Thursday, March 29, 2012

To Be Clear...

For the required essay (or theme), you must do the following:
  • Equally divide your guiding questions into sections.  For example, if you have six guiding questions and three group members, each group member will be responsible to write a theme that combines the three guiding questions assigned to him.
  • Research these questions in more depth.
  • Write a clear theme that contains an introduction, body, and conclusion, organized in paragraphs. 
  • You are responsible for both a first draft and a final draft.
For right now, don't worry about how to write the theme.  We will get to that later.  Just focus on divvying (dividing) up the questions and researching your assigned topics. 

Over the Easter break you are responsible for the research of your theme.

Re-post of Project Objectives

You should all have photocopy of this, but to be clear, here is the project's outline.  Be sure to read part two of the project which explains the objectives of your written theme. 

Group 1: BP Oil Spill of 2010
Group 2: Japan Earthquake and Nuclear Disaster of 2011
Group 3: Nigeria and Oil

Information graphics or infographics are graphic, visual representations of data, information and knowledge.  They are useful because they communicate information quickly and efficiently.  However, creating an infographic is not particularly easy.  It takes time and well-researched data. 

Part I: The Infographics
Your overall goal is to take your topic and:
1.      Relay the basic “story” of the disaster/situation.
2.      Represent the public and government response to the disaster/situation.
3.      Look at the actions of the government and public over time; communicate outcomes and results.
Here is how we will approach this project:
1.      Research your topic.  Print out resources on your topic.  Articles from newspapers, magazines and political blogs are particularly great resources.  See a list of websites below.
2.      Choose the information and data you feel is most important to communicate on your infographic (the size of a poster).
3.      Compile that information on note cards. 
4.      Choose how to best represent that data. 
5.      If you realize you have too much information or too little information, adjust your data as you see fit.  Remember, you must always keep the data accurate and transparent.
6.      Create your infographic.
7.      Present your infographic to the class.

Part II: The Theme
Each group will present their infographic to the class.  Here is how you will break down the presentation:
1.      Divide the infographic into equal parts depending on the number of people in your group.  If there are three people in your group, then divide the infographic into three sections. 
2.      Groups will assign sections to members (with the help of the group leader). 
3.      Each member must write a theme of at least two pages, double-spaced on their particular topic including any appropriate historical, political, and data-based information. 
4.      The student must end his/her theme with a personal response, in which he/she expresses his/her opinion regarding the section discussed in the theme.  This must consist of at least one paragraph. 

Possible Newspapers, Magazines, Blogs and Sites
The New York Times
The Guardian
The Financial Times
BBC
National Geographic
PBS
Cool Infographics
Bloomberg
NPR
Most .gov websites (government websites)
Reuters
The Atlantic
The Economist
The New Yorker
Cool Infographics
EIA (US Energy Information Administration)
Brookings Institute
TED

Monday, March 26, 2012

YOU NEED TO

COMMENT!

Pick any post you like and write a(n appropriate) comment or question of your choice.  That way I know that you have a google account and that you are able to comment.

Thanks!

Some Great Resources

...from our friends at the New York Times.

BP Oil Spill Group: Interactive Oil Spill Tracker

Nigeria + Oil Group: Battered by Oil Slideshow

Japan's Earthquake + Nuclear Crisis: In the Wake of Disaster Slideshow

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Extracting Valuable Information from an Article

How to Extract Information from an Article
(15 minutes)
·         Read the article assigned to you.
·         Highlight important points as you read.
·         Make any necessary notes or ask any necessary questions in the margins of the article. 
(10 minutes)
·         Compare notes with your partners.
·         Discuss which bits of information are statistical and which bits are not.
·         Choose (with your group) what you feel are the most important bits of information and copy them onto note-cards.  Each bit of information should have a separate note card. 
·         Decide what question they best answer and write the number of that question at the top of the note card.  (For example, if your first question is “what is BP?” and your note card states that “BP, British Petroleum,  is an oil company that…”, you write 1 at the top of that note card because the information refers to question 1).
·         On the back of the note card write the date, the article’s title, and the source of the article.
(5 minutes)
·         Share what you feel is the most interesting bit of information with the class.

Thursday, March 15, 2012

INFOGRAPHICS PROJECT CALENDAR!

 Yay!
 Prima Liceo Veicolare
 Ms. AldigĂ©
 Infographic Project Calendar
Monday, March 19th:
Guiding Questions

Wednesday, March 21st:
Each student must bring two articles each regarding their topic.

Monday, March 26th:
Each student must bring their note-cards with information and statistics extracted from their articles.  Each student must have at least 10 note-cards. 

Wednesday, March 28th:
Each student must bring the corrected versions of their note-cards to class. In class, you will exchange your information and decide which is best to include in your infographic.

Monday, April 2nd :
Rough draft/outline of infographic due.

Wednesday, April 16th:
Rough draft of individual theme due.  Group revisions of infographic due.

Wednesday, April 18th:
Final draft of infographic due.

Monday, April 23rd:
Final draft of individual theme due.  Presentations begin.

Wednesday, April 26th:
Presentations continue.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Don't forget...

on Monday, you must have a list of at least five questions that will guide the process of researching and creating your infographic.  This is a big step in the process so take it seriously!
Also, I have created a new email for myself and for you so that I can share documents with you through Google.  I've already posted the documents necessary for the infographic project.

Speaking of the infographic project, here's a New York Times video piece on the consequences of the earthquake and tsunami in Japan. 

http://video.nytimes.com/video/2012/03/10/world/asia/100000001415907/in-the-wake-of-disaster.html

Monday, March 12, 2012

We can work it out...

Thank you all again for a great class.  Let's start with a clean slate.  (That means no homework for English besides your vocabulary worksheet). 

So, just remember: 

Thursday, March 8, 2012

So I realized...

...that I can't upload documents to Blogger.  This is not a fun fact for a teacher.  What I'll do from here on out is put up an announcement for the project/homework/assignment.  If you need a copy, just write me and I'll email it to you.  And with that, I'll leave you with a song I didn't get to show you today.  There are subtitles! The HD version is below. Share what you think.
















The song I showed you all in class today:
















Tuesday, March 6, 2012

I'd like a bit of INFO...GRAPHICS!

Whether we are watching TV, playing video games, checking our phone, or driving down the highway, we are constantly inundated with graphic information.  Your task for this project is to learn how to create graphic information.  It's not as easy as you might think.  Draw some circles, put some percentages down, maybe throw in a word or two...  Not so fast, Mister! It takes dedication and thoughtful research to successfully communicate a concept or story through graphics. So here it is: