten that type was
designed to be read with ease.
We’ve crunched it, stretched it,
smooshed it and whooshed it. We’ve
trampled it, filled it, curved it and
twisted it. We’ve shattered it,
splattered it, squashed it and twirled
it. We’ve even been very creative
with it, but in doing so, we have
sometimes caused it to be totally
unreadable. Along the way, we seem
to have forgotten that type was
designed to be read with ease.
18/22 pt.
18/30 pt.
TERMINOLOGY
LEADING
26. • Type can be set
• Flush left (ragged on the right)
• Flush right (ragged on the left)
• Centered (ragged on both sides)
• Justified (straight on both sides)
TERMINOLOGY
ALIGNMENT
27. TERMINOLOGY
ALIGNLEFT
We’ve crunched it, stretched it,
smooshed it and whooshed it. We’ve
trampled it, filled it, curved it and
twisted it. We’ve shattered it,
splattered it, squashed it and twirled
it. We’ve even been very creative with
it, but in doing so, we have
sometimes caused it to be totally
unreadable. Along the way, we seem
to have forgotten that type was
designed to be read with ease.
28. We’ve crunched it, stretched it,
smooshed it and whooshed it. We’ve
trampled it, filled it, curved it and
twisted it. We’ve shattered it,
splattered it, squashed it and twirled
it. We’ve even been very creative with
it, but in doing so, we have
sometimes caused it to be totally
unreadable. Along the way, we seem
to have forgotten that type was
designed to be read with ease.
TERMINOLOGY
ALIGNCENTER
29. We’ve crunched it, stretched it,
smooshed it and whooshed it. We’ve
trampled it, filled it, curved it and
twisted it. We’ve shattered it,
splattered it, squashed it and twirled
it. We’ve even been very creative with
it, but in doing so, we have
sometimes caused it to be totally
unreadable. Along the way, we seem
to have forgotten that type was
designed to be read with ease.
TERMINOLOGY
ALIGNRIGHT
30. We’ve crunched it, stretched it,
smooshed it and whooshed it. We’ve
trampled it, filled it, curved it and
twisted it. We’ve shattered it,
splattered it, squashed it and twirled
it. We’ve even been very creative with
it, but in doing so, we have
sometimes caused it to be totally
unreadable. Along the way, we seem
to have forgotten that type was
designed to be read with ease.
TERMINOLOGY
ALIGNJUSTIFIED
31. • Body copy and captions are
usually set justified.
• Headlines are usually set
flush left.
TERMINOLOGY
ALIGNMENT
33. TERMINOLOGY
• There are six picas in an inch.
• Column widths are measured in picas.
• There are 72 points in an inch.
• Body copy is generally 10/12 pt.
(Read: 10-point type on 12-point
leading)
• Headlines are at least 18 pt.
• The wider the column, the greater the
leading.
TIPS
34. 1. What did you like/not like about previous editions?
2. Pick a font family.
3. Try different sizes.
4. Try different column widths.
5. Try different leading.
6. Try different letter spacing.
7. See how it mixes with other fonts on page.
PROCESS
35. 1. Pick a body copy font largely based on readability.
2. Pick a headline/caption font based on contrast
with body copy font and readability.
3. Pick an accent font to convey a tone or feel.
PROCESS
Inola Handlettered
36. Berkeley was originally designed under the name of Californian by Frederic W.
Goudy in 1938 for the University of California Press in Berkeley. The UC Press
still owns the original typeface, and the 1983 ITC version is a careful redrawing
by Tony Stan.
It has the flavor of several other Goudy designs, including Kennerley, Goudy
Oldstyle, and Deepdene. This is a typeface designed for text applications,
therefore, close attention was paid to the relationships of the weights. Book and
Medium are close to each other in weight, with larger jumps to the Bold and the
Black, used for emphasis and contrast.
myfonts.com: $40.50/each for 8 fonts; $40.50/style
39. SWIMMING/DIVING
The men’s and women’s swimming teams each put together a series of
impressive victories and had some outstanding individual performances in
what coach Brooks Teal called “a season of ups and downs.”
