This leaflet uses different fonts and styles to target different audiences. A plain font is used for adults, while a bolder, fun font is used for children alongside illustrations. The leaflet is biased towards nature as it promotes the national trust and environmental protection. It has clear sections and organization to be easily understood by all audiences.
This how-to guide uses simple but clear images and text to instruct parents on how to safely pick up a baby and test a baby bottle. It employs a black and white color scheme to keep the message clear. Bold, underlined text and red text are used to distinguish between the "do" and "don't" instructions to make the proper and improper actions obvious. The simplistic visual design without paragraphs helps ensure the instructions are easy to understand and follow correctly.
This document summarizes a leaflet advertising a zoo. It uses bright colours and images of animals and families to attract families with young children. The large, colourful headings and images make it appealing and help parents visualize the fun activities. The simple, clear language and table of information allow busy parents to find details quickly. Overall, the leaflet is targeted towards entertaining families rather than solely children.
The document contains analyses of different types of factual writing, including leaflets, instructions, how-to guides, and journalistic articles. The analyses examine aspects like layout, design, language, use of images, clarity, and factual accuracy. For each sample, the author evaluates techniques used to clearly convey important information to the intended audience in a concise manner.
- The document is a leaflet created by Chadwell Primary School to promote healthy eating. It uses simple visuals and text to appeal to children. The informal language makes it enjoyable to read.
- Instructions are provided for assembling and operating a Batman toy. labeled diagrams and clearly explained text provide accurate information in a style fitting the theme.
- An online guide offers solutions to common iMessage problems through headings, images, and bold text to aid navigation. While technical, it references other sources and informal language aids readability.
This document summarizes different types of factual writing styles:
1. Instruction manuals contain step-by-step instructions with images to make the assembly process clear. They avoid bias and ambiguity to accurately guide the user.
2. How-to guides provide advice and tips through a clear layout with highlighted key points in bubbles or banners. They keep language simple but allow some interpretation.
3. Factual journalism informs on events through longer articles using images to break up text. It relies on interviews but can be biased based on a single perspective without opposition.
The document summarizes different methods of presenting information, including leaflets, instruction manuals, "how to" guides, and factual journalism. For leaflets, it discusses font choice, background color, use of boxes and colors to draw attention to important sections. Instruction manuals use imagery, bolding of titles, and bullet points to break down steps. "How to" guides provide tips in addition to steps and use color and bolding. Factual journalism uses colored boxes and a bold font to advertise features and an old font to relate to the paper's history.
This document summarizes a factual news article. Key details include:
- The article uses different colors and monochrome text to grab readers' attention.
- Intriguing offers are placed in colored boxes at the bottom to entice readers to buy the paper.
- The main title uses an old-fashioned font to relate to the paper's founding in 1937.
- Bold formatting is used for section headings to draw the eye to new stories.
- Emotional headlines are designed to engage readers and make them want to read more.
This leaflet provides information about plant-based nutrition in a clear and concise style. It is laid out in an easy to navigate format with obvious sections divided by topic. While the language uses some technical terms, it also aims to be informal at times to engage readers. However, the lack of referencing raises questions about the accuracy of the information presented.
This how-to guide uses simple but clear images and text to instruct parents on how to safely pick up a baby and test a baby bottle. It employs a black and white color scheme to keep the message clear. Bold, underlined text and red text are used to distinguish between the "do" and "don't" instructions to make the proper and improper actions obvious. The simplistic visual design without paragraphs helps ensure the instructions are easy to understand and follow correctly.
This document summarizes a leaflet advertising a zoo. It uses bright colours and images of animals and families to attract families with young children. The large, colourful headings and images make it appealing and help parents visualize the fun activities. The simple, clear language and table of information allow busy parents to find details quickly. Overall, the leaflet is targeted towards entertaining families rather than solely children.
The document contains analyses of different types of factual writing, including leaflets, instructions, how-to guides, and journalistic articles. The analyses examine aspects like layout, design, language, use of images, clarity, and factual accuracy. For each sample, the author evaluates techniques used to clearly convey important information to the intended audience in a concise manner.
- The document is a leaflet created by Chadwell Primary School to promote healthy eating. It uses simple visuals and text to appeal to children. The informal language makes it enjoyable to read.
- Instructions are provided for assembling and operating a Batman toy. labeled diagrams and clearly explained text provide accurate information in a style fitting the theme.
- An online guide offers solutions to common iMessage problems through headings, images, and bold text to aid navigation. While technical, it references other sources and informal language aids readability.
This document summarizes different types of factual writing styles:
1. Instruction manuals contain step-by-step instructions with images to make the assembly process clear. They avoid bias and ambiguity to accurately guide the user.
2. How-to guides provide advice and tips through a clear layout with highlighted key points in bubbles or banners. They keep language simple but allow some interpretation.
3. Factual journalism informs on events through longer articles using images to break up text. It relies on interviews but can be biased based on a single perspective without opposition.
The document summarizes different methods of presenting information, including leaflets, instruction manuals, "how to" guides, and factual journalism. For leaflets, it discusses font choice, background color, use of boxes and colors to draw attention to important sections. Instruction manuals use imagery, bolding of titles, and bullet points to break down steps. "How to" guides provide tips in addition to steps and use color and bolding. Factual journalism uses colored boxes and a bold font to advertise features and an old font to relate to the paper's history.
This document summarizes a factual news article. Key details include:
- The article uses different colors and monochrome text to grab readers' attention.
- Intriguing offers are placed in colored boxes at the bottom to entice readers to buy the paper.
- The main title uses an old-fashioned font to relate to the paper's founding in 1937.
- Bold formatting is used for section headings to draw the eye to new stories.
- Emotional headlines are designed to engage readers and make them want to read more.
This leaflet provides information about plant-based nutrition in a clear and concise style. It is laid out in an easy to navigate format with obvious sections divided by topic. While the language uses some technical terms, it also aims to be informal at times to engage readers. However, the lack of referencing raises questions about the accuracy of the information presented.
Leaflets, instruction manuals, 'how to' guides, and magazines/newspapers all aim to inform readers through factual writing. However, their styles and purposes differ. Leaflets advertise brands and locations, using persuasive language. Instruction manuals provide step-by-step guidance through diagrams and text. 'How to' guides offer advice and tips through a mix of text and images. Magazine and newspaper articles entertain while informing on various topics, using facts and evidence to back opinions. All must be clearly written and structured to effectively achieve their goals.
