![]() There are many low-cost or free resources available for these visual types of information, not the least of which is the Kids Discover website (which I must assume you are reading from at the moment) that offers infographics on many varied topics, including Biomes, Mesopotamia, Simple Machines, Essential Vitamins, Continental Drift, Rocks and Minerals, just to mention a few. If you’ve not yet tried it, search the term infographic and I will wait here while you scroll through all of the results.Īre you back? Good! Let’s discuss ways that infographics are used as learning tools in the classroom, as well as a way that your students can create their very own infographic. Infographics (also known as ideograms and cuneiforms) have found special interest through social media sites, and none quite so much as Pinterest, likely because of its simplicity. (To wit: Carved stone is not so easy to erase or correct.) These often vertical displays (due to the nature of your web browser’s penchant for scrolling) are finding more and more acceptance as a way to quickly dispense information or knowledge in a visual format.Īs any good designer will tell you, the best way to get your thoughts across to an audience (and greatly increase the comprehension) is via that wonderful marriage of words and pictures an idea that has held sway at least since the day that King Tut’s art director was tasked with recounting his boss’s doings along the river Nile. ![]() You may have also noticed a recent surge of information graphics, or infographics as they are known to most. Unless you been living under a rock for the last few years, you may have noticed this phenomenon that we like to call “the internet.” Along with this surge in all-things-electronica, we are also witnessing a veritable tsunami of imagery… from Facebook, Twitter, Snapchat (ask a high school sophomore), Instagram, and many others. ![]()
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