The men’s team included sensational freshman diver Vitor Assuncao,
sophomore swimming phenom Cullen Jones and last year’s returning MVP,
sophomore swimmer Steve Cowling.
“Vitor and Cullen were both highlights,” said Teal, as Assuncao notched an
impressive 22 diving victories and took second place in the three-meter at the
ACC Championships, while Jones won the 50m and 100m freestyle events at
the ACC Championships, earning a berth in the NCAA Championships.
Unfortunately, the team suffered a number of setbacks as well. Not only
was Cowling, whom Teal called “our best returning swimmer,” beset by
injuries throughout the year, but junior swimmer Kevin Barkley and diver T.J.
Ferguson also struggled with injuries.
Teal said of Ferguson, “when you only have three [divers], that’s a big
loss.”
“We were going to be a thin team, anyway,” said Teal. “And then we were
hit with injuries and setbacks.”
Nonetheless, the team certainly enjoyed a successful year.
One of the highlights of the year was the mid-season victory over Virginia
Tech.
“That was a combined win [both the men’s and women’s] over a team that
came in ranked a little higher than we were,” said Teal.
The women’s team included sophomore diver Molly Culberson and
freshman swimmer Rebecca Perry.
“One of the high points this year was Rebecca’s performance [at the ACC
Championships],” said Teal.
Culberson also captured 8 first-place finishes on each of the one and
three-meter boards during the season.
Both teams had high potential.
“A lot of the strength in the men’s team is in our sophomores and juniors,”
Teal said. “A lot of the strength on our women’s side is in our freshmen and
sophomores. The teams are a year away from reaching their potential. We feel
we’re poised.” Black
CROSSING THE FINISH LINE
2003 Scores
198-199 Swimming.indd 198-199 6/3/08 8:55:05 AM
40.
41. fontbureau.com, $450/complete; from myfonts.com: $40/each for 15 fonts
In 1938, Frederic Goudy designed California Oldstyle for University of
California Press.
In 1958, Lanston issued it as Californian.
Carol Twombly digitized the Roman version 30 years later.
David Berlow revised it for Font Bureau with italic and small caps. Jane
Patterson designed the bold. In 1999, assisted by Richard Lipton & Jill Pichotta,
Berlow designed the black and the text and display series.
44. typography.com, $3,208/complete 66 styles, $885/basic set
The inspiration for HTF’s Gotham isn’t the work of a single iconic architect, but
the lettering style common on buildings and signs throughout mid-
century Manhattan. Tobias Frere-Jones celebrated his return to his native
New York by designing a typeface based on the unnoticed everyday signage
around him, starting with the lettering that labels the Port Authority Bus
Terminal, the city's central hub for long-distance buses, a block west of Times
Square.
The actual letterforms have rounded, generous proportions; uniform thickness of
strokes; extreme simplicity of form; and the suggestion that they were drawn by
an engineer. The ends of curved strokes are cut off diagonally, straight
across the stroke, rather than horizontally or vertically; but diagonal straight
strokes all end horizontally.
52. Hoefler Text
typography.com: $299/complete set
Steeped in the virtues of classical book typography, Hoefler Text is a
comprehensive family of typeface designs which was originally developed for
Apple Computer.
Hoefler Text was designed with the healthy conceit that such an extensive family
of typefaces might anticipate every need of a demanding typographer. It is for
this reason that the family includes 27 designs: aside from the three weights
with small caps and swashes are a few additions, packed into the alternate fonts,
hopefully of service to attentive designers.
55. Designer Robert Slimbach, 1992, created this font, inspired by fonts of the late
Renaissance.
Minion was created primarily as a traditional text font but adapts well to today’s
digital technology, presenting the richness of the late baroque forms within
modern text formats.
Minion
fonts.com: $598/family
58. W
hen it came to leader-
ship, both the men’s
and women’s soccer
teams looked beyond
seniors to younger
members of the team.