This document summarizes a how-to guide for making paleo pancakes. The guide uses simple images and minimal text written in an informal register. The color palette is muted greys and the images are emphasized with grey borders. Important text like the title and ingredients are written in a darker, capitalized grey to stand out. Overall, the guide has a simple, easy-to-follow design to clearly instruct readers on the paleo pancake recipe.
The document provides an analysis of different design elements used across several types of informational documents, including leaflets, instruction manuals, how-to guides, and factual journalism articles. Key points analyzed include typography, images, organization of content, clarity, bias, intended audience, and the use of design elements to convey meaning and engage readers. Across all document types, the analysis focuses on how visual design choices help communicate messages and ideas effectively to targeted audiences.
The document analyzes different types of media including leaflets, instruction manuals, how-to guides, and factual journalism. It examines the text to image ratios, typography, language, accuracy, and adherence to codes of various examples. For each media type, it assesses visual and written elements and considers the intended audience. The analysis finds that images effectively support the text in each example and formatting is used strategically to guide the reader's attention.
This document summarizes and analyzes several types of documents, including factual writing, instruction manuals, leaflets, how-to guides, and factual journalism. For each document type, it examines elements like use of color, illustrations, conciseness of text, clarity, ambiguity, bias, register of language, and referencing of sources. The analysis considers how these elements are used effectively or could be improved for each document type. It provides insightful evaluations of design principles for instructional and informational documents.
The document provides feedback on different elements of a school magazine cover and contents page. For the masthead, it notes the basic font does not attract all readers and could include more exciting words. The plugs use the same font and color, so stories seem similar and less engaging. No puff was included, making the magazine seem tedious. The cover photo shows a smiling student but cutting could be improved. The style is childish but lacks appeal compared to best sellers due to little content and an ugly background color. The headline is straightforward but basic. Content page images positively portray the school but information is brief and uninteresting.
The document provides an evaluation of a graphic narrative project. It summarizes the key points made in each response. The creator feels their final product reflects their original intentions for layout, content, and style. While some changes were made, such as adding more scenery, the overall vision remained the same. The images are well constructed with a cartoon style, appropriate sizing, and bright colors. A small amount of complementary text is used to allow the images to be the main focus. The short length, simple language, and visuals make the product suitable for its intended young audience. The creator discusses both benefits and limitations of the techniques used. Overall, the work compares favorably to past versions while modernizing aspects like technology, language
Teaching English Through English I Class # 4lisyaseloni
This document contains discussions from an online English teaching forum on several topics:
1. Members discuss the effectiveness of English villages in Korea and how to improve them. Suggestions include making the content more authentic, locating them closer to cities, and collaborating more with schools.
2. There is a debate about the pros and cons of English villages, with some arguing they are useful immersion experiences and others saying they do not significantly improve English abilities.
3. The forum moderator then assigns members a class activity where they must present arguments for and against English villages and engage in a discussion.
4. Guidelines are provided on how to create and present a short teaching demonstration focusing on an English reading text
The document discusses the design elements of a magazine cover and interior pages. Key points include:
- The masthead is bold and colorful to draw attention in the top left corner as is standard.
- The cover uses a celebrity image, quiz promotion, and colloquial language to attract readers.
- Interior pages continue the color scheme and include an exclusive celebrity interview in magazine style with direct engagement between images and text.
The document describes the process of designing a magazine cover. It details the selection and formatting of fonts, colors, graphics, and text elements like cover lines and a pull quote. The designer experimented with different color, font, size, and effect combinations to make elements like the masthead, subtitles, graphics, and text prominent and visually appealing on the cover while maintaining a cohesive design.
The document provides details on the design of a magazine cover and contents page for a teenage girl target audience. Key elements included a bold masthead in the top left, a celebrity cover image and teaser lines. The contents page uses sections and informal language to organize and preview magazine content appealing to teenage girls. Consistent colors, fonts and positioning are used throughout for brand recognition and readability.
The document discusses the 7Cs of communication: clear, concise, concrete, correct, coherent, complete, and courteous. Clear communication avoids vagueness and leaves no ambiguity about the topic or purpose. Concise communication avoids unnecessary words and repetition. Concrete communication uses vivid details and examples. Correct communication is free of errors and uses appropriate language. Coherent communication focuses on one main topic without changing subjects abruptly. Complete communication provides all relevant information. Courteous communication is polite, respectful, and avoids hostility or passive aggression.
This document outlines topics and strategies covered across 16 weeks for a freshman English course. Week 6 discusses strategies for interpersonal communication including dyadic communication and interviewing. Week 7 focuses on confidence building and making PowerPoint presentations. Week 9 covers making oral presentations individually and in groups. Later weeks address public speaking, communication in meetings, writing convincing letters, resumes, and building confidence. The document provides guidance on communication skills, presentation techniques, and professional development.
The document discusses codes and conventions used on magazine front covers. It provides examples and analysis of various magazine covers. Some key points made:
- Mastheads are bold and eye-catching to stand out from the background. Images typically represent the target audience or key locations.
- Information is generally laid out clearly in a list-like structure for easy reading. Larger text draws attention to important parts.
- Font choices, image styles, and language used provide clues to the target audience. Serif fonts imply sophistication while sans-serif suggests younger audiences.
- Color schemes, models, and topics of interest are tailored towards the magazine's demographic, often middle-class women or younger readers.
This document analyzes the representation and design of a double page spread from a magazine about the TV show "The Great British Bake Off". It discusses how the main photo focuses on the presenters to promote the show. Secondary photos show snapshots from the show to emphasize the baking focus. The layout uses columns and smaller images to make the page easier to read. Representation of the show emphasizes British countryside stereotypes through props in the background of the main photo. However, a small cupcake image offers some variety in baking beyond stereotypes.
The document provides guidance on summarizing texts in 3 sentences or less:
- A summary condenses the key points of a document into a short, clear overview without including unnecessary details or changing the meaning.
- To write a summary, one must understand the document, identify the main ideas and supporting points, and convey them in their own words using simple language and grammar.
- Summarization skills include paraphrasing passages while retaining the original meaning, using general terms and synonyms to shorten details, and adhering to word limits.
