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Julie Keith

Creative Writing 101: A Beginner's Guide to Creative Writing - 0 views

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    Creative Writing 101
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    This site has a lot of good information!
anonymous

d#1 hw#9&10 My Wordpress Blog - 10 views

Peer Review, I love the contrast color scheme you've chosen for your tutorial. I was attracted to the color pink when I first glanced at the tutorial. I used the color scheme as a guide to follow t...

Wordpress TWC301

Alex Portela

D#2 HW#8.2 - 1 views

    • Michael Clark
       
      I like these tips. Good thing to remember.
    • Alex Portela
       
      This also goes along with; "Instructions: How to Write Guides for Busy, Grouchy People". Under things to remember she demonstrates the importance of using commands.
  • it is important to remember who your audience is
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  • Be consistent with your instructions
  • You can clear up a lot of questions by using diagrams and illustrations
  • testing the instructions. It’s important that you as the author to practice the instructions you write, but it’s even more important that you get someone else with little to know experience on the subject to follow the instructions
  • Create a title that explains what the instructions are  "How to...." Use action verbs in the beginning   "Pick up, take, hold...." Use short clear sentences with words that are common. Avoid words with more than one meaning. Make sure to include any cautions, warnings, or dangers. Be Specific.
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    This site seems to helpful towards project #1 because it gives different website links for examples. It covers main points on remembering the audience and being consistent. It also covers a little bit of incorporating diagrams and illustrations which I will be using on project #1.
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    This website gives clear views on the best way to write instructions.This will help with project 1 because it tells me the best way to give instructions without having the people look away before reading it all.
Shannon Ridgeway

Conscious Consistency: The Principle Of Repetition | Web Design Principles - 0 views

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    I like this article because it gives you examples on how to use repetition in graphic design. The examples are listed using bullet points which makes it easy to read. 
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    a good site that gives good examples of how to use repetition
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    This website offers some suggestions of the types of elements that can be repeated. Heading and subheading styles, for example, can be varied bu using different colors, stronger fonts, or larger font sizes. A consistent overall color scheme can also help unify a page; this site suggests selecting a few key colors and then applying that throughout the project. Quote I liked: "Repetitive elements create a sense of organization. The effect is the same as using a consistent unit of measurement - it helps interpret the meaning of the object under consideration, and it helps to identify all elements as part of the same site." (Or page/project).
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    a few good tips about repetition, plus lots of tutorials on other related topics.
Michael Wheeler

Design Meltdown § Flow - 0 views

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    Design Meltdown has yet another great explanation of design principles, this time for the principle of flow. The explanation incorporates great visual examples.
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    This website usually has my favorite design principle explanations. I just discovered the person who wrote them used the Basics of Design textbooks as their jumping off point for wrting them.
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    This article provides helpful tips on how to create flow. It also provides visual examples of how to create flow in a layout. 
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    This site gives a brief explanation of flow and what it is used for. It also tells which principles are helped out by flow. the site also gives some samples into how some websites use flow.
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    This site is great at showing flows in designs. It includes descriptions as well as examples.
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    This website does a good job at explaining exactly what flow is. What I like about it is that it provides example of different website and the kind of flow that they have. The arrow that the webpage author draws on the example to show the flow is very useful!
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    This page give multiple page layout examples and then superimposes over them to show the flow of the layout. It also discusses the different flow of each example to help us understand how it works
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    talks about flow as a simple design principle and how it is often a result of contrast and emphasis. page also gives examples of pages and uses a blue arrow to demonstrate the path or flow of the page, just showing different ways pages and be perceived or organized
Nicole Schmitter

Flow - Composition Flow - Motion in Layout - Motion in Artwork - 0 views

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    This website is a perfect example of visual flow. It consist of 7 pages displaying the definition and images that explain the concept of visual flow. It stresses basic points such as making sure your text flow from left to right and the viewer's eyes should not slow down.
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    I liked this website it gives a good easy to understand definition of visual flow which is one of the important in overall flow , it gives some examples of images as well , with text and how to use flow for your audience.
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    - Layout and Artwork that Conveys Motion By Jennifer Kyrnin, About.com GuideFiled In:Web Design / HTML Using flow in a design carries reader`s eye through out the page. Visual flows can be achieved in several ways such as perspective, curves, motion in images , faces etc.
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    On page one, visual flow is defined well. But there are great examples on pages 2-5 on how to use it correctly. Mostly focuses on how the viewers eye catches the prominence of the right elements. Achieving flow through a flawless scheme that leaves no snags or visual loss of the designs message.
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    This site explains how flow can be used, as well as different ways to create flow. It shows common mistakes when using flow and how to correct them.
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    This is a tutorial that shows examples of good and bad flow. Ways to achieve visual flow is through arrows, sequential images, perspective, gradients, size changes, curves, motion in images, and faces (especially the eyes).
Micheal O'Neil