Women’s team
forward Lindsay Vera,
a sophomore in First
Year College and a for-
mer ACC All-Fresh-
man selection, fin-
ished second on the
team with five goals
and a total of 11 points
on the season. During
ACC play, Vera led the
Pack with three goals,
and she earned her a
spot on the All-ACC
Second Team.
Vera’s vocal inten-
sity on the field also placed her in a leadership role for
the women’s team.
“I will speak up if there is something I think needs
to be done,”Vera said.“I’ve never had to hold the cap-
tain position to speak up.”
Vera said four seniors also contributed leadership
skills to the team.
“Michelle Massey and Amy Graul lead a lot through
example,” Vera said. “Nicole Mayo and Megan Con-
nors stepped up vocally and gave direction on the
field. We used them as a good line of communication
to the coaches when we had something we wanted to
discuss.”
The women finished the season with a record of 9-
9-2 after an first-round exit in the ACC tournament to
top-ranked, and eventual champion, North Carolina.
Head coach Laura Kerrigan.“It was a tough game;
we fought hard, and
tried to keep it a low
scoring game, but
Carolina is a really
good team.”
Younger men’s
team members were
also stand-outs. Ju-
nior El Hadj Cisse,
majoring in science,
technology and soci-
ety, and sophomore
defender Ronnie Bo-
uemboue, majoring
in business man-
agement were both
named to the ACC
all-tournamentteam.
The pair are the first
Wolfpack duo to be
honored from the
same tournament
since N.C. State had two members on the 1992 team.
“Cisse has been a great (team) captain all year,”
Bouemboue said. “He provides that mouth when we
are on that field and coach can’t be there to talk to us.”
The team ended the season 6-10-1, but rather than
focusing on the overall record, team members focused
on two wins in the ACC Tournament. The Pack won
its first round game against Virginia Tech before fall-
ing to No. 4 Duke in the second round. Bouemboue
recorded a hat trick for the Wolfpack to lead the first
round comeback victory. Cisse said the tournament
changed the way team members played.
“I saw a change in confidence and determination to
win,” Cisse said.“I made all the team work harder and
they were all giving me the balls I needed to put them
in the back of the net.”
198-199_Soccer.indd 198-199 6/3/08 8:16:00 AM
62. Mrs. Eaves is an historical revival based on the design of Baskerville. “In
translating this classic to today’s digital font technology, I focused on capturing
the warmth and softness of letterpress printing that often occurs due to the ‘gain’
of impression and ink spread.” — Zuzana Licko, 1996
Sample of Baskerville
Mrs. Eaves
emigre.com: $299/family
65. myfonts.com: $220/seven-font family, $31.43/style
An extremely versatile, intelligently restrained design by Robin
Nicholas for Monotype in 1980. Nimrod works well at small sizes thanks to its
large x-height, sturdy serifs, and lack of ornament; yet it is not characterless.
Nimrod has been used successfully in national newspapers and books. (The
Guardian, London, from its late-1980s redesign until it was replaced by
a Carter interpretation of Miller in 1998; the Concise Oxford English Dictionary
in the typographically unsurpassed 1990 edition.
70. myfonts.com: $240/10-font family, $24/style
Digitally engineered by Steve Jackaman.
Humanist sans serif with a calligraphic cut and tall ascenders.
Light, medium and extra bold designed by Nick Shinn in 1985 for Typsettra;
Jackaman added the book and bold weights and italic.
71.
72. Noting that nineteenth century designs were based on the ellipse, and twentieth
century ones on the circle, we wondered what other geometries might prove
similarly fertile, and were inexorably drawn to the rounded rectangle.
Instead of using the rounded rectangle as a motif, the strategy we devised for
Vitesse was to use a more sophisticated shape as its central theme: a modified
rectangle with flat surfaces above and below, gently curved sides, and quick turns
at the corners. The complexity of these ingredients allows Vitesse to escape the
grid when necessary, helping to preserve both the natural poise of intricate
letters, and the typeface’s personality throughout its complete range of styles.
The design that emerged has many of the qualities of a beloved sports car: Vitesse
is agile, steady, suave, confident, and stylish.
http://www.typography.com
Vitesse
typography.com, $199/12 styles