The document discusses planning the stylesheets for a magazine, including:
1) Choosing a gender-neutral color scheme of red, white, and black to appeal to a wide audience.
2) Brainstorming masthead ideas and selecting "Demo" as it closely relates to discussing new music releases.
3) Choosing a bold yet youthful, readable font for the masthead that reflects the simple design.
4) Experimenting with different masthead colors and deciding on red as it stands out and has passionate connotations.
5) Testing body text fonts to be simple but interesting for younger readers.
6) Choosing fonts for cover lines, subheadings and ensuring they
The document discusses planning the stylesheets for a new magazine, including:
1) Choosing a gender-neutral color scheme of red, white, and black to appeal to a wide audience.
2) Selecting the font "Demo" for the masthead as it closely relates to the magazine's goal of discussing new music.
3) Experimenting with different masthead colors and choosing red as it stands out and has passionate connotations fitting the magazine's theme.
This document contains summaries of various types of factual writing documents. It analyzes leaflets, instruction manuals, guides, and journalism articles on their design, formatting, language and content. Key elements summarized include the use of color, images and formatting to attract audiences and highlight important information. Accuracy and avoiding bias are also discussed as important for factual writing.
This leaflet uses simple colors and fonts to keep the design clean and professional. Key words are highlighted in bold to draw attention and emphasize their importance. Images of children are used to make the message more personal and help people relate to the cause. The clear facts and statements aim to avoid ambiguity and get the key points across effectively.
The instruction manual uses a simple step-by-step layout with clear illustrations and minimal text to guide the reader easily through the assembly process. Bold formatting is used to highlight important details like steps and product names. The clear, unambiguous style leaves no room for misinterpretation.
This how-to guide breaks information into colored sections for easy reading. Important tips are highlighted in bubbles
This how-to guide provides simple instructions for making paleo pancakes. The guide uses a muted color palette of greys and features images showing each step of the recipe alongside short, clear instructions in a simple font. The images and formatting help make the recipe easy to follow visually and through short, declarative sentences. The guide aims to provide accurate instructions for readers to interpret and follow as they wish to make the paleo pancakes.
This document contains summaries of different types of factual writing:
- A how-to guide on photography is evaluated. It uses a semi-formal tone and clear typography but could be more concise. Photos with details support the text.
- A product manual for installing a baby seat is very formal and concise for safety. Illustrations paired with numbered steps leave no ambiguity.
- A newspaper article is shown to have a biased and ambiguous tone that questions its accuracy. It aims to rile readers rather than provide facts.
Leaflets, instruction manuals, 'how to' guides, and magazines/newspapers all aim to inform readers through factual writing. However, their styles and purposes differ. Leaflets advertise brands and locations, using persuasive language. Instruction manuals provide step-by-step guidance through diagrams and text. 'How to' guides offer advice and tips through a mix of text and images. Magazine and newspaper articles entertain while informing on various topics, using facts and evidence to back opinions. All must be clearly written and structured to effectively achieve their goals.
This document summarizes a how-to guide for making paleo pancakes. The guide uses simple images and minimal text written in an informal register. The color palette is muted greys and the images are emphasized with grey borders. Important text like the title and ingredients are written in a darker, capitalized grey to stand out. Overall, the guide has a simple, easy-to-follow design to clearly instruct readers on the paleo pancake recipe.
The document provides an analysis of different design elements used across several types of informational documents, including leaflets, instruction manuals, how-to guides, and factual journalism articles. Key points analyzed include typography, images, organization of content, clarity, bias, intended audience, and the use of design elements to convey meaning and engage readers. Across all document types, the analysis focuses on how visual design choices help communicate messages and ideas effectively to targeted audiences.
The document analyzes different types of media including leaflets, instruction manuals, how-to guides, and factual journalism. It examines the text to image ratios, typography, language, accuracy, and adherence to codes of various examples. For each media type, it assesses visual and written elements and considers the intended audience. The analysis finds that images effectively support the text in each example and formatting is used strategically to guide the reader's attention.
This document summarizes and analyzes several types of documents, including factual writing, instruction manuals, leaflets, how-to guides, and factual journalism. For each document type, it examines elements like use of color, illustrations, conciseness of text, clarity, ambiguity, bias, register of language, and referencing of sources. The analysis considers how these elements are used effectively or could be improved for each document type. It provides insightful evaluations of design principles for instructional and informational documents.
The document provides feedback on different elements of a school magazine cover and contents page. For the masthead, it notes the basic font does not attract all readers and could include more exciting words. The plugs use the same font and color, so stories seem similar and less engaging. No puff was included, making the magazine seem tedious. The cover photo shows a smiling student but cutting could be improved. The style is childish but lacks appeal compared to best sellers due to little content and an ugly background color. The headline is straightforward but basic. Content page images positively portray the school but information is brief and uninteresting.
The document provides an evaluation of a graphic narrative project. It summarizes the key points made in each response. The creator feels their final product reflects their original intentions for layout, content, and style. While some changes were made, such as adding more scenery, the overall vision remained the same. The images are well constructed with a cartoon style, appropriate sizing, and bright colors. A small amount of complementary text is used to allow the images to be the main focus. The short length, simple language, and visuals make the product suitable for its intended young audience. The creator discusses both benefits and limitations of the techniques used. Overall, the work compares favorably to past versions while modernizing aspects like technology, language
Teaching English Through English I Class # 4lisyaseloni
This document contains discussions from an online English teaching forum on several topics:
1. Members discuss the effectiveness of English villages in Korea and how to improve them. Suggestions include making the content more authentic, locating them closer to cities, and collaborating more with schools.
2. There is a debate about the pros and cons of English villages, with some arguing they are useful immersion experiences and others saying they do not significantly improve English abilities.
3. The forum moderator then assigns members a class activity where they must present arguments for and against English villages and engage in a discussion.
4. Guidelines are provided on how to create and present a short teaching demonstration focusing on an English reading text
The document discusses the design elements of a magazine cover and interior pages. Key points include:
- The masthead is bold and colorful to draw attention in the top left corner as is standard.
- The cover uses a celebrity image, quiz promotion, and colloquial language to attract readers.
- Interior pages continue the color scheme and include an exclusive celebrity interview in magazine style with direct engagement between images and text.