Emphasis in Writing - 1 views

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    Emphasis in writing has certain methods to follow in order to correctly use the technique. One important thing to remember is to never over do it! This will take away from the focal point. This website is a good reference and guide for the proper use of emphasis. 
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    Changingminds.com looks very basic at the homepage. It reinforces many different style that are usually overlooked in my multimedia writing.
Hector Garcia

D#3HW#1: Good Designs Have Strong Contrast | I'd Rather Be Writing - 0 views

  • Most effective type layouts take advantage of more than one of the contrasting possibilities.
  • We already understand the principle of contrast in many other aspects of our lives, such as how we dress.
  • My point is this: if we take our natural sensibility for contrast that we automatically employ in dress, and then apply it to layout and design, we’ll naturally make documents that have greater appeal.
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    This nice page has info from a book I've had recommended on amazon for technical writing class, and is written by a novice like me.
Nicole Carnal

D #3 HW #1 Visual Contrast - 0 views

    • Michael Clark
       
      This page dfmakes a great point about not enough contrast or not the right ones. Lots of good examples as well.
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    This site shows the importance of contrast in web layouts. It gives tips such as using the "squint test" to better view the contrast in a web page.
Jordin Mitton

D#2 HW#2: Emphasis Techniques - 0 views

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    This a website that gives a study guide ( question and answer) about emphasis techniques you must know
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    This website supplements the book's topic of emphasis techniques by giving a straightforward tip list. I would recommend this list to anyone who wants a quick check list. 
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    This is a very helpful website that explains the importance of emphasizing in web pages. It says to use a lot of repetition, to stick it in the reader's mind. It also says give the major points more space to discuss. Use different font style to catch the reader's eye.
Anastacia Albinda

D#3 HW#1 - 0 views

  • The important thing about contrast is that the elements should be completely different. Not just a little bit different
    • Chris Schultz
       
      You need to use items that aren't too similar, as this would defeat the purpose of contrast
  • Be bold with your font choices but remember to make sure the text is legible
  • Is contrast strengthening your design idea?
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  • contrast
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    This article is one of my favorites because it does more than just tell you how to use contrast but it explains why it is important. It discusses the benefits of using contrast in relevance to web and ad design.  This article is easy to read by its use of number lists and bolded headings. 
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    I liked this website a lot as well. Instead of showing ways in which how to use contrast, it explains three ways that contrast is important. One is that contrast is attractive to the eye, the other is that contrast aids in organization of info, and finally contrast creates focus. A key point that was made that I think is good to emphasize is that "contrast elements should be COMPLETELY different, not just a little bit"
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    This website gives very nice examples and pictures that help explain the contrast principle. I love how attractive to the eye all the images are.
Michael Wheeler

Chpt. 4 Balance- WriteDesign - 0 views

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    I enjoyed this website because it gave a good definition of "balance", it was a description that was clear and to the point. Easy enough for anyone who wasn't in art to understand.
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    This page represents all the types of balance: Symmetry, Approximate Symmetry, Asymmetry and Radial but it rerepsents them using pictures so the viewer gets an idea of all the different ways that balance can be used
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    Symmetry Approximate Symmetry Asymmetry Radial this page has a general definition of balance but the important part for this sight was that it was full of pictures. when it comes to these design principles i find that visual aspects are the best so the reader can see what exactly the principle does for design
Nicole Schmitter

Design Meltdown § Alignment - 0 views

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    This page gives a good explanation in understanding the design principle of alignment. It also gives samples of how to properly use alignment
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    I like this article because it explains the principle of alignment very well. It uses web design examples and points out why alignment works in each example. 
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    Alignment creates unification and definition in a design. It creates natural borders in a page. This website gives good examples of that idea.
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    This website gives very specific examples of alignment used on different web pages. It gives a pretty in depth review of each page.
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    This site explains that even though alignment may be the simplest of the principles of design, it is also very important. It says that the main reason to focus on alignment is for unification. It then includes different samples of sites that have very significant alignment properties.
anonymous