The document describes the process of designing a magazine cover. It details the selection and formatting of fonts, colors, graphics, and text elements like cover lines and a pull quote. The designer experimented with different color, font, size, and effect combinations to make elements like the masthead, subtitles, graphics, and text prominent and visually appealing on the cover while maintaining a cohesive design.
The document provides details on the design of a magazine cover and contents page for a teenage girl target audience. Key elements included a bold masthead in the top left, a celebrity cover image and teaser lines. The contents page uses sections and informal language to organize and preview magazine content appealing to teenage girls. Consistent colors, fonts and positioning are used throughout for brand recognition and readability.
The document discusses the 7Cs of communication: clear, concise, concrete, correct, coherent, complete, and courteous. Clear communication avoids vagueness and leaves no ambiguity about the topic or purpose. Concise communication avoids unnecessary words and repetition. Concrete communication uses vivid details and examples. Correct communication is free of errors and uses appropriate language. Coherent communication focuses on one main topic without changing subjects abruptly. Complete communication provides all relevant information. Courteous communication is polite, respectful, and avoids hostility or passive aggression.
This document outlines topics and strategies covered across 16 weeks for a freshman English course. Week 6 discusses strategies for interpersonal communication including dyadic communication and interviewing. Week 7 focuses on confidence building and making PowerPoint presentations. Week 9 covers making oral presentations individually and in groups. Later weeks address public speaking, communication in meetings, writing convincing letters, resumes, and building confidence. The document provides guidance on communication skills, presentation techniques, and professional development.
The document discusses codes and conventions used on magazine front covers. It provides examples and analysis of various magazine covers. Some key points made:
- Mastheads are bold and eye-catching to stand out from the background. Images typically represent the target audience or key locations.
- Information is generally laid out clearly in a list-like structure for easy reading. Larger text draws attention to important parts.
- Font choices, image styles, and language used provide clues to the target audience. Serif fonts imply sophistication while sans-serif suggests younger audiences.
- Color schemes, models, and topics of interest are tailored towards the magazine's demographic, often middle-class women or younger readers.
This document analyzes the representation and design of a double page spread from a magazine about the TV show "The Great British Bake Off". It discusses how the main photo focuses on the presenters to promote the show. Secondary photos show snapshots from the show to emphasize the baking focus. The layout uses columns and smaller images to make the page easier to read. Representation of the show emphasizes British countryside stereotypes through props in the background of the main photo. However, a small cupcake image offers some variety in baking beyond stereotypes.
The document provides guidance on summarizing texts in 3 sentences or less:
- A summary condenses the key points of a document into a short, clear overview without including unnecessary details or changing the meaning.
- To write a summary, one must understand the document, identify the main ideas and supporting points, and convey them in their own words using simple language and grammar.
- Summarization skills include paraphrasing passages while retaining the original meaning, using general terms and synonyms to shorten details, and adhering to word limits.
The document discusses planning the stylesheets for a magazine, including:
1) Choosing a gender-neutral color scheme of red, white, and black to appeal to a wide audience.
2) Brainstorming masthead ideas and selecting "Demo" as it closely relates to discussing new music releases.
3) Choosing a bold yet youthful, readable font for the masthead that reflects the simple design.
4) Experimenting with different masthead colors and deciding on red as it stands out and has passionate connotations.
5) Testing body text fonts to be simple but interesting for younger readers.
6) Choosing fonts for cover lines, subheadings and ensuring they
The document discusses planning the stylesheets for a new magazine, including:
1) Choosing a gender-neutral color scheme of red, white, and black to appeal to a wide audience.
2) Selecting the font "Demo" for the masthead as it closely relates to the magazine's goal of discussing new music.
3) Experimenting with different masthead colors and choosing red as it stands out and has passionate connotations fitting the magazine's theme.
This document contains summaries of various types of factual writing documents. It analyzes leaflets, instruction manuals, guides, and journalism articles on their design, formatting, language and content. Key elements summarized include the use of color, images and formatting to attract audiences and highlight important information. Accuracy and avoiding bias are also discussed as important for factual writing.
This leaflet uses simple colors and fonts to keep the design clean and professional. Key words are highlighted in bold to draw attention and emphasize their importance. Images of children are used to make the message more personal and help people relate to the cause. The clear facts and statements aim to avoid ambiguity and get the key points across effectively.
The instruction manual uses a simple step-by-step layout with clear illustrations and minimal text to guide the reader easily through the assembly process. Bold formatting is used to highlight important details like steps and product names. The clear, unambiguous style leaves no room for misinterpretation.
This how-to guide breaks information into colored sections for easy reading. Important tips are highlighted in bubbles
This how-to guide provides simple instructions for making paleo pancakes. The guide uses a muted color palette of greys and features images showing each step of the recipe alongside short, clear instructions in a simple font. The images and formatting help make the recipe easy to follow visually and through short, declarative sentences. The guide aims to provide accurate instructions for readers to interpret and follow as they wish to make the paleo pancakes.
This document contains summaries of different types of factual writing:
- A how-to guide on photography is evaluated. It uses a semi-formal tone and clear typography but could be more concise. Photos with details support the text.
- A product manual for installing a baby seat is very formal and concise for safety. Illustrations paired with numbered steps leave no ambiguity.
- A newspaper article is shown to have a biased and ambiguous tone that questions its accuracy. It aims to rile readers rather than provide facts.
The document provides information on the design and content of various informational materials, including a charity leaflet, instruction manual, piano playing guide, and news article. Key design elements discussed include use of color, images, formatting of text, and highlighting of important information. Legal and ethical requirements for providing accurate information are also addressed. The materials aim to clearly communicate their messages to audiences in concise and unambiguous ways.
This factual journalism piece reports on the Hillsborough inquests with a high level of accuracy and clarity. It avoids ambiguity by directly quoting police officers and reports. The register is both formal in its description of legal proceedings and informal when quoting individuals. Accuracy is essential given the sensitivity of reporting on a tragedy where people lost their lives.
This document summarizes and analyzes different types of factual writing, including leaflets, instruction manuals, how-to guides, textbooks, and magazines. It discusses the purpose, language, design elements, potential biases, and legal considerations of each type. Overall, the document demonstrates how the format and style of factual writing must align with its intended audience and objective.
This newspaper article from The Sun reports on an alleged attack on a former model, Alicia Douvall, by her ex-boyfriend. The headline uses attention-grabbing language to summarize that the ex-boyfriend "battered" Douvall as she drove her car. The article includes a large photo of Douvall with bruises on her face and quotes from her describing the attack. While only telling the story from Douvall's perspective, the article cites her as the source of information and avoids naming the ex-boyfriend since he has only been arrested, not charged, to prevent legal issues like libel.
This document summarizes and analyzes several types of informational documents, including a leaflet on alcohol awareness, an instruction manual for a DSLR camera, a how-to guide for painting a pole, and a piece of factual journalism about the Hillsborough disaster inquests. For each document type, it discusses the accuracy, clarity, conciseness, register/tone, illustrations, colors, fonts, and other design elements, assessing how well each document achieves its informational goals.
This document summarizes and analyzes several types of informational documents, including a leaflet on alcohol awareness, an instruction manual for a DSLR camera, a how-to guide for painting a pole, and a piece of factual journalism about the Hillsborough disaster inquests. For each document type, it discusses the accuracy, clarity, conciseness, register/tone, illustrations, colors, fonts, and other design elements, assessing how well each document achieves its informational goals.
- The document discusses the design choices made for a charity leaflet, instruction manual, piano learning guide, and news article.
- Key design elements discussed include use of color, images, formatting text for clarity, following legal/ethical standards, and highlighting important information.
- The goal of each design is to clearly communicate information to target audiences through visuals, concise text, and accessibility of content.
The document discusses design elements of instructional materials like recipes. It explains how images, font styles, and formatting are used to clearly present information and engage readers. Bullet points and concise steps make the instructions easy to follow.
This document summarizes a factual writing piece in 3 sentences:
The document discusses different typographic tools used in factual writing such as changing font sizes, colors, and styles to draw attention to important information. Sections are divided using titles in red with explanations below. Images are also included to further describe and show what the text is explaining.
This document analyzes several factual writing pieces including a breastfeeding information leaflet, photography how-to guides, instructions for origami, and a journalistic news article. Key analysis points made about each piece include their use of visual elements like images and formatting to draw attention to information, inclusion of evidence and perspectives to support arguments, and language choices to establish tone and make information clear and accessible. Permission for using any copyrighted content is also noted as an essential part of publishing factual writing.
This document analyzes the factual writing style used in various documents, including a NHS information leaflet on OCD, instruction manuals, diagrams, and newspaper articles. Key aspects discussed include the use of clear and direct language, balanced perspectives from multiple sources, formal and objective tone, visual elements like diagrams and images to support the text, and protecting privacy through anonymizing or blurring details. Overall, the analysis examines techniques for presenting information factually, objectively and in an accessible manner for readers.
This document provides a factual layout analysis of several documents, including a yoga leaflet, vegan lifestyle leaflet, article on overfishing, and airsoft gun instruction manual. Key points analyzed include font choices, image selection, use of formatting like bolding, paragraph structure, and how design elements match the topic and intended audience. The analysis finds the documents are generally clear and easy to understand, with design and information presentation fitting the subject matter.
The leaflet is for a charity called 'Viva' that advocates against cruelty to lambs. It uses clear language, facts, and accurate information. Pictures of lambs are included to visually depict the issues. Pink text is used for headlines to make them stand out. The title engages the reader by mentioning 'Lucky the lamb' and tells the lamb's story to elicit an emotional response. Contact information and a call to action are prominently displayed.
This document summarizes and compares two different types of factual writing - an instruction leaflet and a magazine article.
The instruction leaflet uses simple black and white illustrations, a plain font, bold text for headings, and a minimal color scheme to clearly communicate assembly steps without distraction. In contrast, the magazine article uses various fonts, bolding, italics and one color photo to make the text more interesting and break up a large amount of information.
While the instruction leaflet is very concise to be understood by all, the magazine article uses less concise language that fits the style of the publication and tells more of a story. The article aims to appeal to its target female audience on a personal level about losing
This document summarizes and compares two different types of factual writing - an instruction leaflet and a magazine article.
The instruction leaflet uses simple black and white illustrations, a plain font, bold text for headings, and a minimal color scheme to clearly communicate assembly steps without distraction. In contrast, the magazine article uses various fonts, bolding, italics and one color photo to make the large amount of text more interesting and readable for its audience.
While both aim to accurately communicate information, the leaflet is highly concise to concisely convey assembly instructions, whereas the magazine article is less concise to tell a story in a style fitting for its publication. The language is also more formal in the leaflet
Factual Writing of different media forms holly hudson
This leaflet from The Vegan Society aims to promote veganism through clear and concise messaging. It uses simple language and compelling images of animals to convey the key reasons for being vegan - compassion for animals, justice for people, and protecting the planet. The accuracy of the information can be relied on as it comes from a large, reputable organization. The leaflet's presentation with calming colors and striking visuals seeks to portray veganism positively.
Here are some key advantages and disadvantages of employing discretion when negotiating a brief:
Advantages:
- Allows for creativity and new ideas. Discussing aspects of the brief that could be improved upon or adding new elements can lead to a better final product.
- Builds trust and collaboration. Having an open dialogue shows the client you want to work as a team to meet their needs.
- Manages expectations. Negotiating upfront prevents issues down the road if the original brief needs to change.
Disadvantages:
- Potential scope creep. Too much discretion could result in a very different final product than what the client originally envisioned.
- Loss of structure. The brief provides guidelines; too much
The document discusses ethical guidelines and considerations for journalists when writing about different groups of people. It notes that the National Union of Journalists (NUJ) has developed guidance sheets on topics like terrorism, race, asylum/immigration, and others to help journalists avoid biased or discriminatory representations. Journalists are advised to have social and cultural awareness and consider how their words could influence readers' views. They should not portray groups in a biased way. The NUJ also has a code of practice and hotline journalists can use as a resource. Overall, the document stresses the importance of journalists representing diverse groups of people accurately, fairly and without discrimination.
The document compares and contrasts advertising strategies between luxury and mass market brands. Luxury brands like Dolce & Gabbana and Tom Ford focus on crafting an image of quality and expense through sophisticated visuals and minimal text or pricing. In contrast, mass brands like Miss Guided, Aldi, and Barry M emphasize price, value, and relatability to attract cost-conscious customers through bold prices, simple designs, and showing products. While luxury brands sell an aspirational lifestyle, mass brands aim to demonstrate affordability and accessibility.