D#10 HW#5 - 0 views

  • Scientists and engineers routinely have the need to express themselves clearly, concisely and persuasively in applying for grants, publishing papers, reporting to their supervisors, communicating with their colleagues, etc.; in experimental science, formal reports are the primary means by which experimentalists communicate the results of their work to the scientific community.
  • condensed, compact and brief presentation
  • The report should be no more than 800 words, (3 pages of double spaced type) and 2 pages of graphs and/or diagrams.
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  • 1.) Title: This should be short, but precise, and convey the point of the report. It could be either a statement or a question. For example, a title like "Voltage-current relationship of a transistor" is good, as is "Does the transistor obey Ohm's Law?". But simply "The transistor" is too vague and is not a good title. 2.) Abstract: The abstract summarizes, in a couple of sentences, the content of the report. It provides a brief (5-10 lines) outline of what the report is about; it should include a statement of what it is you measured and its value (Warning! -- students often make abstracts too long -- note that an abstract is not an introduction.) 3.) Introduction: The role of this section is to state why the work reported is useful, where it fits in the bigger picture of the field (or of science in general), and to discuss briefly the theoretical hypotheses which are to be tested (e.g. for the Absolute Zero experiment, state the meaning of absolute zero and how it is to be measured, mention the equation PV = nRT and discuss its verification, and under what circumstances you expect it to be valid). 4.) Experimental Method: Describe the apparatus and procedure used in the experiment. Remember that a picture (or simple diagram) is often worth a thousand words! Enough details should be provided for the reader to have a clear idea of what was done. But be careful to not swamp the reader with insignificant or useless facts. 5.) Results and Discussion: In this section, you present and interpret the data you have obtained. If at all possible, avoid tables of data. Graphs are usually a much clearer way to present data (make sure axes are labeled, and error bars are shown!). Please make sure the graphs and diagrams have concise figure captions explaining what they are about! Do not show the details of error calculations. The derivation of any formulae you use is not required, but should be referenced. Explain how your data corroborates (or does not corroborate) the hypotheses being tested, and compare, where possible, with other work. Also, estimate the magnitude of systematic errors which you feel might influence your results (e.g. In the Absolute Zero experiment, how big is the temperature correction? Does this alter your results significantly?). 6.) Conclusion: In a few lines, sum up the results of your experiment. Do your data agree (within experimental error) with theory? If not, can you explain why? Remember that the conclusion is a summary; do not say anything in the conclusion which you have not already discussed more fully earlier in the text. 7.) References: In this section of the report list all of the documents that you refer to in your report. We recommend numbering the references sequentially in the text, in their order of appearance, and listing them in the same order in the references section. One possible reference format is used by the Canadian Journal of Physics. That is: for JOURNALS: Author(s), Journal Title, Volume (year) page number for BOOKS: Author(s), Book Title, Publisher, city of publication, year of publication, page (or range of relevant pages).  
Michael Wheeler

how to write a formal report - 0 views

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    A truly useful document that will be beneficial in the process of writing my Formal report. It is a packet created by Western Ontario University. It breaks down the different sections that comprise a formal report. It also describes how to approach the formal report and what it is. I found it to be extremely useful. 
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    This handout goes in depth on how to write a formal report. It provides specific instructions and lists them step by step making it easy for someone who has never written a formal report before. 
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    This website would be a resource to utilize because it shows some examples on how to write a good formal report .
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    Great site on how to write a formal report. It is easily understood and each paragraph gets right to the point of what needs to be included in every heading. I'll use this information and it is a great refresher for those of us who haven't written a formal report in years.
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    Very good example of how to organize formal reports. Included example is invaluable to overall message.
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    This very descriptive document gives students all of the details necessary succeed in writing a formal document that meets the needs of the audience and purpose of the writer.
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    6 page PDF file A report is a fact-based piece of writing which sets out a problem and the possible solutions to that problem, in a highly organized way. Some reports are short and informal and cover topics like accidents, incidents that happened in a plant, an inspection visit or a small project that has been completed.
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