The document compares and contrasts advertising strategies between luxury and mass market brands. Luxury brands like Dolce & Gabbana and Tom Ford focus on crafting an image of quality and sophistication through minimalist ads with subtle colors and no prices shown. In contrast, mass brands like Miss Guided, Aldi, and Barry M attract customers with a focus on price, using bright colors and large text to prominently display cheap prices. While luxury brands sell an aspirational lifestyle, mass brands aim to show affordability and value for money to their target audiences.
The objective of this marketing and PR campaign is to promote the band The Gilded Six Bits and their new album "neat, plausible and wrong". The target audience is 16-30 year olds who like alternative indie rock. Social media platforms like Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube will be heavily utilized to engage fans and promote events and new releases. Unique merchandise like t-shirts and accessories will also help promote the band's message of empowerment and positivity. Small, intimate gigs and appearances at music festivals are part of the promotional events planned. Hyperbolic words like "outstanding" and "refreshing" will be used to make the band seem exceptional to appeal to their target demographic.
This document contains a S.W.O.T. analysis for a proposed Spotify MP3 player. The strengths include allowing offline playback to save phone battery, being cheaper than Apple products to attract more customers, and being convenient for workouts. Weaknesses are that customers may not want an extra device and may stick with Apple or phone music players. Opportunities include bringing MP3 players back into fashion and allowing Spotify to promote membership deals. Threats include strong competition from Apple and phone companies, and customers may see no need for the device if they can stream Spotify on their phone.
The document contains ideas for creating promotional materials for the organization Surfers Against Sewage. It includes four initial ideas for a campaign poster, with the first idea being selected to develop further. It also includes draft designs for a membership form and merchandise items like t-shirts, mugs, and surfing accessories, with an emphasis on using the organization's color scheme and logo. The merchandise ideas range from inexpensive stickers to more expensive items like surfboards to appeal to different member levels.
The magazine layout document discusses the formatting and design of magazine pages. Key elements include placing the title and images attractively, using columns to structure the text flow, and considering how elements like ads are integrated. The overall goal is to effectively convey information to readers in an aesthetically pleasing manner.
The magazine layout document discusses the formatting and design of magazine pages. Key elements include placing the title and images attractively, using columns to structure the text flow, and considering how elements like ads are integrated. Overall the goal is to effectively convey information to readers in an aesthetically pleasing manner.
The magazine layout document discusses the formatting and design of magazine pages. Key elements include placing the title and images attractively, using columns to structure the text flow, and considering how elements like ads are integrated. Overall the goal is to effectively convey information to readers in an aesthetically pleasing manner.
The document outlines ideas for a campaign poster to raise awareness about beach litter. It discusses using dull colors to represent polluted beaches and including shocking images of marine animals trapped in litter. Key elements to include are facts about the scale of beach litter, references to other similar campaigns, and celebrity endorsements to encourage support and action. The goal is to use emotional imagery and messages to motivate the audience to reduce beach waste.
The document discusses considerations for researching social action issues and creating campaign materials for an organization like Surfers Against Sewage (SAS). It notes that researching sensitive social issues requires being respectful of different groups. While physically researching SAS may be difficult due to distance from the coast, this can be overcome through online research, emails, and social media. Finished campaign materials should have wide distribution in cities, online, and media to involve more than just local beachgoers. SAS may face funding issues because the public sees it as only for surfers, rather than the broader goal of clean beaches for all.
This document discusses two case studies of social action campaigns: Stonewall's campaign to change attitudes towards homosexuality, and UKIP's campaign poster promoting Nigel Farage.
For Stonewall, the aims were to reduce homophobia and change attitudes to view being gay positively. Their techniques used simple text-based posters with bold colors and sarcastic witty messages. Evidence showed their impact through legal changes like repealing Section 28 and surveys finding less workplace discrimination against LGBTQ individuals.
For UKIP, the poster aimed to promote Nigel Farage and voting for him by portraying other party leaders negatively with cloth over their mouths. Techniques included bright colors, slogans and logos to stand out. Charts showed
This document contains summaries of several posters, logos, and marketing materials for the organization Surfers Against Sewage.
The first poster uses dark colors and imagery of surfboards in sand to depict the negative impact of sewage on beaches in a haunting way. Another poster takes a more humorous approach, showing a surfer covered in sewage to disgust viewers and raise awareness in a memorable way.
Logos for SAS include a simple, plain logo aimed at adults and an more image-heavy logo using whales and sea creatures to appeal to children. Merchandise like t-shirts promote the brand and raise awareness when worn.
Leaflets are used to both recruit new members and renew existing members.
Surfers Against Sewage (SAS) is an environmental charity established in 1990 by surfers in the UK to improve water quality. They campaign on issues like marine litter, sewage pollution, climate change, and coastal development through community action, volunteering, and research. SAS is funded through donations and works to protect beaches, oceans, and surfing in the UK. Some of their successful campaigns have reduced marine litter like plastic pellets on beaches. They continue to campaign for issues like reducing UK beach litter by 50% by 2020 and better legal protection of surf breaks from threats like pollution and development.
Surfers Against Sewage is an environmental charity established in 1990 by surfers in Cornwall to improve water quality. They campaign on issues like marine litter, sewage pollution, toxic chemicals, and coastal development through community action, volunteering, education, and research. SAS is funded through donations and run by voluntary trustees. They have successfully campaigned against issues like plastic pellets called "Mermaid's Tears" on beaches and helped implement solutions through partnerships with plastic manufacturers. Their ongoing goals include further reducing marine pollution and protecting coastal environments.
The document contains ideas for campaign materials for the organization Surfers Against Sewage. It includes four initial ideas for a campaign poster, with the first idea being selected to develop further. It also includes draft designs for a membership form and merchandise items like t-shirts, mugs, and surfing accessories, with an emphasis on using the organization's color scheme and logo. The merchandise ideas range from inexpensive stickers to more expensive items like surfboards to appeal to different member levels.
This document discusses various marketing and public relations techniques. It defines key terms like marketing, audience profiling, the marketing mix, advertising, sponsorship, endorsements, events, merchandising, and press releases. Examples are provided for many of these terms. The document also explains tools for understanding markets and clients, such as SWOT analysis, focus groups, questionnaires, and social media.
The document contains ideas for creating promotional materials for the organization Surfers Against Sewage. It includes four initial ideas for a campaign poster, with the first idea of a split beach being selected to develop further. Other concepts include logo designs, membership forms, merchandise ideas like t-shirts and mugs, and inspiration for clothing items displaying the campaign message. Sketches and mockups are provided of potential poster designs, membership booklets, and merchandise displaying the organization's logo and colors.
The document discusses the design process for a logo for Surfers Against Sewage. The designer got inspiration from an existing surf shop logo using a back-to-front S design. They tried different designs but ultimately settled on using just the initials "SAS" with an X behind to represent "against". The S was technically challenging to design but became the focal point of the logo. The designer also created a membership form, getting inspiration from SAS's existing form, and included pictures and information about the charity's campaigns and goals. Merchandise was created for both male and female audiences, including surfing-specific items like a wetsuit and surfboard fin to promote the charity within the surfing community.
Walmart Business+ and Spark Good for Nonprofits.pdfTechSoup
"Learn about all the ways Walmart supports nonprofit organizations.
You will hear from Liz Willett, the Head of Nonprofits, and hear about what Walmart is doing to help nonprofits, including Walmart Business and Spark Good. Walmart Business+ is a new offer for nonprofits that offers discounts and also streamlines nonprofits order and expense tracking, saving time and money.
The webinar may also give some examples on how nonprofits can best leverage Walmart Business+.
The event will cover the following::
Walmart Business + (https://business.walmart.com/plus) is a new shopping experience for nonprofits, schools, and local business customers that connects an exclusive online shopping experience to stores. Benefits include free delivery and shipping, a 'Spend Analytics” feature, special discounts, deals and tax-exempt shopping.
Special TechSoup offer for a free 180 days membership, and up to $150 in discounts on eligible orders.
Spark Good (walmart.com/sparkgood) is a charitable platform that enables nonprofits to receive donations directly from customers and associates.
Answers about how you can do more with Walmart!"
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty, In...Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty,
International FDP on Fundamentals of Research in Social Sciences
at Integral University, Lucknow, 06.06.2024
By Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
Executive Directors Chat Leveraging AI for Diversity, Equity, and InclusionTechSoup
Let’s explore the intersection of technology and equity in the final session of our DEI series. Discover how AI tools, like ChatGPT, can be used to support and enhance your nonprofit's DEI initiatives. Participants will gain insights into practical AI applications and get tips for leveraging technology to advance their DEI goals.
This presentation was provided by Steph Pollock of The American Psychological Association’s Journals Program, and Damita Snow, of The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), for the initial session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session One: 'Setting Expectations: a DEIA Primer,' was held June 6, 2024.
This slide is special for master students (MIBS & MIFB) in UUM. Also useful for readers who are interested in the topic of contemporary Islamic banking.
How to Build a Module in Odoo 17 Using the Scaffold MethodCeline George
Odoo provides an option for creating a module by using a single line command. By using this command the user can make a whole structure of a module. It is very easy for a beginner to make a module. There is no need to make each file manually. This slide will show how to create a module using the scaffold method.
2. Leaflets:
This leaflet uses a range of
typography. It ranges from a very
plain comic sans font. Which is seen
to be aimed at adults. This is used in
a certain area of the leaflet which
suggests that this area is aimed at a
more adult like audience. Then on
another part of the leaflet the
typography changes to a fun like font
like hobo std. This font is a lot bigger
than the other font and it is bold and
stands out a lot more. It seems to be
that this font is more child friendly
compared to the comic sans which
suggests that there is an area on the
leaflet for children.
There is a illustration next to this
piece of writing which is child like this
links with the child like typography,
There is normally a illustration next
to a piece of factual writing that
backs the piece of writing up and this
is a piece of factual writing for
children that has a illustration to
support this writing.
This leaflet is a lot
more biased towards
nature as it a leaflet
for the national trust.
You can tell this from
the way that nature
is spread all over this
leaflet. They are
more biased about
protecting the
environment
because that is what
the national trust is
about. Through this
they use words like
‘Help’ , ‘Protect’
This leaflet is clear and
has a really good clarity.
It all is in a neat order.
Which makes it simple to
read and this is effective
communication. Each
topic is put into a section
of the leaflet and the
appearance changes on
who the section is aimed
at for example adults and
children. It is easy to
understand because of
this. This makes it simple
to the audience and the
layout is clear and
organized.
The leaflet uses appropriate language for the
audience. It uses middle class language and
does not use slang or abbreviations. It is
formal and uses such words as ‘neighboring’
which you would not necessarily see In more
lower class pieces of writing.
It has to have a more formal
approach to the language as
they are members of the Royal
Society Of Wildlife Trusts. This
is in bold so the audience
notice this more. This is using
persuasive language.
This leaflet uses the main colour red. This is a very noticeable
colour. It makes the leaflet stand out. It is not that colour is sticks
to a colour scheme of natural colours, red and blue. It has to look
smart as it representing a very important element.
3. This section of the leaflet is where legal
constraints and codes of protective, because this
area is dealing with peoples money and bank
details that need to be protected. There will be
rules and regulations for this and once it gets to
the department that sorts the money out they will
have to follow legal constraints to ensure that the
peoples bank details are safe and no not go
missing.
4. The language used on this manual is pretty straight forward and
simple. This is so people can follow the instructions easily. It does
not used big words and it uses a non formal language. It abbreviates
the sentences to keep it short e.g. straight above head, they missed
the your
Instruction Manual:
This is an instruction
manual which is telling
you how to use a
product. This is the
purpose for a
instruction manual. As
you can see this a step
by step manual for
using this product. It
shows you want to do
and where to place it
and how to use this
product.
There is a women and
men's section for the
instructions. So it does
not gender
discriminate. Which is
following codes of
practice following
trading standards.
This instruction manual has a very good clarity. It
is very clear to their target audience. This is by
having sections and keep large amount of space
between each instruction so the audience does
not get confused. They have also added
illustrations to go with the text. This supports the
text and makes the instructions a lot more clear
of what to do. Factual writing typically has
illustrations that come with it to support the text.
This is what this instruction manual has. The text
is spaced out so it is easy to understand and
there are columns to organize the page into
sections to make it easy to read. I think this
instruction manual has a really strong clarity.
Conciseness-
There is only a
few words per
action explaining
what to do and
this is effective
communication as
it keeps the text
short so people
want to read it
and are not
bored. This keeps
it really simple
and follows the
clarity affect.
Bias. I can’t say that this
instruction manual is biased as
such but it shows there product
in a way in which makes you
want to use it. It would be
biased towards health and
keeping fit because this is what
this product is about and this is
what this product is explaining.
The typography on this manual is very
bold and clear. It isn’t anything special
and follows the lines of Ariel and Calibri. It
is universal and can be used for both
genders. It is very adult like which shows
that this piece of equipment is for adults.
It is a high contrast from the background
to make it stand out.
This instruction manual
has to accurate and to
my eyes it does look
accurate so you are able
to follow the instructions
to use the product
correctly.
Here this shows
how the women
and mans
section are
shown on the
instruction
manual. They
have each
section labeled
which links with
the high clarity
of the piece.
5. How to guide:
This is a how to guide to
contouring. This shows you
how to apply make up to
certain areas of the face to
create a heavily contoured
look. This gives the reader
advice and tips to completing
a task in this case
contouring. It can be step by
step like a manual but this is
not.
This piece from the text of this how
to guide gives you advice on how
to make your lips look fuller.
Typography of this how to guide is a very soft font which suggests that it is very girly. It is very
small and almost cute looking which shows that this is guide aimed at girls. It is a Calibri like font
but it is in italics for the titles of the page and normal for the instructions.
This how to contour guide has a very
strong clarity. As you can see it is all
spaced out and has arrows that point to
the part of the face that the text is on
about. This is effective communication
and makes the guide clear and easy to
understand for the audience. The font
is spaced out and is in short hand to
keep it simple and not have mountains
of text. The clarity of this how to guide
is spot on and I think they have got it
just right as it makes the audience want
to read it.
This uses as few words as possible. It
uses short hand writing to explain what
to do/advice and tips. This keeps it
really simple and allows there to be a
strong conciseness. For example it says
‘Highlight: Top of the chin. Instead of
using a proper sentence.
This uses illustration to support the text for example
there is a illustration of a women's face with different
highlighted areas to shows the audience when to apply
what the how to guide Is showing.
This how to guide is biased
about make up as this is what
it is showing. But it does not
necessarily mean that this how
to guide shows that it is
biased. It is very soft. It does
not push make up in your face
when you read it. This does
not show that it is biased. It
shows that it could be but is
not.
This avoids ambiguity by
showing there is clear
information. It tells you exactly
what to do and is clear about
the tips and advice there is no
room for people to interpret
other information. As it is very
straight for
The language used in this work is very simple and shorthand they use
‘:’ to create shorter sentences. The language is in the middle of formal
and slang. They do not use really formal language yet it does not use
slang and abbreviations. It’s just easy language for the audience to
understand.
6. This is a factual writing piece of
Journalism. This is information us
about an event that is happening
and communicating to the
audience about the facts of the
occurrence. This is in an news like
format as it come from The
Guardian news paper website.
The typography used here is an Arial font which is
very plain and nothing special. This shows that is
aimed at adults and it shows that it is newspaper
story. It’s a universal font so any one can read it.
The title is a lot bigger than the rest of the writing
to catch the audiences attention. The typography
is nothing special and they needed to go for a
plainer font so people would be able to read it
clearly.
The clarity of this piece of journalism is very
effective as it is all organized and clear. It is
spaced out and separated out so that there is a
main layout style. You have a clear title and article
that is separated with spaces by a picture. It is
easy to understand which is an effective
communication.
This does not follow conciseness as it can not say
as few words as possible. As this is a news article
it has to be descriptive and it has to engage in all
the facts and add as much in as possible to
create a detailed news article about the subject
and this instance the subject is about the
Shetland Islands.
The writing has a picture to support
the text. This typically comes with a
piece of factual journalism as it
supports the writing and gives the
reader a vivid understand of what the
writing is about. In this case It shows
the mother and daughter that are
mentioned in the article. I suppose
that this is to show that it is actually
affecting real people and you can see
the people that it is affecting.
This article must be accurate this
is because it is delivering
information to the public. You can
believe that this is the right
information due to there being a
photograph and quotes.
A journalism piece could definitely be
biased as there is a story and there is
obviously two sides to every story but
it takes the story from two different
sides and shows this in the writing.
For example on the right it shows that
the young girl is upset but then shows
the other side and says the council
know they will have a better
education. This article is not being
biased even though it could be.
This avoid ambiguity as it presents clear
information in a column and backs statements
up with quotes .
This uses formal language because it is a
national newspaper and is aimed at a higher
class audience. As it is aimed at a more academic
audience they use formal words and language
style to accommodate there audience. Also they
have to be professional so they can not use slang
as that would not be professional.
7. This journalism piece is evidencing
an argument between two opinions
which in this case is whether or not
children on the Shetland islands
should be sent away to boarding
school. This argument has two sides
and this is shown by there being two
paragraphs. One of the paragraphs
shows the young girls point of view
and the other shows the councils
point of view. This clearly explains
both sides to the story for the
audience to chose what they thing is
right. They explain issues and
benefits for both dies which is
evidencing the argument well.
This news article uses a lot of sources such
as people. They have take a a young girl
living in the Shetlands and they have used
the council as another. The reference these
sources well as the tell the audience who
the source is from and how they are related
to the situation. The photograph is clearly
labeled underneath. So you understand
where the image comes from and how it is
relevant. Quotes are correctly attributed
through out the article.
Legal constraints will be considered as this
is an article. As they are talking about news
gagging orders will have to be thought about
as they can not releaser anything that has a
gagging order on it. As it is a piece or writing
by a journalist and is published online
practicality in journalism has to be thought
about. They can not write anything that is
going to offensive towards people and they
have to think about what is suitable to write.
In this specific news article they have been
practical and they have not written anything
that could be offensive to either of the
argument. They have been sensible and
they have not been biased. Issues of libel
needed to be taken into consideration as
well.
Codes of practice needed to be thought of
as well as this is a news article published
online. Things like editors codes of practice,
ASA guidelines and NUJ codes needed to
be thought about as they needed to follow
rules and regulations. This article seems to
follow all these regulations as there is not
anything that is inappropriate to the story.
The main codes of practice that needed to
be taken into consideration must be editors
codes practice. As it is a news story by a
journalist.